This article originally provided by
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January 26, 2005
Boxer Rebellion Spreads
John Nichols
Give Barbara Boxer credit for
sparking the most engaged debate that the Senate has yet
seen over the Bush administration lies that led the United
States into the quagmire that is Iraq (news
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web sites).
Boxer, the California Democrat
who has been increasingly vocal in her objections to the
Bush administration's reign of error and excess, seized the
opening provided by President Bush (news
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web sites)'s nomination of Condoleezza Rice (news
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web sites) to serve as Secretary of State to try and
force a necessary discussion about the misstatements,
misconceptions and misdeeds that Rice and others in the
administration used to make the "case" for the invasion and
occupation of Iraq. And, to the surprise even of some war
foes, she got it.
Yes, of course, Rice's
confirmation was certain to be confirmed. In a Senate where
the balance is now tipped 55-45 toward a Republican caucus
that for the most part puts party loyalty above duty to
country, and where there are still too many Democrats who
continue to preach the failed "can't-we-all-just-get-along"
mantra that has relegated the party to minority status,
there was never any chance that the national security
advisor's record of failure and deception would prevent her
from taking change of the State Department.
But Rice's road to Foggy Bottom
proved to be far rockier than had been expected. Tuesday's
Senate debate on her nomination was one of the most charged
that the chamber has seen in recent years, and while Rice
survived, she did not finish the day unscathed. Senator
after senator rose to recall what Senator Edward Kennedy,
D-Massachusetts, described as Rice's "false reasons" for
going to war, and to charge, as Kennedy did, that had Rice
told the truth "it might have changed the course of
history."
Though he and others were
eloquent in their critique of Rice on Tuesday, the person
who changed the course of history with regard to the debate
over the Bush administration's nominee for Secretary of
State was not Kennedy, nor West Virginia's Robert Byrd, nor
any of the other more senior senators who ripped Rice.
Rather, it was Barbara Boxer, the diligent if not always
prominent senator from the Golden State.
When Rice appeared on January
18 before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on which
Boxer sits, it was the California senator who did the heavy
lifting. She began by announcing that, "I will... not shrink
from questioning a war that was not built on truth." And she
then detailed the role that Rice played in creating the
foundation of lies for the war.
"Perhaps the most well known
statement you have made was the one about Saddam Hussein (news
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web sites) launching a nuclear weapon on America, with
the image of a 'mushroom cloud.' That image had to frighten
every American into believing that Saddam Hussein was on the
verge of annihilating them if he was not stopped," said
Boxer, who then announced that, "I will be placing into the
record a number of other such statements which have not been
consistent with the facts nor the truth."
Then Boxer hammered home the
point that really mattered: That when Rice and her team
lied, people died.
"This war was sold to the
American people -- as Chief of Staff to President Bush Andy
Card said -- like a 'new product.' You rolled out the idea
and then you had to convince the people, and as you made
your case, I personally believe that your loyalty to the
mission you were given overwhelmed your respect for the
truth," Bixer calmly declared.
"That was a great disservice to the American people. But
worse than that, our young men and women are dying. So far,
1,366 American troops have been killed in Iraq. More than 25
percent of those troops were from California. More than
10,372 have been wounded."
It Boxer read out the
statistics, it was a devastating moment -- and a rare one.
Seldom do senators accuse prospective Cabinet members of
lying. Rice knew she was taking a harder hit than anyone had
expected. The Secretary of State nominee tried to get the
upper hand with classic Washington spin. "Senator," Rice
whined, "I have never, ever lost respect for the truth in
the service of anything. It's not in my nature. It's not in
my character. And I would hope we could have this
conversation... without impugning my credibility or my
integrity."
Rice's problem was that her
credibility and integrity had been impugned -- not by Boxer
but by the nominee herself. All Boxer did was bring Rice's
deceptions to light and, perhaps most significantly, to link
them to the continuing crisis in Iraq. In so doing, she
shamed a number of her fellow Democrats into joining her in
opposition not just to Rice but to the administration's
entire approach to the war.
Tuesday's Senate debate was
distinguished by the bluntness of the criticism of Rice's
record. "She exaggerated and distorted the facts," said
Michigan's Carl Levin, the ranking Democrat on the Senate
Armed Services Committee (news
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web sites). Minnesota Democrat Mark Dayton announced
that he was opposing Rice nomination in order to whole the
administration accountable for its lies. "I don't like
impugning anyone's integrity," Dayton said. "But I really
don't like being lied to -- repeatedly, flagrantly,
intentionally."
"My vote against this nominee
is my statement that this administration's lies must stop
now," the Minnesotan explained.
Other senators were equally
pointed in their condemnations of the nominee.
"Dr. Rice is responsible for
some of the most overblown rhetoric that the administration
used to scare the American people," thundered West
Virginia's Byrd, who argued that, "Her confirmation will
most certainly be viewed as another endorsement of the
administration's unconstitutional doctrine of preemptive
war, its bullying policies of unilateralism, and its callous
rejection of long-standing allies."
Byrd remarks were, as always,
historically rich and intellectually powerful. But the dean
of the Senate did not hesitate to give credit where credit
was due.
Recalling the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee session at which his colleague from
California had grilled Rice, the senior senator said, "I was
particularly impressed by Senator Boxer, who tackled her
role on the committee with passion and forthrightness..."
Expressing his dismay with
Republicans who have accused Senate Democrats of engaging in
"petty politics" by demanding a debate on Rice's nomination,
Byrd argued that, "Nothing could be further from the truth.
The Senate's role of advice and consent to presidential
nominations is not a ceremonial exercise."
Byrd was right to assert that
the Senate's constitutionally dictated "advice and consent"
duty "is not a function of pomp and circumstance" and that
senators must never "acquiesce mutely to the nomination of
one of the most important members of the President's
Cabinet."
He was equally right to
recognize the critical role that Boxer played in assuring
that so many Democratic senators recognized their
responsibility to assume that the consideration of Rice's
nomination was something more that "a ceremonial exercise."
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