Is There Still Time to Impeach the President before Nov. 2?
Press Action
Thursday, October 07, 2004
http://www.pressaction.com/news/weblog/full_article/leopold10072004/


By Jason Leopold

John Dean, the former counsel to President Richard Nixon, made a case last year for impeaching President George W. Bush if the president intentionally misled Congress and the public into backing a war with Iraq.

“To put it bluntly, if Bush has taken Congress and the nation into war based on bogus information, he is cooked,” Dean wrote in a June 6, 2003 column for findlaw.com. “Manipulation or deliberate misuse of national security intelligence data, if proven, could be ‘a high crime’ under the Constitution’s impeachment clause. It would also be a violation of federal criminal law, including the broad federal anti-conspiracy statute, which renders it a felony ‘to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose.’”

On Wednesday, a 918-page report released by the Iraqi Survey Group, headed by former United Nations weapons inspector Charles Duelfer, said Iraq eliminated all of its illicit arms programs in the mid-1990s, shortly after the first Gulf War. In other words, Iraq wasn’t a threat Bush’s dire warning turned out to be misleading and, as we now know, factually wrong, and, even worse, lies. That’s grounds for impeachment.

“Presidential statements, particularly on matters of national security, are held to an expectation of the highest standard of truthfulness,” Dean wrote in the June 6 column. “A president cannot stretch, twist or distort facts and get away with it. President Lyndon Johnson’s distortions of the truth about Vietnam forced him to stand down from reelection. President Richard Nixon’s false statements about Watergate forced his resignation.”

Some of Bush’s most frightening statements about Iraq’s non-existent weapons program:

Remember, this a government that impeached a president for accepting sexual favors in the oval office and lying about it. You would think that the punishment for taking a country to war on false pretenses would be worse.

(c) 2004 Jason Leopold


Jason Leopold is the former Los Angeles bureau chief of Dow Jones Newswires where he spent two years covering the energy crisis and the Enron bankruptcy. He just finished writing a book about the crisis, due out in December through Rowman & Littlefield. He can be reached at jasonleopold@hotmail.com.