http://www.philly.com/inquirer/opinion/20081221_The_American_Debate__He_leaves_with_a_record_of_contempt__secrecy__lies.htmlThe American Debate: He leaves with a record of contempt, secrecy, lies
By Dick Polman
Inquirer National Political Columnist
snip//
And whereas Cheney kept publicly telling us in 2002 that Hussein was in close cahoots with Osama bin Laden, the president's own Daily Brief of Sept. 21, 2001, said there was "scant credible evidence" of any "significant collaborative ties" - a conclusion since endorsed by the 9/11 Commission report in 2004 and a new Pentagon report in 2008.
Cheney's characteristic debasement of factual empiricism was not limited to the war, of course. Even after voters booted the GOP out of power on Capitol Hill in 2006, he sought to deny statistical reality. He said the Democrats had won only "a narrow victory," whereas, actually, the aggregate tally of all contested House races showed the Democrats winning by 6.6 percentage points nationwide - a wider margin than when Newt Gingrich and the GOP captured the House in 1994. And the swing-voting independents favored the Democrats in 2006 by 18 points - a portent of the Democratic seizure of the center in 2008.
Yet even though Cheney is currently playing out the string with the lowest favorability rating of any veep in modern polling (scraping bottom with Dan Quayle, which says a lot), and even though he no longer has the clout that he enjoyed when ally Donald Rumsfeld ran the Pentagon, there is nary a hint that he confess error or lighten his hubris with a dose of humility.
On ABC News recently, Cheney was still justifying the Iraq invasion, claiming that the postwar inspectors had determined "that Saddam Hussein still had the technology to produce weapons of mass destruction. He had the technology, he had the people, he had the basic feedstocks." This was yet another lie. The authoritative postwar Duelfer Report concluded four years ago that Hussein's mass weapons programs had "progressively decayed" since 1991, and that inspectors found no evidence of any "concerted efforts to restart the program."
But perhaps the GOP should have the final word. During the early presidential primaries, one of the candidates was asked, "Would you grant your vice president as much authority and as much independence as President Bush has granted to Vice President Cheney?" The candidate simply replied: "No" - and the Republican audience cracked up. And that alone should be the verdict on Cheney's legacy.