Man of 2005: Patrick
Fitzgerald
January 12
2006
Counterbias.com
GERALD RELLICK
My nomination for Man of the Year in 2005 is Patrick Fitzgerald.
Anyone who could flush out a sleazy journalist like Judy Miller and
toss her in jail without blinking an eye gets my vote. More
significantly, though, it was only after Fitzgerald’s tenacious
investigation that the media woke from its stupor and discovered
that the disclosure of Valerie Plame’s CIA identity was more than
just another Washington scandal – which is where they seemed happy
to leave it. So we began reading about – get this now –
possible
attempts by the Bush administration to dissemble,
deceive and distort, as they “fixed the intelligence” to sell the
Iraq war to Congress and the American people. It’s clear that
Fitzgerald’s dogged efforts had that hard-to-define tipping effect,
where what had been obvious all along, but was being ignored for
lack of momentum, suddenly gets new life.
But the media still has some catching up to do. When discussing the Plame affair, they frequently describe the White House’s actions as
an attempt to "discredit”
Joseph
Wilson. This has never made any sense. Wilson was a career
diplomat from 1976 until 1998, specializing in African affairs, and
was the first president Bush’s acting ambassador to Iraq during the
period of Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990. He was a
perfectly logical choice to undertake the CIA mission to assess
whether Hussein had attempted to buy uranium ore from the African
country of Niger. So, why would revealing his wife’s clandestine CIA
status discredit him? If Plame was known to be anti-Bush it might be
different. But Plame worked undercover for the CIA and her political
views—if she even had any – were surely anything but common
knowledge.
And just this week the New York Times, in an otherwise hard-hitting
editorial critical of the Bush administration’s “leak
investigations,” called the Plame outing “an attempt to
silence Mrs. Wilson's husband.” Then later in the same editorial the
Times says the whole incident “began with a cynical effort by the
administration to deflect public attention from hyped prewar
intelligence on Iraq.”
No, Joe Wilson’s wife was outed in a purely vindictive act to punish
Wilson, and secondarily, to frighten off others who might question
the Bush war propaganda machine which was then in high gear. In one
of the more inane articles on the Plame affair, Washington Post
columnist, Jim Hoagland, asked why the White House had to resort to
this tactic. Asks Hoagland, “Why didn’t they just write a
countering op-ed?” You have to wonder where Hoagland has
been for the last five years. The answer is, this is not how the
Bush administration works. They are juvenile and petty – like school
yard bullies who steal your lunch and defy you to do something about
it. Thanks to the Fitzgerald investigation, we see this now more
clearly than ever.
The administration’s conduct in the Plame affair calls to mind Peter
Singer’s dissection of George Bush in his book,
The
President of Good and Evil: The Ethics of George W. Bush.
Singer is professor of philosophy at Princeton and a prolific author
on a range of subjects. It is Singer’s view that Bush suffers from
“arrested moral development.”
He supports his argument by citing work of Harvard psychologist
Lawrence Kohlberg who studied moral judgment in children,
adolescents and adults from the United States and other countries.
Kohlberg found that we all move through three major stages of moral
development, the last being what he calls the “postconventional
stage,” where one moves away from “an orientation
toward authority, fixed rules, and the maintenance of social order”
that characterize the prior stage, to a more sophisticated and
nuanced understanding of rules and the possibility of altering these
by “appealing to logical comprehensiveness, universality and
consistency.”
For Singer, Bush is stuck in the second stage of moral reasoning
which is “typically reached by teenage boys in the
thirteen to sixteen age group.” [emphasis added]. “Bush’s
childishly literal notion of what is truthful has set the tone for
his entire administration,” writes Singer… "Handicapped
by a naďve idea of ethics as conformity to a small number of fixed
rules, [Bush] has been unable to handle adequately the difficult
choices that any chief executive of a major nation must face.”
And just this week we got yet another revelation of George Bush’s “arrested
moral development.” According to an article in the UK
Independent, New York Times journalist, James Risen, in his recently
released book, State of War: The Secret History of the CIA
and the Bush Administration, tells of a telephone
conversation between Bush and his father, the former President.
After the elder Bush challenged his son for allowing Donald Rumsfeld "and
a cadre of neoconservative ideologues" to exert excessive
influence over foreign policy, the younger Bush simply hung up the
phone.
While attention is now focused on Bush’s secret domestic
surveillance program, don’t dismiss Fitzgerald’s investigation. It’s
not over yet. Hanging in the balance is the fate of Dick Cheney,
still believed to be a Fitzgerald target. Wouldn’t a Cheney
indictment be sweet justice? The match up between Fitzgerald and the
White House is the stuff of movies. Compare Fitzgerald’s leading man
stats – 6’ 2”, 215 pounds, handsome, and a former rugby player at
Amherst and Harvard – with those of George Bush, the
pom-pom waving cheerleader at Andover and Yale, and Dick Cheney, the
Yale flunk-out and draft dodger, and you have the beginnings of a
script for a modern day version of Gladiator II.
So I’m looking forward to an interesting 2006. If anyone can wipe
that smirk off George Bush’s face, it’s Pat Fitzgerald.
==
Gerald S. Rellick, Ph.D., worked in aerospace industry for 22
years. He now teaches in the California Community College system.