Directly from the book:
McClellan says bush's reason for war always was "an ambitious and idealistic post-9/11 vision of transforming the middle East through the spread of freedom". But Bush and his advisers made "a marketing choice" to downplay this rationale in favor of one focused on increasingly trumped-up portayals of the threat posed by the weapons of mass destruction.
So Bush's reason for going to war with Iraq was "an ambitious and idealistic post-9/11 vision of transforming the middle East through the spread of freedom". I guess this knocks the wind out of the sails of the Bush haters, and blows the 'conquer Iraq for oil' theory, doesn't it?
I'm not a Bush fan, but I think he was treated unfairly about the Iraq issue.
McClellan states: "History appears poised to confirm what most Americans today have decided - that the decision to invade Iraq was a serious strategic blunder."
History is poised to do no such thing. Al-Qaida is on the run, a brutal, murderous dictator has been toppled, and the U.S. appears to be near victory in Iraq. Years from now Americans will see this as a turning point in history, a time when an American leader stood up to protect Western Civilization following the barbarous attacks of 9/11..
Yes, he expressed concern Saddam would get a nuclear weapon with which to blackmail both his neighbors and the West.
But Bush also wanted to halt the spread of terror, deny a possible haven for al-Qaida, and promote democracy in the Mideast, among other things. Bush delivered 24 major speeches on Iraq from Sept. 2002 to Sept. 2004. In them, he made a wide-ranging case for getting rid of Saddam. It wasn't only about WMD.
McClellan states Bush was shading the truth. He was shading the truth about WMD? The CIA assessment of Iraq that Bush used was made during President Clinton's final year in office. It said that Saddam had a WMD program and possibly a nuclear weapon. Every major intelligence agency - Britain's, France's, Russia's, Germany's, Israel's, even the U.N.'s - agreed.
As it turns out, some of that intelligence was wrong. Even so, reasons for getting rid of Saddam were too numerous to ignore. In 2002, Congress cited 23 reasons when it overwhelmingly gave Bush the right to remove Saddam.
Bush was clear and honest from the start- this was about defending our nation from the insane radical Islamists who had declared war on us from their safe havens in the Mideast.
McClellan, blinded by his anger and desire to cash in on his insider position, can't see this. I think one day the American people will see this.