Syzy, you assume that this requires some giant "conspiracy." In fact, it's just business as usual (for both parties), perhaps carried a bit farther and based on some false assumptions in this case. In fact, none of these current accusations were secrets until now -- they were just underreported by career beltway journalists (don't want to ask the tough, unpopular questions and lose access to high ranking figures or face a career threatening public backlash for not being patriotic) and unopposed by cowardly Democratic legislators. The Washington Post, Frontline and Helen Thomas reported on this well before the war started but they were about the only ones.
I'm not a beltway insider, but I do regularly deal with national policy issues as a journalist covering the petroleum field. I regularly deal with lobbyists, congressional staffers and Washington agency officials (primarily EPA, DOE, EIA and in the past FEMA) and sadly this is just business as usual. For example, do you think that ethanol is being mandated in gasoline to provide "clean air" or "reduce the dependence on foreign oil?" Guess again. In fact, most people probably don't know that each gallon of ethanol used in gasoline takes $.55 out of our highway funds in the form of a subsidy to make it economical in the first place. Ethanol is good for ADM, good for farmers (at least until biomass comes on line, then they might be surprised) and good for "corn belt" senators who cannot force such legislation through, but who can block other legislation to leverage their way on this and similar issues. Even "big oil" supports this (and ethanol is a squeak work with) as a compromise related to other pork barrel legislation that favors the industry.
A similar situation exists with ANWR drilling and large portions of the current energy policy legislation, and many other less public issues. The same held true in other public issues I've encountered related to other industries during the past decade.
I have also worked in public relations for an international trade association. For those of you unfamiliar with marketing, public relations, advertising and propaganda there are books filled with case studies on media campaigns where the audience was "sold" an issue. Entire college curriculums up to the graduate level teach people how to do this. It's as American as apple pie and Chevrolet. It's universal. And if you have any skills or experience in the field, it's obvious when you see it in action. Its actually amusing to watch the message development and the media campaign. I laughed when Bush went off-message at his last press conference before the war and said Al Queada-like organization referring to that group operating in Kurdish territority (he really is bad at this type of stuff). I cringed in the same[?] speech when he put Do not destroy the oil fields first on his list of warnings to Iraqi field commanders (above using WMD against the troops, for example) -- the speechwriter should have got his bellybutton kicked for that basic mistake.
Even though we were technically justified to undertake this action, it was never about (except in a broad metaphorical sense):
1. Al Queada. However, 40 percent of New Yorkers believe that Saddam Hussein was responsible for 9/11. Talk about case studies, this is a glowing success.
2. WMD. Frankly, it's surprising he doesn't have any, but his WMD threat was always a regional threat particularly given the dynamics of his secular regime.
3. Liberating the Iraqi people. A nice fall back when 1 and 2 either failed to gain traction or failed to materialize.
It's about a modern bunch of McNamaras finally getting a golden opportunity to move think tank concepts into the real world to "reshape" the Middle East, and, interwoven, securing and leveraging Iraq's oil against a shaky Saudi Arabia. Unfortunately, as PR 101 tells us (remember that Goering quote posted previously on the BBS - disturbing but totally accurate), these issues are too complex, esoteric and less emotionally appealing to the general public than pushing emotions like revenge and fear. It's not a mystery, and not a surprise. But it is disgusting that it is used when our soldiers lives are on the line. Thats why I left PR for the high paying
field of journalism.
Charon