Impeachment: 'Be Prepared' Good Advice for Bush White House
Paul Weyrich
Tuesday, June 24, 2003
The late John Connally, former governor of Texas and secretary of the
treasury in the Nixon administration, told me a story back in 1975 when I
was a guest at his ranch. The governor had been indicted and, although later
vindicated, he was fixated on the question of who was responsible for his
indictment.
He related to me an episode that he was convinced lay at the heart of his
indictment. He said that one day he had been asked to testify before a House
committee. He was confused about the location. He opened a door and there,
off in a corner, was then-Defense Secretary Mel Laird, and with him was Father
Robert Drinan, the extreme leftist congressman, and a half-dozen other
leftists.
Since he had not been seen, he thought he'd listen to what Laird
was discussing with those left-wingers. Connally found, to his utter shock
and amazement, that Laird was discussing the impeachment of President Nixon. This
was early on, when Drinan and the other leftists had just introduced
impeachment articles in the House. Most everyone thought this was a
frivolous joke on Drinan's part. Supposedly impeachment had no chance.
Anyway, to hear Connally tell it, Laird suddenly looked up and saw Connally
there. The governor said Laird was obviously embarrassed and Connally
excused himself, saying he was in the wrong place. He didn't give it much
thought at the time, he told me, although the sight of Laird together with
those left-wingers really troubled him.
Then, when the governor was
indicted, he began to think of who would want him out of the way and he
recalled the meeting. The governor went to his grave convinced that fellow
Cabinet secretary Mel Laird was responsible for his indictment so he would
not be credible if he fingered Laird as being in on a plot to get President
Nixon.
Now, I have known Mel Laird for many years and while I am no fan of his, I
find the notion that he would be plotting against President Nixon a bit hard
to believe. But I mention the story for this reason.
When Father Drinan said that Nixon should be impeached, the president was at
the height of his popularity. Drinan was regarded even by most of his
Democratic colleagues as a far-out crazy. Drinan was not taken seriously.
Well, there is a little weasel tripping around now, insisting that there
might well be grounds to impeach President George W. Bush. I have heard
three different interviews with him on the subject. He sounds plausible.
His
name is John Dean. He once was White House counsel under President Nixon. He
blew the whistle on Nixon and for weeks was a matinee idol when Sen. Sam
Ervin's hearings into Watergate were televised.
Perhaps Dean misses fame and thinks he can be a star once more. Who knows?
Right now, only the fringes in the media and politics are taking him
seriously. But if I were the administration, I would take him seriously. I
would listen to every argument he is making and I would be prepared to
counter it.
I am assuming, of course, that President Bush and Vice President
Cheney didn't attempt to alter the data produced by the Central Intelligence
Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and other agencies in regard to
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. I still believe they may be found or at
least we may learn how they were disposed of.
I can also believe that the
CIA and even the DIA gave Bush very bad information. It was Bush's father,
when he was president, who told me, based on CIA information, that if
Gorbachev were deposed, then a Stalin-like figure would take his place. I
told President Bush that the CIA could not have been further from the truth.
Which of us was correct?
So it is entirely possible those agencies were dead wrong. What I find
impossible to believe is that the current President Bush and the vice
president told these agencies the conclusions they wanted when they knew
that these conclusions were far removed from the truth.
To believe that is to believe that our president and vice president have
absolutely no integrity. Whatever you think of their politics, I believe
President Bush and Vice President Cheney are both men of character who would
not take our country to war based on false information they helped to
manufacture.
Obviously, if they did engage in such illegal practices, they would be
impeached. There is no way that will happen. But even if Dean is way out in
orbit, he should not be allowed to plant doubts in the minds of our citizens.
The administration should put the truth out there. Otherwise you never know
how a far-out plot by someone who is not taken seriously will turn into
something red-hot and blown way out of proportion by the media.
Lord knows
enough people hate George Bush in this town that they will take any scrap of
"evidence" they can find and will turn it into a dozen articles of
impeachment.
I know the White House has competent counsel. But they have been busy trying
to get good federal judges confirmed and many other matters. If you see
them, urge them to add this to their "to do" list. We wouldn't want them to
find themselves unprepared in the unlikely event the left is able to make
something out of nothing.
Paul M. Weyrich is Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
George W. Bush
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