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JOE SCARBOROUGH, HOST: Tonight in SCARBOROUGH
COUNTRY, Richard Clarke won‘t stop talking about 9/11,
while Condi Rice won‘t start.
You‘re about to enter SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY. No passport
required, no cover-ups allowed.
Getting to the bottom of why 9/11 happened to make sure it
never happens again should be our nation‘s top priority.
So why won‘t the president‘s top security adviser talk
with the commission charged with finding that out?
And former Bush aide Richard Clarke drops his 9/11
bombshell and does “60 Minutes” the same week as the
nation‘s most important hearings on terror attacks on
Capitol Hill. Now he stands to make $1 million off of that
testimony. A coincidence? Not a chance. We‘re going to
talk to a mother who lost her son on 9/11 and says Clarke
is exploiting his death to make a few bucks.
Then, the lid is blown off a huge scandal at the U.N.
Instead of feeding hungry Iraqi children, the U.N.
oil-for-food program was allegedly skimmed for billions of
dollars from axis of weasel members France and Russia,
U.N. bureaucrats and possibly Kofi Annan‘s own son. We‘ll
uncover that soon.
And “The Passion” has been showing in America for over a
month. And it hasn‘t spurred an anti-Semitic backlash. But
critics warn that once “The Passion” hits the Middle East,
all that will change. Are their worst fears now coming
true?
But, first, is Condi Rice in the middle of a cover-up?
It‘s time for tonight‘s “Real Deal.”
Why won‘t Condi Rice talk? Oh, now, I know what the White
House lawyers are saying, but I really want to know, why
won‘t Condi Rice testify before the 9/11 committee? You
know, it‘s more than a little disconcerting that the
president‘s most important policy adviser on terrorism
won‘t testify at the most important political hearing of
this new century, claiming privilege, while at the same
time making herself available for every news program
seemingly from “60 Minutes” to the Delaware cable access
network.
If what she has to say on this issue is so important that
she goes on “60 Minutes,” then why not testify before the
committee? Or, conversely, if what she has to say is so
secretive, then why blab about it on national news
programs? Ms. Rice and the White House can‘t have it both
ways or else they‘ll be no better than Richard Clarke,
whose own political showmanship over the past week has
been nothing short of disgusting.
Clarke‘s apologists claim that it‘s just a crazy
coincidence that this hack‘s million-dollar book deal
dropped on the eve of these explosive 9/11 hearings. But
if you believe that, I have some voting machines in
Florida that I‘d like to sell you. Bottom line—Condi needs
to start talking and Clarke needs to stop and count the
millions of dollars he‘s made exploiting the tragedy of
9/11, because, in my mind, his 15 minutes are just about
up. And that‘s tonight‘s “Real Deal.”
Now, as we‘re on the air tonight, there is news out of
Washington that the White House is actually considering a
compromise that would allow Condoleezza Rice to testify.
With us now to talk about that breaking news, John Fund
from OpinionJournal.com.
John Fund, thanks for being here. I want to play you what
Condoleezza Rice said on “60 Minutes” just last night.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, “60 MINUTES”)
CONDOLEEZZA RICE, NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER: Nothing would
be better from my point of view than to be able to
testify. I would really like to do that. But there‘s an
important principle involved here. It is a long-standing
principle that sitting national security advisers do not
testify before the Congress.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: John Fund, somebody else that worked on the
National Security Council for a president, his name Oliver
North, could tell you that sometimes perception tops
reality in these hearings. Come on, Condi Rice needs to go
before this committee, needs to go before America and tell
America what she knows, doesn‘t she?
JOHN FUND, COLUMNIST, “THE WALL STREET JOURNAL”: She is
willing to go before the committee. She is willing—I think
there‘s going to be a compromise in which she testifies
behind closed doors and then a transcript of the session
is released to the public.
Joe, you remember when you‘re in Congress that it‘s very
important to keep the lines of authority between Congress
and the executive branch clear. We don‘t allow presidents
to haul in senators after a vote to subpoena them and say,
how did you vote this way? And we shouldn‘t allow Congress
to drag in the president‘s personal staff, the people he
relies on for the most unbiased advice, before a committee
unnecessarily.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Hold on, John. She goes on “60 Minutes.” She
goes on all these other networks and talk about what she‘d
be saying in front of this committee. Why not go in front
of the committee?
FUND: Because Richard Clarke himself, when Bill Clinton
was president, declined to do that before a Senate
committee, and in fact, he invoked the same privilege that
Condoleezza Rice is invoking. This is nothing new. All
presidents have done this.
And, you know, the polls show the public really doesn‘t
care. There‘s a “Newsweek” poll out tonight, Joe, that
shows by 49 percent to 47 percent, the American people say
it doesn‘t make any difference whether she testifies in
public because they know that they‘re going to hear the
same things that she‘s saying on these news shows. This is
a distinction without a difference.
Deroy Murdock, you‘re a syndicated columnist for Scripps
Howard News Service. As a Bush supporter, you say
Condoleezza Rice should testify and this is just another
case of the White House doing a bad job getting its
message out. Explain.
DEROY MURDOCK, SYNDICATED COLUMNIST: Well, that‘s exactly
the case.
There is an argument to be made, which I guess John is
making, that what happens in the Oval Office should stay
in the Oval Office, and whether you agree or disagree with
that, I could respect that if Condoleezza Rice had said
I‘m not going to talk to anybody about what I say to the
president of the United States, that stays private, and
then not testify privately, not go on “60 Minutes,”
etcetera.
But she‘s testified privately to this commission already.
Whatever executive privilege that would have existed there
I think has been breached. They now know privately what
was on her mind and what she said to the president. And
what we‘re not getting is the public having an opportunity
to hear her say under oath what the White House knew about
terrorism before 9/11, what they‘ve been doing about it
since, why Saddam Hussein was a tremendous supporter of
terrorism and why that justified the war in Iraq.
I think she ought to take the opportunity, with all those
cameras there, with the whole entire country, world
focused on those hearings, if she comes forward, and use
that as an opportunity to explain what we‘re doing about
terrorism, why the war in Iraq was justified, not so much
in terms of weapons of mass death, but in terms of an
effort in the war on terror to unseat a government that
was very, very supportive of terrorists in general and I
think even al Qaeda in particular.
It‘s a wonderful platform for her to explain exactly what
the administration‘s policy is.
Let me bring in “TIME” magazine‘s Tim Burger.
Tim, you‘ve written about this. And I know there are a lot
of Americans out there are listening to this debate,
saying, hold on. Wait a second. Let me get this straight.
Condi Rice will testify not in front of cameras, but
she‘ll go before this committee and testify. She‘ll say
the same thing that she‘s been saying on TV. What‘s the
difference? What‘s the distinction? Why is the White House
botching this issue this way?
TIM BURGER, “TIME”: Well, John Fund has mentioned that
there are a bunch of important precedents at stake. That‘s
true. Some would say that the 9/11 attacks are a precedent
unto themselves.
The commissioners, both sides of the aisle, as you know,
are saying that they want to see her in public. Part of
what they see their mission as is to sort of tell the
story publicly. And also in public you‘ll have her
required to answer questions of the commissioners,
depending on the format they choose were she to appear.
So they want to be able to have these 10 or so
commissioners asking her some questions with follow-ups
and you know telling the story publicly to the extent she
can.
SCARBOROUGH: So what‘s the difference, though? Again, John
Fund‘s saying well, maybe she can testify behind closed
doors. But, again, what‘s the difference? You say the
White House is claiming that they have privilege and
there‘s a long history of this, but aren‘t they just
shooting themselves in the foot?
BURGER: Well, that‘s what one of the Republican
commissioners has said. John Lehman, who has worked in the
Reagan administration, said it‘s a political blunder of
the first order and he doesn‘t understand why they‘re
taking this approach. And I think the other Republicans
and Democrats on the commission also don‘t understand.
There are important precedents at stake. Many would say
that there are ways for them to work it out so that
precedent isn‘t implicated, but in any case, I think
everyone hopes that there will not be another 9/11-type
precedent that might change the political calculus in the
first place.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Hold on a second.
Tim was talking about the chairman of the 9/11 commission
was calling on Condoleezza Rice to testify, saying that
executive privilege doesn‘t apply and this is what he
said.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JOHN LEHMAN, 9/11 COMMISSION MEMBER: We‘re not an arm of
the Congress. Once again, I think the lawyers are driving
the train here and we‘ve got to get them out of control of
this because they‘re saying that we‘re an arm of the
Congress, which we‘re not except in the sense that every
agency of the government is an arm of the Congress. We
don‘t report to Congress.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: John Fund, as you know, that‘s a Republican.
That‘s a George Bush supporter. That‘s a man that says
this White House has nothing to hide. Talk to his point
where he says, this is not Congress, so she should testify
without any privilege.
FUND: Look, John Lehman is right that this is politically
harmful to the administration. It looks bad, Joe, I agree.
But he has not challenged the legal definition of
executive privilege. This commission was created by
Congress. It may not be a complete creature of Congress,
but it is created out of the legislative branch. And I
think the administration is on very solid legal ground.
The polls show that the public wants to hear from Condi
Rice, but the format, whether it‘s public or private, open
testimony, is not that important to them.
I think it would be nice if she did it, but I think she
has to pay attention to the powers of the presidency. This
precedent will be cited for decades and even 100 years
from now.
(CROSSTALK)
MURDOCK: Joe, I think this is something very interesting
for a constitutional law class, but politically speaking I
think the administration is now into the second week that
this is going on. This may go on into a third week. And I
think they really need to be able to get on their game and
go on offense, rather than another four or five days of
defense on this.
I think the way to do it, as my friend Quin Hillyer of
“The Mobile Register” suggests is, actually assert
privilege and then go ahead and waive it and say, under
these unusual circumstances, we‘ll waive the privilege and
go ahead and testify. That‘s one way to maintain the
privilege legally, while politically going forward and
coming forth and talking about this. And I think
Condoleezza Rice is someone who can talk very forthrightly
and very clearly on what‘s at stake here.
I think she would do a tremendous job of defending the
president and the administration‘s policies on this.
SCARBOROUGH: Tim Burger, I‘m going to give you the last
word. What is going to happen tomorrow? Do you think
they‘re strike a deal?
BURGER: There‘s lots of ways that a deal could be struck.
They could say, OK, the commission isn‘t demanding that
she come, but suddenly, Condoleezza Rice wants to come.
And they could do it in defense forums, in different ways.
It seems a lot of pressure is building for them to reach
some kind of an agreement. So that‘s definitely a big
story line to watch this week.
FUND: Joe, we‘re going to hear from her.
SCARBOROUGH: All right. All right.
Thank you so much to Deroy Murdock, John Fund, Tim Burger.
We appreciate you being with us tonight.
And let me give you the “Real Deal.” I gave it to you up
front. I‘ll give it to you here. The White House is going
to strike that deal, Condi Rice is going to talk and all
of this is going to be political damage to this White
House that didn‘t need it right now. They mishandled this
situation. They should have taken care of it right up
front. This is a very different situation. And right after
Richard Clarke spoke, somebody at the White House should
have figured out, you know what? We don‘t need to be even
having the appearance of a cover-up before the American
people because it won‘t help us out. So now what do they
have? The worst of both worlds.
Anyway, coming up, Richard Clarke isn‘t just profiting
over his failure as an intelligence officer. A mother of a
9/11 victim now says he‘s profiting off of the death of
her son, a firefighter killed in the attacks of September
11. We‘re going to talk to her next.
And then, you want to know why the chocolate makers of old
Europe were against the war in Iraq? You‘ll be appalled at
who got rich scamming the U.N. oil-for-food program.
Plus, what the heck‘s going on in the California state
legislature?
Stick around for a civics lesson that everybody can
understand.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: More than 3,000 people were killed on
September 11. Does getting back to normal mean making a
buck off the attacks? Well, just ask Richard Clarke. We‘re
going to be debating that after this short break.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Former counterterrorism adviser Richard
Clarke has been the media‘s darling after attacking the
Bush administration. And he‘s set to make millions of
dollars off his book. But not everybody‘s happy about
Clarke‘s testimony or his accusations, including some 9/11
victims‘ family members.
In a letter published over the weekend, family members
said—quote -
· “We find Mr. Clarke‘s actions insensitive considering
the fact that there was always a high probability that the
9/11 Commission could be used for political gain. He
decided to risk the actual and perceived impartiality of
this important process to maximize book sales.”
With us now is Rosemary Cain. She‘s a mom who signed that
letter to Richard Clarke. Her son, firefighter George
Cain, was murdered in the attacks of 9/11.
Thank you so much, Ms. Cain, for being with us tonight.
ROSEMARY CAIN, SON KILLED IN SEPTEMBER 11 ATTACKS: Thank
you.
SCARBOROUGH: And Explain to our viewers why you think
Richard Clarke may be profiteering over the tragedies of
9/11.
CAIN: Well, he‘s clearly profiting over the tragedies of
9/11, writing a book and coming out and timing it with the
commission hearings and just giving it all the publicity
that he‘s been getting. And when questioned about it,
every answer that he gives is prefaced with, my book, my
book, my book.
So it‘s quite obvious that he‘s looking to promote his
sales, and I think it‘s sickening that anybody would make
money over the tragedy and the murders of September 11 and
all the horror and the tragedy that it‘s brought to the
families; 3,000 families practically are suffering to this
day. They‘ll be suffering—God only knows how long they‘ll
be suffering. There‘s a hole in every family‘s heart, and
this is not something that somebody should look to go out
and make money on and profit from.
SCARBOROUGH: Now, in his testimony last week, Richard
Clarke apologized on behalf of the U.S. government. And
this is what he said.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RICHARD CLARKE, FORMER COUNTERTERRORISM ADVISER: Your
government failed you. Those entrusted with protecting you
failed you. And I failed you.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: Then, of course, he went on to apologize. The
media praised him for that apology. I‘m just curious,
since you‘ve written this letter to Richard Clarke...
CAIN: Right.
SCARBOROUGH: Has he called you or contacted any other
victim‘s family and apologized to them?
CAIN: Well, no, he has not called me personally, and I am
not aware of him having called anybody else.
SCARBOROUGH: Have you heard of Clarke discussing this
letter with anybody, and, again, discussing your concerns
about the fact—the perception among victims‘ families that
he‘s profiteering over the 9/11 tragedies?
CAIN: I have heard no response whatsoever from Mr. Clarke,
and as far as I have heard, I have not heard from any of
the family members that he‘s responded. So, as far as I
know, he hasn‘t responded to it. He‘s just going on with
his agenda. And I think his apology was 2 ½ years too
late.
I think if anybody is sincere in an apology, you don‘t
wait 2 ½ years to apologize for something. We all know
that there were failures in the system. He doesn‘t have to
apologize on that end. We know that there were failures in
the system. What the families would like to see is that
all of the failures are remedied, that it never has to
happen again, that nobody else in this country ever has to
live through another terrorist attack.
SCARBOROUGH: But the bottom line is that you and these
other victims‘ families believe that he dropped this book,
released this book at a time right before this testimony
to maximize the profits and make I guess it‘s being
reported now $1 million-plus off of this book, right?
CAIN: Well, I think if he‘s sincere in his heart of his
apology, then maybe he should take all the profits from
this book and give it to charity. Maybe he should set up
some scholarship funds for children or make some kind of a
worthy cause of it. If he‘s sincere in his apology, he
won‘t be looking to make any money out of it.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Rosemary Cain, we‘ll leave on that
very high note. In fact, we‘ll try to contact Mr. Clarke
and see if he‘s interested in doing exactly that. There
are a lot of great 9/11 charities and you‘ve given us good
food for thought tonight. Thanks a lot for being here.
CAIN: Thank you, Joe. Thank you for hearing from the
families.
SCARBOROUGH: All right.
Now let‘s bring in our panel. With us now is former Navy
Secretary John Dalton, a good friend of Pensacola, also
Jack Burkman. He‘s a Republican strategist who questions
the timing of Clarke‘s allegation.
Mr. Secretary, you just heard from Rosemary Cain, who of
course tragically lost her son on 9/11. She believes that
Richard Clarke timed this book to profit off of the 9/11
tragedy. What‘s your response?
JOHN DALTON, FORMER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY: Well, I don‘t
know Dick Clarke personally, Congressman. And I think he
has raised some issues that need to be answered, as
Senator Chuck Hagel said. I‘ve never worked with him
personally, but I know a lot of people from the first Bush
administration and from the Clinton administration that
worked with him and had good things to say about him as
being a hard-working, tenacious, get-the-job-done kind of
guy who was truly loved by his staff.
And clearly Condoleezza Rice must have thought highly of
him because she put him in the chair to manage the crisis
on 9/11, which was the worst tragedy our country has
suffered since Pearl Harbor. And President Bush thought
highly enough about him to give him a handwritten note
thanking him for his dignity and honor of service to the
country.
So I think the important thing here is not the messenger,
but the message. There‘s some particular facts that are
important for us to learn from this tragedy. And it‘s very
important that we learn from the tragedy and that we don‘t
make the same mistakes again.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Hold on a second, Jack.
I want to play you something, because Richard Clarke went
on “60 Minutes” and he testified before the 9/11
Commission. He‘s set to make $1 million on his book, but
he thinks he‘s the victim. This is what he said. Actually,
this is what he said on “Meet the Press.”
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, “MEET THE PRESS”)
CLARKE: They‘re engaged in a campaign, people on the
taxpayers rolls, dozens of people on the taxpayers rolls
are engaged in a campaign to destroy me personally and
professionally, because I had the temerity to suggest that
the American people should consider whether or not the
president had done a good job on the war on terrorism. The
issue is not me. The issue is the president‘s job in the
war on terrorism.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: Jack Burkman, respond. Does the Republican
National Committee have a hit list and is Mr. Clarke on
the top of it?
JACK BURKMAN, REPUBLICAN STRATEGIST: Not to my knowledge.
And I‘ll tell you, he‘s learned from Clinton. He‘s already
making himself out to be a victim. He‘s playing all the
angles. But I will say this, Joe. If this guy felt that
what he had to say was so darn important that the American
people had to hear it because it could be instrumental in
preventing another attack, why would he wait 2 ½ years to
say it?
If I held, if you held, if anybody holds information, if
their motive is pure, if their motive is to help the
people, you would release that information two years ago.
You wouldn‘t release it now. I don‘t know how anybody
could look at this and see anything but bad motives given
the timing. And you can say the same thing for Madeleine
Albright with her testimony. It was much the same story.
I‘ll tell you something else about Richard Clarke. I very
strongly
suspect that he has committed felonies in his testimony by
releasing
classified information. No one has looked into this, but
the things that
he cites could only have come—and I‘d bet if you go
through that—if
the Justice Department goes through those transcripts,
you‘ll find several
instances, each one is a felony count where this guy has
committed crimes -
· felony count, where this guy has committed crimes.
And I‘ll tell you something else. For a person who served
in the Clinton administration, and you remember December
9, 1998, when impeachment was on the Hill and you were
there, that team bombed Iraq committing what I argued
then, will still argue now was nothing but blatant
treason, the use of American military force. He was a part
of that.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Jack, we don‘t want to get off on
too many sidetracks here.
I do want to play the secretary, though, another quote
from “Meet the Press,” because over the last week the
media‘s been portraying Richard Clarke as a long time
Republican and some have said he‘s even a hawk. But
Richard Clarke answered for himself yesterday on “Meet the
Press.”
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, “MEET THE PRESS”)
TIM RUSSERT, HOST: Did you vote for George Bush in 2000?
CLARKE: No, I did not.
RUSSERT: You voted for Al Gore?
CLARKE: Yes, I did.
RUSSERT: In 2004, you‘ll vote for John Kerry?
CLARKE: I‘m not going to endorse John Kerry. That‘s what
the White House wants me to do. And they want to say I‘m
part of the Kerry campaign. I‘ve already pledged I‘m not
part of the Kerry campaign and I will not serve in a Kerry
administration.
RUSSERT: Will you vote for him?
CLARKE: That‘s my business.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
SCARBOROUGH: Secretary Dalton, obviously, you worked in
Washington for a long time during a contentious period
during the Clinton administration. Is it impossible for
anybody to come forward with this type of testimony and
not be blasted as a partisan or a political hack?
DALTON: Well, you know, I don‘t like to question anyone‘s
motives, Joe.
I think the point is that this man has raised some serious
questions
that need to be answered. And that‘s just not my opinion.
Senator Chuck
Hagel, a very respected, distinguished leader of the
United States Senate,
thinks that. And you know, to try to blast the messenger
and—I don‘t
think that‘s productive. This is a very important hearing.
What we‘re
trying to learn from this hearing
(CROSSTALK)
BURKMAN: But is it important hearing?
(CROSSTALK)
DALTON: I do think we should hear from Condoleezza Rice.
BURKMAN: This is not an important hearing. And I‘ll tell
you why.
What‘s the worse thing we could learn from this hearing?
We could learn that there‘s blame for 9/11. If there‘s any
blame to be levied, it can‘t be levied against George
Bush. He was only in office for seven months. If there‘s
any blame for 9/11, you have to go to the preceding eight
years. So I have problems—when you say these are important
hearings. Why? Are they looking into criminal behavior?
No. Are they looking into allegations of wrongdoing? No.
What are they looking into?
They‘re looking at an issue of presidential judgment,
which is really not for the Congress. It‘s for the voters
and it will be very much on the ballot in November.
SCARBOROUGH: Mr. Secretary, I‘ll give you the last word.
(CROSSTALK)
DALTON: If I could respond to that, this is very
important. This is the worst tragedy that‘s happened to
this country in over 60 years. And this is not a blame
game. We‘re not trying to find out who did what and why.
We‘re trying to learn from mistakes that were made and
make sure that this country does not make the same
mistakes again.
BURGER: Clarke is laying blame. You says it‘s not a blame
game.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: All right. Well, listen, we‘re going to have
to leave it there.
Mr. Secretary, good to see you, as always.
(CROSSTALK)
DALTON: Joe, nice to see you. Thank you, sir.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Jack Burkman, appreciate you being
with us also.
BURGER: Thank you, Joe.
SCARBOROUGH: And coming up, we found Saddam Hussein in a
spider hole, but before that he was living the high life
with billions of dollars from a kickback scheme that‘s now
rocking the United Nations. Do you even have to ask if the
French are involved?
But, first, let‘s get the latest headlines from the MSNBC
News Desk.
(NEWS BREAK)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Do you remember when Saddam sympathizers in
the United Nations accused America of starving Iraq‘s to
death with sanctions?
Well, it turns out that the United Nations may actually
have blood on its hands, blood from the money hundreds of
U.N. employees allegedly got from Saddam Hussein. New
allegations are blowing the cover off the $100 billion
oil-for-food scam, and the investigation into widespread
bribery and kickbacks may even take down Kofi Annan.
Raghida Dergham of “Al-Hayat” newspaper spoke with Kofi
Annan and says we shouldn‘t rush to judgment about the
United Nations. Congressman J.D. Hayworth thinks this is
more proof that the U.N. is dangerously out of touch.
J.D., explain what‘s happening in this scandal that is
unfolding at the United Nations.
REP. J.D. HAYWORTH (R) ARIZONA: Well, we talked about it
being food for oil. What it turned out to be was money for
Saddam and death to the Iraqi people.
Let me quote one figure that comes from UNICEF, the United
Nations‘ fund for children. They estimated that because of
the malfeasance here, 100,000 Iraqis per year died, 60,000
of those under the age of 5. And of the $100 billion you
mentioned earlier, Joe, $63 billion went into the pockets
of Saddam Hussein. You know
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Wait, wait. J.D., hold on. Are you telling me
that a United Nations agency is saying, because of
malfeasance in this program, that thousands of Iraqis
died?
HAYWORTH: One hundred thousand Iraqis a year, 60,000 of
those under the age of 5.
(CROSSTALK)
HAYWORTH: So all the tripe we heard about America starving
the Iraqi children was just that, total tripe.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: So the U.N. has the blood of tens of
thousands of Iraqi children on their hands?
HAYWORTH: Not only that. We also see the money being
diverted, Kofi Annan‘s son Kojo working for a consulting
group taking money, kickbacks, as detailed today in Bill
Safire‘s column in “The New York Times,” the fact that our
erstwhile allies, the French and Russians had a piece of
the action here.
This is very serious business, and it calls for incredible
reform of the United Nations, reform that France and
Russia and the U.N. itself probably not keen on getting
done.
SCARBOROUGH: Raghida Dergham, let me bring you in here,
because a Baghdad newspaper published the names of 270
people, including Kofi Annan‘s right-hand man, who got
vouchers to buy oil at a discount in exchange for keeping
quiet about corruption.
And “The New York Times” William Safire wrote this in his
column today
· quote—“At least $5 billion in kickbacks went from
corrupt contractors, mainly French and Russian, into the
pockets of Saddam and his thugs.”
Raghida, is the U.N.‘s credibility going to be destroyed
by this scandal?
RAGHIDA DERGHAM, NBC FOREIGN AFFAIRS ANALYST: Let‘s wait
for the investigation. And it may be correct.
And if that is the case, then there is, of course, a
credibility problem for the United Nations. But there is
no investigation yet. As to what the congressman just said
about his figures, his figures are absolutely right. The
trouble is with what he said is that these figures relate
to the impact of sanctions, sanctions imposed by the
United States and other members of the Security Council on
Iraq. This is exactly what sanctions have cost the Iraqis;
5,000 children were dying a month.
That is according to the UNICEF figures that the
congressman is
talking about. So I think there‘s a little bit of a
problem here. It
isn‘t about
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: Sir, there‘s no such thing as UNICEF figures
saying that these deaths amount to—or these deaths are
related to the corruption allegations by the United
Nations, none whatsoever.
HAYWORTH: Well, look at what we found in the wake of the
war, Raghida, hundreds of mass graves and the deaths of
people that regardless of their age on the hands of Saddam
Hussein.
(CROSSTALK)
HAYWORTH: Here‘s the crucial matter, Raghida. The fact is
Saddam was emboldened by this scam to continue on, rather
than preserving. The United Nations empowered Saddam
Hussein to continue his terror.
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: With all due respect, Congressman, I beg to
differ with you, because I—with all due respect, your
information is totally...
HAYWORTH: Sure. Saddam is a wonderful man. He was a
wonderful man,
Raghida. Try to sell that to
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: Don‘t railroad me here, Congressman. Please
don‘t. I did not say any such thing. We‘re talking about
the United Nations.
You are saying that the United Nations is the organization
that really brought about the misery to the Iraqi people,
and, in a way, you are right. It is because of the
sanctions imposed by member states of the United Nations,
including the United States.
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: Secondly—please, sir, in terms of Saddam Hussein
having been responsible for the death of many Iraqis,
you‘re right, but this has nothing to do with this
so-called scandal and allegations.
(CROSSTALK)
HAYWORTH: It has everything to do with this, Raghida. The
fact is,
what happened is, the United Nations, through kickbacks to
its own members,
through contracts going to the French and Russians, and to
the general
misconduct, to put it mildly, of Saddam Hussein
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: You don‘t know that, Congressman. You don‘t know
it.
HAYWORTH: We don‘t know it?
(CROSSTALK)
DERGHAM: No, you don‘t.
HAYWORTH: Well, I‘ll tell you what.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Raghida, one at a time. Hold on. Hold on. One
at a time.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Raghida, hold on.
DERGHAM: OK. Surely.
SCARBOROUGH: One at a time.
I‘m going to play you—I‘ll read you what Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said when he flipped sides last week and agreed
to an outside investigation. He said—quote—“It is highly
possible that there has been quite a lot of wrongdoing.”
Now, look, on one side, you say, sure, there‘s been a lot
of wrongdoing. But on the other side of it, you seem to be
saying here tonight that the $5 billion to $10 billion
that even the U.N. is saying was probably skimmed off of
this program didn‘t starve little children that wanted the
money that needed the food.
DERGHAM: Here‘s what I‘m saying, Joe. Here‘s what I‘m
saying.
I am saying, if the United Nations officials and
governments and countries and companies belonging, be it
to the French or the Germans, are indeed involved in this
bribery charges, indeed have skimmed the Iraqi people of
their money that was supposed to be for food, then they
should be accountable. And I think William Safire is doing
the world a favor by holding their feet to the fire. So I
am all for it.
But what I‘m against is jumping to conclusions before
there is an investigation. I would like to say that this
investigation should not be only by Kofi Annan, that he is
the jury and the judge of the executioner. It should be
much more independent. And I think it‘s healthy to do this
investigation. And I‘m all for it.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: OK.
J.D., three Iraqi investigations showed the corruption was
so bad that Iraq knowingly spent millions of dollars on
rotten food and useless medicine just to get kickback
money from U.N.-approved companies. Is Congress going to
hold the United Nations‘ feet to the fire by saying we‘re
not going to continue giving you 25 percent of your budget
unless you account for where all of this money went?
HAYWORTH: You‘ll recall I brought an amendment to the
floor dealing with appropriations for the U.N. last year
that my friend, Steve King, managed in my absence, as I
couldn‘t be there that day. But I‘ll bring it back again
this time, and I welcome the fact that the International
Relations Committee, Chairman Henry Hyde, absolutely has
to move forward with hearings.
When it comes to the U.N. investigating itself, listen,
the French, the Russians, and a lot of other folks are
going to work overtime to ensure there is not a thorough
investigation.
SCARBOROUGH: Exactly.
HAYWORTH: The United States has to lead the way also. On
June 30, sovereignty day, look for the new Iraqi
government to have millions of documents currently under
seal and they will also have a hand in this as well.
SCARBOROUGH: J.D. Hayworth, you‘re exactly right. Raghida
Dergham, as always, thank you for being with in
SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY.
And coming up next, “The Passion of the Christ” opens in
the Middle East. Is it causing anti-Jewish violence, like
critics feared? Stay tuned to find out.
And then you‘re not going want to miss how these
California legislatures treat visitors to the Capitol. The
Stanford men‘s basketball team doesn‘t even deserve this.
Ouch.
ANNOUNCER: Tonight‘s SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY challenge: What
Oscar will “The Passion” be ineligible for? Is it, A, best
adapted screenplay, B, best cinematography or, C, best
foreign language film?
The answer coming up.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
ANNOUNCER: In tonight‘s SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY challenge, we
asked:
What Oscar will “The Passion” be ineligible for? The
answer is, C, best foreign language film? “The Passion” is
in Aramaic. Since there‘s no country that currently speaks
Aramaic, no country can submit it in that category.
Now back to Joe.
SCARBOROUGH: Got that one right.
“The Passion”‘s making headlines around the world. The
anti-Semitism charge is front and center in Kuwait and
France, but it‘s topping the box office in London and it‘s
leaving them crying in Damascus and it‘s getting the
bishop in Manila. Were “The Passion”‘s critics right in
predicting an anti-Jewish backlash overseas or was the
fear overblown?
With me now, we have Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, author of “The
Private Adam,” Jennifer Giroux of seethepassion.COM, and
MSNBC entertainment reporter Dana Kennedy.
Let me begin with you, Rabbi. A top Shiite cleric urged
the Kuwaiti government to let “The Passion” be shown in
the conservative Muslim nation because he said—quote—“It
reveals crimes committed by Jews against Christ.”
Rabbi, is this exactly what you were concerned about
RABBI SHMULEY BOTEACH, SPIRITUAL ADVISER: Well, I was
concerned about anti-Semitism, defamation, not only
abroad.
Before we even look at the Arab response to the film,
let‘s just look here in the United States as well.
Jennifer Giroux has been on this show several times saying
that she wants Jews to see this movie and to convert to
Christianity. Now, if that‘s not an assault on our faith,
God almighty, we live in an era and in a society of
religious openness, religious tolerance.
And we‘re supposed to believe in mutual enrichment, that
Christians and Jews can actually learn from each other
instead of replacing each other. So some of our worst
fears have been materialized even on this show. But, of
course, in places like the Middle East, it‘s far more
serious, because these are countries that are dedicated to
the physical destruction of the Jewish nation and the
Jewish state in Israel.
Now, Jennifer seems—you know, she seems not as dangerous,
of course, and innocent enough and she‘s like a fun
fanatic. But at the end of the day, to get on national TV
in the year of 2004 and say you want all Jews to convert
to Christianity, like this new book by Tim Lahaye from the
“Left Behind” series which says that when Jesus comes all
Jews will convert to Christianity. And the book has
144,000 Jews converting on television, or so I hear, and
this book will sell millions of copies.
I‘m a Jew and I‘m here to stay. And it‘s time that people
who advocate for this movie understand why the Jews have
been so concerned. But we are here to stay and we will
stand up and speak for our rights, even if there is no
violence, just because it is a lie and it‘s defamatory. We
did not kill Jesus. The Romans did, period.
SCARBOROUGH: Jennifer Giroux, are you a fun fanatic that
wants to spread anti-Semitism in America and abroad?
JENNIFER GIROUX, SEETHEPASSION.COM: Well, Joe, let‘s talk
about what happened over there with the Shiite cleric.
The only part of his statement I agree with is they should
lift the ban and all Muslims, all Jews, and all Christians
should be allowed to see this movie, because what really
has been lacking in that region over there is the message
of love and forgiveness that Christianity emulates. That
is the message of this movie. The attacks by the rabbi
only tell me he fears people seeking the truth.
Unfortunately, what‘s going to happen is, people like this
Shiite person is going to use “The Passion of Christ” to
further their own agenda, as I feel the rabbi is doing on
this show. This message, I stand by it is true to the
Gospels. And just because one radical person invokes it in
a harmful way, it does not make us walk away from the good
that has been done. You cannot deny that we have reports
of a man who has now stepped forward and had admitted to a
murder down in Texas.
We have someone admitting to two bombings in Norway
because of the compassion that they felt that Christ
suffered for them. This is all the truth of what is going
on and you cannot deny it. We are simply saying people are
going to be—we have evidence on our Web site, conversion
stories of people who have gone to the movie and have come
out converted and changed.
BOTEACH: Jennifer, do you want all Jews to become
Christians?
GIROUX: I believe everybody needs to seek the truth,
Rabbi. You sound like you‘re afraid of that.
(CROSSTALK)
BOTEACH: Jennifer, does Judaism have any truth as a world
religion?
GIROUX: You know what, Rabbi? It sounds to me like you‘re
very...
(CROSSTALK)
BOTEACH: With all due respect, what makes you different to
Osama bin Laden, who says that his truth is the only
truth? Now, as I said, you brought the fun back into
fundamentalism. I don‘t see you, God forbid, driving
planes into building. But you‘re saying on national TV
that we have no truth.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: OK, Rabbi, you asked a very explosive
question.
Jennifer, respond.
BOTEACH: Rabbi, I think that everyone should seek the
truth at all times and seek their on conversion to emulate
the message that this movie so clearly provides for all of
us, the message of love and forgiveness.
I‘m hearing that you‘re afraid for people to do that. All
I‘m saying is that people should be given the right to go
into this movie, see it with their own eyes, and come out
of that and find their own understanding of what their
relationship with God is and where they should be. Now,
many people speculate, because of how the Muslims hold
Mary in such high esteem, this movie and Mary herself
could lead them to a better understanding of Jesus as the
son of God. That‘s nothing to fear. That‘s a beautiful
thing.
SCARBOROUGH: All right, Dana Kennedy, there have been some
remarkable reactions in America and across the world. You
know, when three Jewish brothers in France petitioned the
court there to ban “The Passion” because of anti-Semitism,
the judge in the case refused to stop the premiere this
week and said this—quote—“The film in question cannot be
considered an indictment to hatred and violence against
Jews or an affront to their dignity and security.”
You know, we‘ve got court cases in France. We‘ve got
Yasser Arafat coming out talking about this. We‘ve got
Muslim clerics throughout the Middle East discussing “The
Passion.” Talk about the international response it‘s had
not only at the box office, but also the public outrage or
support for this movie worldwide.
DANA KENNEDY, NBC ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR: Joe, you know, I
think the headline as far as “The Passion” as a global
phenomenon, has moved away a bit from anti-Semitism to the
fact about how much money this movie is making and what a
phenomenon would become.
Who knew that a story like this would become like Arnold
Schwarzenegger or Jean-Claude Van Damme‘s movies overseas?
In England, it made two million pounds this week. And that
is a record for a subtitled foreign film opening there. I
understand Australia is one of the few places it‘s not as
big a hit as it is around the world. And I think what
people really are struck by now is just how much money
this is making and what kind of phenomenon it is.
I do think that the anti-Semitism as a subject has died
down a bit.
SCARBOROUGH: All right. Rabbi, we‘ve got 15 seconds. I‘ll
give you the final word.
BOTEACH: Well, look, come on, Joe, are we really surprised
this movie did so well? Mel Gibson took out a huge
insurance policy. It‘s called baiting the Jews. History
has shown, if you attack the Jews, you get a lot of
publicity. It‘s why Zionism equals racism is the most
famous U.N. proclamation. It‘s the reason why Adolf Hitler
is the most famous man of the 20th century.
(CROSSTALK)
GIROUX: Mel Gibson did a very brave thing.
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: Actually, you just threw more flame on the
fire.
Jennifer Giroux, I‘ll give you the last 15 seconds.
GIROUX: Well, I just think Mel Gibson did a very brave
thing. He put himself and his family on the line, open to
all kind of criticisms to bring to the big screen and
preserve for all time biblical Gospel truth. Thank you,
Mel Gibson.
Settle down, Rabbi. It‘s just a
(CROSSTALK)
SCARBOROUGH: OK, thank you, Rabbi. Thank you, Jennifer.
And, as always, thank you, Dana Kennedy.
Still to come, things are a little bit different in the
state of California and the legislature now that Arnold
Schwarzenegger is governor. But is one assemblyman taking
things too far? We‘re going to have the rest of this
painful story next.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Tomorrow night in SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY, former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright talks about God and
foreign policy and weighs in on Richard Clarke. I don‘t
think the rabbi will be in for that one.
More SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY straight ahead.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
SCARBOROUGH: Are you sick of funny politicians saying, I
feel your pain?
Well, we caught one dishing out pain. A group of Buddhist
monks from China visited the California Capitol to perform
what they call feats of strength. The former speaker of
the assembly, a Democrat, is here kicking one of the monks
right between the chopsticks. Now the monk know how it
feels to be a California taxpayer.
And this wasn‘t painful enough, here‘s another example of
the monk‘s mind over matter. He‘s demonstrating what it‘s
like to be a Republican in Congress. Ouch.
Don‘t miss our show tomorrow. He didn‘t stay on his feet.
Don‘t miss our show tomorrow night. We‘ve got former
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. She‘s going to talk
about how God influences America‘s foreign policy. And
we‘re going to ask her what she thinks of the Richard
Clarke fiasco.
And, hey, if you got comments about the show or anything
going on in the flyover country that we call SCARBOROUGH
COUNTRY, send me an e-mail at Joe@MSNBC.com.
Thanks for visiting SCARBOROUGH COUNTRY. We‘ll see you
tomorrow night.
And, Dad, happy 70th birthday. Get feeling better.
END |