From:

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/phyllisschlafly/ps200082.shtml

August 2, 2000

Danforth report asks wrong questions about Waco

By Phyllis Schlafly

Every lawyer knows that if he can control the questions, he can
get the answers he wants. The problem with the Danforth interim
report on the Waco tragedy was not the answers but the questions.
It is clear from Special Counsel John C. Danforth's report that
he defined his mission not as gathering all the facts to explain
how the fiery disaster happened but as restoring American
citizens' confidence in our government. His biggest worry was
that "61 percent of the people" believe the government was at
fault in the Waco tragedy and that this imperils "the very basis
of government."

In fact, it is the cover-up of government mistakes and bad
judgment that imperils the very basis of government. The public
correctly believes that the government has not fully acknowledged
its wrongdoing in the Waco tragedy, and the Danforth report only
adds fuel to the fire.

In a misguided attempt to dispel public opinion that the
government was at fault, Danforth deliberately restricted his
investigation to the events of April 19, 1993. Danforth boasted
in his news conference that he did not look into whether
government agents "exercised bad judgment."

But the very bad judgment of the government's attack on the
Branch Davidians is a key part of the case! Why did the Clinton
administration attack a small and pitiful religious group,
suspected of relatively trivial offenses, with two U.S. Army
tanks, U.S. Air Force aircraft and helicopters, mine detectors,
machine guns, 700 men and the secret, highly trained U.S. Delta
military force created for use against dangerous terrorists?

The picture of the U.S. Army tank ramming the Branch Davidians'
buildings will go into history as a pictorial legacy of the
Clinton administration, along with the famous photograph of the
grabbing of Elian Gonzalez with a pointed machine gun. Those
powerful images illustrate law enforcement under Bill Clinton.

Danforth declared "with 100 percent certainty" that government
agents "did not unlawfully employ the armed forces of the United
States." Even if it is true that this large-scale military
offensive was within the letter of the law (and it appears to be
a gray area), that shouldn't end the analysis.

We want to know who gave the order to use military force against
civilians who were not terrorists or any threat to others. And if
what the government did and didn't do at Waco was all within the
law, then the law ought to be changed or, at the very least,
heads should roll for such extraordinary bad judgment.

To the question, "Did federal agents start the fire?" Danforth
answered no. But the FBI spent six hours pouring into the
Davidians' wooden structure the poison gas known as CS, which is
banned for use in war by the Chemical Weapons Treaty.

Even if the Davidians were to blame for the fire, that doesn't
excuse the government's actions because both sides could be at
fault.

Why didn't the government have fire hoses ready to save the
children?

Danforth didn't ask any questions about why the government
conducted a 51-day siege of the Branch Davidians' compound. Nor
did he ask why the government cut off the Davidians' water and
electricity and tormented them with recordings of animal screams
played at a deafeningly high pitch.

Danforth reported that the government "did not engage in a
massive conspiracy and cover-up." The weasel word is massive. He
had to admit that FBI agents and lawyers did conceal information
about the pyrotechnic devices the FBI fired, about the videotape
proving that an FBI agent authorized the explosive rounds and
about the evidence of fired rounds collected at the scene.

Danforth also admitted that these FBI concealments "contributed
to the public perception of a cover-up and permitted a false
impression to persist." If there wasn't a cover-up, why did the
FBI, on the day of the final assault, keep newsmen and television
cameras on the side of the building where they couldn't see or
photograph the military offensive?

The Danforth report blames the public for believing that the
government was at fault and for ignoring "the contrary evidence
that the FBI waited for 51 days without firing a shot." But he
didn't ask why the FBI didn't wait 51 weeks rather than
initiating an attack that resulted in the incineration of more
than 80 people including at least 20 children, most of them
younger than age 10.

So many questions were excluded from the Danforth investigation
because it was limited to events on April 19.

For example, why didn't the government arrest Koresh on one of
the many days when he went jogging outside the compound?

The Danforth report appears to be designed to restore public
confidence in our government rather than to discover what
happened and why.

Unfortunately, this report looks like government people closing
ranks to protect each other, and that does not restore our
confidence.

©2000 Copley News Service



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