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IMDbPro

Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War

  • 2004
  • 56m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
945
MA NOTE
Uncovered: The Whole Truth About the Iraq War (2004)
DocumentaryWar

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueInterviews with varied U.S officials and experts offer a deconstruction on the Bush administration's case for war in Iraq in the wake of 9/11.Interviews with varied U.S officials and experts offer a deconstruction on the Bush administration's case for war in Iraq in the wake of 9/11.Interviews with varied U.S officials and experts offer a deconstruction on the Bush administration's case for war in Iraq in the wake of 9/11.

  • Director
    • Robert Greenwald
  • Stars
    • John Dean
    • David Albright
    • Robert Baer
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,7/10
    945
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Robert Greenwald
    • Stars
      • John Dean
      • David Albright
      • Robert Baer
    • 11Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 9Commentaires de critiques
    • 60Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Rôles principaux25

    Modifier
    John Dean
    John Dean
    • Self - Former White House Counsel to President Nixon
    David Albright
    • Self - Physicist and former weapons inspector with the IAEA Action team
    Robert Baer
    Robert Baer
    • Self - Former CIA operative who served in Iraq and Lebanon
    Milton Bearden
    Milton Bearden
    • Self - Former Head of the CIA's Societ…
    Rand Beers
    • Self - Former Special Assistant to the President and National Security Council Senior Director for Combating Terrorism
    Bill Christison
    • Self - Former CIA Director of the Office of Regional and Political Analysis
    David Corn
    David Corn
    • Self - Washington Editor of the Nation Magazine
    Philip Coyle
    • Self - Former Assistant Security of Defense and Director of Operational Test and Evaluation at the Pentagon
    Patrick Eddington
    • Self - Former CIA Analyst during the 1991 Iraq War
    Chas Freeman
    • Self - Former Assistant Secretary of Defense and Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
    Graham Fuller
    • Self - Former Vice Chairman of the National Intelligence Council at the CIA
    Melvin Goodman
    Melvin Goodman
    • Self - 20 year Senior CIA Analyst
    • (as Mel Goodman)
    John Brady Kiesling
    • Self - Former Political Counselor to the US Embassy Athens, Greece
    Karen Kwiatkowski
    • Self - Former Air Force Lt. Colonel
    Patrick Lang
    • Self - Former Chief of Middle East Intelligence at the Defense Intelligence Agency
    David MacMichael
    • Self - 13 year CIA Analyst
    Ray McGovern
    • Self - Former Chairman of the National Intelligence Estimate
    Scott Ritter
    • Self - Former Marine Captain and UN Weapons Inspector in Iraq from 1991-98
    • Director
      • Robert Greenwald
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs11

    7,7945
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    Avis en vedette

    10DennisLittrell

    Blistering

    Watching the talking heads in archival news clips from TV in this documentary one is just amazed at how obvious it is that the Bush administration lied about its reasons for invading Iraq. Of course we have the benefit of hindsight and know for a fact that the weapons of mass destruction were not there. But the really striking thing is that all these so-called leaders of our country--Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, and yes, Colin Powell--KNEW they were lying.

    As Al Franken so succinctly said, "It's one thing for a President to lie about his sex life. It's another to lie about why we are sending our young men and women into battle."

    What this documentary does through interviews with leading experts in government, the military, and the intelligence communities, juxtaposed before, between and following the many dire pronouncements from the administration, is demonstrate beyond a shadow of a doubt that what they said was propaganda, disinformation--the Big Lie--dished out to the Congress,the Press and the American people.

    The real question is why? What were the real reasons for Bush's invasion of Iraq? Before I attempt to answer that question, two things, One, this documentary is utterly convincing in its indictment of the Bush administration and will be almost impossible to watch by those who supported the war and continue to support the war. The evidence for the massive mendacity is so vividly expressed by knowledgeable and experienced people within and without the government--people like former Ambassador Joe Wilson, former Director of the CIA Stansfield Turner, anti-terrorism expert Rand Beers, former Assistant Secretary of Defense Philip Coyle, retird Col Patrick Lang, and at least a dozen more--that only the most hardened neocons and faith-based True Believers could doubt the subterfuge. Incidentally, it was Wilson's wife, an undercover agent for the CIA, who was deliberately exposed by leaks from the Bush administration in order to punish Wilson for his expression of the truth about WMD.

    Two, the real blame beyond the Bush administration lies with the Press and with the Congress. If medals were given for cowardice, members of the Press and the Congress would have chests ablaze with bronze, silver and gold. The Press simply abdicated its Fourth Estate responsibility through fear of reprisals from the Bush administration, while the Congress dared not go against the Bush propaganda machine for fear that it would be labeled anti-American. In fact their cowardly and irresponsible behavior was deeply anti-American while it was solidly pro-Bush. They both kept the American people in ignorance about the real reasons for the war.

    Okay what were those reasons? Oil? Of course this was a factor. Notice that other horrendous dictators elsewhere in the world are not removed from power by an American invading force.

    To right the wrong that the first president Bush did when he kept Saddam Hussein in power after the Gulf War? Yes, but here is the beginning of the stupidity. The senior Bush pulled up short of deposing Saddam Hussein because keeping him in power was considered in the best interests of the United States. We had good control over him and he served as buffer to Iranian theocratic ambitions.

    To demonstrate to the world the awesome might of the US military (the "shock and awe" that had Rumsfeld practically drooling) and show our willingness to use force if necessary? Yes. This is probably the most important psychological and geopolitical reason for invading Iraq. That it was immoral and likely to further alienate our allies and turn the vast majority of Muslims throughout the world into enemies didn't seem to occur to Bush and the neocons. Notice that another effect has been to convince Iran that it needs to acquire nuclear weapons, since it is obvious that the Bush administration isn't about to invade a country that has them (e.g., North Korea, Pakistan).

    To mollify the American people, so many of whom naturally felt a great need after 9/11 to see some kind of action taken, any action to Show Strength, like a bull whirling around, swinging its horns at anything near.

    To smoke-screen our failure to get Osama bin Laden and the general failure in Afghanistan? Absolutely. Blowing up great mounds of dirt in Afghanistan was NOT satisfactory, and going into nuked-up Pakistan to get bin Laden was not palatable.

    To provide business for Halliburton and other corporations close to Bush and members of his administration? Well, that was one of the effects of the war.

    To subconsciously get into the minds of soccer moms and make them feel safer by making US soldiers (who get paid for this sort of thing) the target for terrorists in Iraq instead of civilians at home? Possibly. Again, that was part of the effect of the war.

    To help Bush win in 2004? Without doubt. Being a "war time" president would give Bush a big advantage over any Democrat. A quick "victory" over Iraq (celebrated aboard an aircraft carrier with Bush in pilot's gear strutting around with a helmet tucked under his arm shaking hands) would allow him to go one up on his father who foolishly abdicated such a possible advantage and lost the next election. BTW, film of the Bush strut is shown in the documentary more fully and more embarrassingly than the nightly news dared show it at the time. You have to see it to believe it.

    I think this last reason is the most compelling reason that Bush went to war, whether he realizes it or not: he wanted to win, not so much the war on terror, but the next election.

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
    5turing77

    Not much here...

    This review regards the 55-minute version. It is not a good documentary. It has more substance and gravitas than Fahrenheit 9/11--which was pointless propaganda--but it is very amateurish-looking, poorly edited, and you can tell, as director Greenwald himself attests, that it was a rush job. After the run-through of all the interviewees at the beginning, some get only one line (Stansfield Turner, Clare Short), and some are forgotten altogether (Thomas White). There were only about five or six individuals that got the bulk of face-time, and you get the impression that Greenwald overreached a bit in trying to assemble an impressive number of credible people to support the anti-war position. From a political standpoint, whether you think that the Bush administration used WMD as a pretext to invade, or whether the President sincerely thought that the weapons existed is moot: with an all-volunteer army, the anti-war forces were never going to get traction. Had the draft been in place in 2003, Kerry would be President right now. But even if most Americans polled think Iraq wasn't worth it, they still support this administration. Without coercion to fight, the anti-war left is barking in the wind.
    6dbborroughs

    Important But It Repeats Itself

    Running only 56 minutes, its too long for what it is.

    Understand, I'm against the war and do think we were lied to, but I don't think that we need to see Bush and his administration shifting and shifting and shifting their stories for an hour. Its the same thing over and over, and after half an hour of this the point was made.

    Granted the entire film is not just the shifting stories, there are interviews with experts, and they are the high points of the film. Why the more of these weren't put into the film is beyond me. Granted they are on the DVD as an extra, but as of right now I'm too unhappy with the film to continue onward.

    6 out of 10, yes it makes the point but it goes on a bit too long.
    8esoder

    Right or Left, you should see this before you vote in '04

    I was invited to a viewing of this film at a neighbor's house up the street. I thought it was a neighborhood get together, but it turned out to be a simultaneous nationwide viewing sponsored by moveon.org. So my guard was up as I was surrounded by a lot of Bush hating liberals, but the movie had just started as I arrived and I was quickly seated in the back. So I decided to stick it out and watch. I'm glad I did.

    All along, I felt that the story we've been told about why we are in Iraq has changed over time. I remember that we were sure that there were weapons ready to be unleashed on us or given to Al-Queda terrorists who would smuggle them in to our country and cause more damage than the World Trade Center attack. Then it was not so much the weapons as the weapons programs. And there were those "mobile weapons labs". And then it was simply to liberate the Iraqi people. It's all jumbled in my mind and I can't remember exactly when and how the official reason change, I just know that it did somehow.

    The best thing about this film is that it documents the subtle changes over time by showing our leaders speaking at various times before and after our invasion of Iraq. There is no "liberal bias" like you get from the news sometimes, it was simply factual presentation of what our leaders told us and when.

    It also presents documentary evidence of things we were mislead about. The "yellow cake" in Niger, the "uranium enrichment tubes" that were actually not suitable for that purpose, the "mobile weapons labs", the satellite evidence and so on.

    After seeing this movie, I am left with two possibilities. We were either lied to deliberately or our leaders were grossly negligent and incompetent. Whatever your political views, this movie should make you angry about how we have been mislead. It pulls together a lot of information that is jumbled in the public mind and makes it clear.

    If you can stand hearing the views of the people that gravitate to this sort of thing, I encourage you to watch it at a local group presentation. Or buy a copy from the website and watch it with friends. It brings up a lot for discussion and thought.
    10kysparkysloan

    Eye-opening. Don't even think about Iraq before you watch this.

    Former CIA, Ambassadors, Senators, and other Washington DC insiders sum up what they know about the "Iraq war;" Iraq's supposed ties with 9-11 and Al-Qaeda, and the lies and mis-information the Bush administration has fed the public to justify this outrage known as "Operation Enduring Freedom."

    This is a must-see.

    Plus de résultats de ce genre

    Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers
    7,6
    Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers
    Uncovered: The War on Iraq
    7,5
    Uncovered: The War on Iraq

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    • Citations

      former White House council to Richard Nixon: The most troubling thing about the fact of the distortions and the misleading statements that Bush gave Congress, is that it is a federal felony, it's a crime, to mislead and distort information and present it to the Congress.

    • Connexions
      Edited into Uncovered: The War on Iraq (2004)

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    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 3 novembre 2004 (Spain)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Truth Uncovered
    • Lieux de tournage
      • ÉTATS-UNIS
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 50 000 $ US (estimation)
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

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    • Durée
      56 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color

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