“Late Show” host Stephen Colbert’s clash with former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld on his CBS show on Monday was anything but a laughing matter.
Colbert, who infamously played a parody of hawkish conservatives for years, took Rumsfeld to task for his role in the build-up to and execution of the war in Iraq. Recalling Rumseld’s widely criticized 2002 press briefing remarks about “known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns,” Colbert argued that there are some things that are “unknown knowns, which are the things that we know and then we chose not to know them or not let other people know we know.” A deadly serious Colbert then brought up as an example of that a declassified September 2002 memo that acknowledged the WMD analysis was flawed.
“We were presented a partial picture … do you think that was the right thing to do?” Colbert asked Rumsfeld, who was appearing on the show to ostensibly promote a new app he helped create, which fuses Solitaire with a game invented decades ago by the legendary late British prime minister Winston Churchill.
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Rumsfeld demurred with a remark alluding to Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton’s email scandal (“I don’t put classified things on my website”) and a long-winded defense of then President George W. Bush’s actions coupled with an acknowledgment that intelligence gathering is an imprecise science.
“If it were a fact, it wouldn’t be called intelligence,” Rumsfeld said, drawing uncomfortable laughs from the studio audience.
“Wow,” Colbert quipped. “I think you answered my question.”









