RUMSFELD TELLS IT LIKE IT IS:

Mr. Rumsfeld placed the blame for the war squarely on Saddam Hussein for his “deception and defiance,” and refusal to abandon his illegal weapons program, as Libya did recently.

“It was his choice,” Mr. Rumsfeld said in a speech here to an audience of 250 government ministers, lawmakers and national security experts from 30 countries, most of them in Europe. “If the Iraqi regime had taken the same steps Libya is now taking, there would have been no war.”

I think that’s a message for, er, some other interested parties. And so, in a different way, is this:

In this climate, many officials here expected a tempered, if not conciliatory speech on Saturday from Mr. Rumsfeld, who is still regarded by many Germans and French, in particular, as a villain for his dismissive remarks about “old Europe.” Instead, Mr. Rumsfeld, feisty and unyielding, appeared eager to put a potential adversary on the defensive as he laid out the administration’s rationale for the war in the absence of any illegal Iraqi weapons.

“Think about what was going on in Iraq a year ago with people being tortured, rape rooms, mass graves, gross corruption, a country that has used chemical weapons against its own people,” he said in response to a question, his voice rising, his hands chopping the air for emphasis.

He then turned the question back on the audience. “There were prominent people from representative countries in this room that opined that they really didn’t think it made a hell of a lot of difference who won,” he said, nearly shouting. “Shocking. Absolutely shocking.”

The European leaders that Rumsfeld was addressing are — quite literally in some cases — partners in mass murder. A few tart words from Rumsfeld is the least they deserve.