Where does such sub geniuses as Bachman get this stuff?

http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/11/05/obama.asia.cost/index.html?hpt=C1

Debunking the myth: The cost of Obama's trip to Asia

By the CNN Wire Staff
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Claim: Obama's trip costs $200 million a day
The report from an Indian news agency doesn't appear true, a former
Bush aide says
The claim is based on an anonymous provincial official in India
The White House and Pentagon have dismissed the report

(CNN) -- It's a story that originated from a single, unnamed sourced
in India -- but it quickly gained momentum, spreading like wildfire
among critics of the Obama administration in the United States and
eventually, the airwaves.

The claim: The United States will be "spending a whopping $200 million
per day" on President Barack Obama's trip to Asia.

That's roughly the amount the federal government spends each day on
the war in Afghanistan. The figure has been dismissed by the White
House as "wildly inflated."

What's more, the claim doesn't appear to hold water.

The former chief of staff for George W. Bush told CNN's Anderson
Cooper in a Thursday interview that it doesn't pass the "sniff test."

"It doesn't to me, but I think the White House is appropriate in
saying they don't talk about what it costs for the president to
travel," said Andrew Card. "We want our president to be safe wherever
he goes. I can't imagine it would cost $200 million a day.

"If it costs anywhere close to that number, the president should be
asking tough questions of the Defense Department and the Secret
Service and the State Department. But he should also be paying
attention to keeping his entourage as small as credibly possible and
still do the job that he has to do for the country as he travels."

While the White House has not released specifics on the cost of the
trip, citing security concerns, White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage
has said, "It's safe to say these numbers are wildly inflated."

Those numbers, according to Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann, are:
$200 million a day, $2 billion total, 34 diverted Navy ships, a
2,000-person presidential entourage, and 870 hotel rooms in India.

"And these are five-star hotel rooms at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel,"
Bachmann told CNN's "AC 360" Wednesday night.

Pressed by Cooper to back up her numbers, Bachmann said, "These are
the numbers that are coming out in the press."

The press she was referring to is the Press Trust of India, one of the
largest news organizations in that country. Its source for Tuesday's
article on the cost of Obama's trip was based on a single anonymous
source: "a top official of the Maharashtra government privy to the
arrangements for the high-profile visit."

The Press Trust article was picked up by The Drudge Report and other
sites online and quickly made its way into conservative talk radio,
sparking outrage by the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Michael Savage and
others.

The White House and Pentagon have fielded questions about the Indian
report and have dismissed the claims in the article.

"I will take the liberty this time of dismissing as absolutely absurd
this notion that somehow we're deploying 10 percent of the Navy, some
34 ships and an aircraft carrier in support of the president's trip to
Asia," Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell told reporters this week.
"That's just comical. Nothing close to that is -- is -- being done."

While the exact cost of Obama's 10-day trip to Asia is not known to
the public, an examination of similar presidential excursions in the
past support the likelihood that the $200 million-a-day figure is
exaggerated.

For example, an 11-day trip by then-President Bill Clinton to Africa
in 1998 involved about 1,300 people cost $5.2 million a day, according
to the federal Government Accountability Office, which adjusted for
inflation.

Obama's trip, which kicks off Friday, is intended to expand export
markets and strengthen security cooperation in what he considers a
region vital to U.S. interests.

The trip to India, Indonesia, South Korea and Japan encompasses a G-20
summit, an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, major holidays in
India and Indonesia, and bilateral talks with Chinese President Hu
Jintao and at least five other leaders, as well as four presidential
news conferences.

It's all part of an administration focus on Asia as a strategic region
in the 21st century, said Ben Rhodes, the deputy national security
adviser for strategic communications.

The president's itinerary in India includes a speech to the Indian
parliament, a state dinner and a wreath-laying at the grave of Indian
independence leader Mahatma Gandhi.


-- 
Larry C. Lyons
web: http://www.lyonsmorris.com/lyons
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/larryclyons
--
People need to realize that the plural of anecdote is not data.

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