While I haven't seen this yet, perhaps it will be on the news tonight, I
would need to understand the context prior to forming a judgment.  For
example, what question prompted this answer and what was the complete
answer.  I am very wary of any single sentence quotes.  It is too easy to
misunderstand what was actually communicated.

And maybe, just maybe, the reason almost nobody quoted him was that it
wasn't newsworthy.

-----Original Message-----
From: Angel Stewart [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2003 3:05 PM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Bush does it again :-)


"July 15, 2003  |  A "darn good" quote that almost nobody quoted
"We gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let
them in."
George W. Bush uttered that amazing sentence yesterday to justify the
war in Iraq, according to the Washington Post.

What? Yes, I promise that's what the man said. (And by "him," the
president clearly meant Saddam Hussein -- not Kim Jong Il, who actually
has refused to let international inspectors into North Korea.)

Now a presidential statement so frontally at variance with the
universally acknowledged facts obviously presents a problem for the
White House press corps. He wasn't joking, and he didn't sound
disoriented or unwell. Although Dana Priest and Dana Milbank wrote the
story as delicately as they possibly could, they couldn't make it seem
less weird:

"The president's assertion that the war began because Iraq did not admit
inspectors appeared to contradict the events leading up to war this
spring: Hussein had, in fact, admitted the inspectors and Bush had
opposed extending their work because he did not believe them effective."

Appeared to contradict the events leading up to war? Indeed, that's an
exceedingly mild description of what Bush said. There's no plausible
explanation, unless the president suddenly flashed back to his Yale
sophomore philosophy seminar, grappling with the argument that
everything we perceive is mere illusion.

For the moment, however, let's just assume reality does exist. What
possessed the president to make an assertion that everyone on the planet
knows to be untrue? And who is going to take the responsibility for this
one? Did George Tenet vet Bush's statement? Do the British have a secret
dossier proving that Saddam never actually admitted Hans Blix and the
UNMOVIC teams? Will Condi Rice or Donald Rumsfeld show up on Fox News
next weekend to explain why Bush's statement is "technically accurate,"
even though he shouldn't have said it?

As hard to explain as what Bush said is the press corps' failure to
report his stunning gaffe. The sentence quoted above doesn't appear in
today's New York Times report, for example. Yet there is no question
about what he said -- undoubtedly to the amazement of both Kofi Annan,
who was sitting beside him at the time, and the dozens of reporters who
were present during their brief joint press conference.

Anyone who doesn't believe me (or the Post) can watch Bush say the exact
words quoted above here, toward the end of the White House's own
videotape of his remarks, under the headline "President Reaffirms Strong
Position on Liberia."

Another recent president once said something that was blatantly untrue,
if fairly trivial, and the videotape of his statement was replayed
again, and again, and again, and again ...

-Joe Conason"

-Gel




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