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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (22562)9/12/2006 11:23:18 AM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
Bill Clinton's real record on fighting terrorism

Betsy's Page

The National Review reprints an article from Byron York in 2001. It is just devastating and shows how truly lucky Bill Clinton is that the ABC documentary didn't do a complete examination of his approach to fighting terrorism.

<<< June 25, 1996, a powerful truck bomb exploded outside the Khobar Towers barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, tearing the front from the building, blasting a crater 35 feet deep, and killing 19 American soldiers. Hundreds more were injured. When news reached Washington, President Bill Clinton vowed to bring the killers to justice. “The cowards who committed this murderous act must not go unpunished,” he said angrily. “Let me say again: We will pursue this. America takes care of our own. Those who did it must not go unpunished.” The next day, leaving the White House to attend an economic summit in France, Clinton had more tough words for the attackers. “Let me be very clear: We will not resist” — the president corrected himself — “we will not rest in our efforts to find who is responsible for this outrage, to pursue them and to punish them.”

As Clinton spoke, his top political strategist, Dick Morris, was hard at work conducting polls to gauge the public’s reaction to the bombing.
“Whenever there was a crisis, I ordered an immediate poll,” Morris recalls. “I was concerned about how Clinton looked in the face of [the attack] and whether people blamed him.” The bombing happened in the midst of the president’s re-election campaign, and even though Clinton enjoyed a substantial lead over Republican Bob Dole, Morris worried that public dissatisfaction with Clinton on the terrorism issue might benefit Dole.

Indeed, Morris’s first poll showed less support for Clinton than he had hoped. But by the time Morris presented his findings to the president and top staffers at a political-strategy meeting a few days later, public approval of Clinton’s response had climbed — something Morris noted in his written agenda for the session:

>>>SAUDI BOMBING — recovered from Friday and looking great
Approve Clinton handling 73-20
Big gain from 63-20 on Friday
Security was adequate 52-40
It’s not Clinton’s fault 76-18<<<

The numbers were a relief for the re-election team. But soon there was another crisis when, on July 17, TWA Flight 800 exploded and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on its way from New York to Paris. There was widespread suspicion that the crash was the result of terrorism (it was later ruled to be an accident), and Morris’s polling found the public growing uneasy not only about air safety but also about Clinton’s performance in the Khobar investigation. Morris found that the number of people who believed Clinton was “doing all he can to investigate the Saudi bombing and punish those responsible” was just 54 percent, while 32 percent believed he could do more. Morris feared that White House inaction would allow Dole to portray Clinton as soft on national security.

“We tested two alternative defenses to this attack: Peace maker or Toughness,” Morris wrote in a memo for the president.
In the “Peacemaker” defense, Morris asked voters to respond to the statement, “Clinton is peacemaker. Brought together Arabs and Israelis. Ireland. Bosnia cease fire. Uses strength to bring about peace.” The other defense, “Toughness,” asked voters to respond to “Clinton tough. Stands up for American interests. Against foreign companies doing business in Cuba. Sanctions against Iran. Anti-terrorist legislation held up by Republicans. Prosecuted World Trade Center bombers.” Morris found that the public greatly preferred “Toughness.”

So Clinton talked tough. But he did not act tough. >>>

There is something so vile at the thought of this guy polling his response to terrorist attacks. But we're not surprised, of course. He polled everything from whether he should tell the truth about Monica when the story first broke to where he should vacation. The man is empty. All that remains is his ego.

No wonder the Democrats were so scared that the ABC show would open up debate again on what his administration might have done differently. They're just lucky that ABC didn't include a scene of Dick Morris delivering his poll responses after the terrorist attacks.

The American people used to say that they wanted a leader who would act according to what he thought was right and not according to polls. Well, they have such a leader in George W. Bush. But it turns out that many people would just prefer to have someone cater to their preferences. They seem to prefer the poll-driven presidency. Whether such lack of leadership will ultimately keep us safer or not is beside the point.

betsyspage.blogspot.com

article.nationalreview.com
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