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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (366015)3/4/2003 11:10:30 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
I have no doubt that another will be available to remove hillary in 2006. Every dummy dem removed is pro American and anti-hate.

We also have sniveling bill in the news.

Tuesday Mar. 4, 2003; 10:45 a.m. EST

Clinton: 'Right Wingers' Won't Let Me Help Bush

Ex-president Bill Clinton is claiming that the Bush
White House turned to him in April 2001 to help solve
the crisis prompted by China's downing of a U.S.
surveillance plane over the South China Sea - and that
the Bush administration would use him more except for
the objections of "right wingers."

"The Administration's only asked me to do two things,"
Clinton tells the Atlantic Monthly for its March issue.
"One is to go to East Timor, which I was happy to do.
The other was to talk to Jiang Zemin. Both of us
happened to be in Hong Kong, and we had that plane down
in China."

At the time the Bush White House said Clinton had set up
the meeting with China's leader without seeking
permission. "The White House respects (Clinton's) right
to go as a private citizen and expressed no objection...
He's not representing anything," Press Secretary Ari
Fleischer told reporters.

But the ex-president not only insisted to Atlantic's
James Fallows that he was asked to intercede during the
spy plane standoff, he maintained that the Bush White
House would ask for his help more often except that they
fear angering "right wingers."

"They have to be careful about that, because they depend
on all those right wingers for support and they've spent
ten years saying what terrible people Hillary and I
were, and they've got to preserve their credibility. If
they asked me to do too much they'd wonder if they
didn't mean it then or don't mean it now."

Clinton claimed that in the past the Bush White House
"didn't mean it" when they criticized him and did so
only because "it was in the interests of so many people
to do it."

Apparently stung by complaints from Sen. John McCain,
R-Az., who said two weeks ago that he and ex-President
Carter should "shut up" and stop trying to undermine the
current administration with so much public criticism,
Clinton defended his outspokenness.

"If and when (the Bush adminsitration does) things with
which I disagree, particularly if they reverse a
specific policy, as they did with the comprehensive
test-ban treaty, Kyoto, international criminal court,
strengthening the bioweapons convention, a number of
other things-then I don't think I have to go on the
attack. I just have to say, This is their view, this is
my view, here's why I believe the way I do. I don't
think that's being hateful or bad for the country or
anything else."

Clinton continued, "Even when I give these political
speeches, almost in every speech I say, I don't want you
ever to treat them the way they treated me. Don't do
it."

He also said that the United States has a lot to answer
for in the current crisis over Iraq, since the Reagan
administration backed Saddam Hussein during the
Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s.

"We have a lot to answer for, and he is basically partly
our creature," Clinton argued, pointing to U.S. actions
under the Reagan administration, which he said "looked
the other way" as Saddam built stockpiles of anthrax.

"I'm not criticizing President Bush on this because I
did the same thing. I've sat there and pontificated
about how [Saddam] is the only guy to use chemical
weapons on his own people. Yeah he did it, and the
Reagan Administration was for him when he did it. Nobody
raised a peep then, because he was against Iran. We now
know that he got his anthrax strain from an American
company while we looked the other way."

Clinton also cited an unsubstantiated report claiming
that Reagan administration CIA Director, the late
William Casey, wanted to arm Saddam with U.S. munitions,
saying, "We also know that, or at least a British
journalist has alleged, that Casey tried to give him
cluster bombs."

The ex-president then quickly added, "I don't know if
that's true or not 'cause I read it in the British press
and you never can tell."

Last month former Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger
vehemently denied the Reagan administration tried to arm
Iraq during the late 1980s.

"We didn't treat them to weapons or anything of that
kind," Weinberger told radio host Sean Hannity. "Some of
our companies tried to do that. Some of them probably
violated our export control rules. But we in the
government certainly did not. And we certainly tried our
best to prevent them from getting any weapons on either
side."

As for the coming U.S. attack on Iraq, Clinton said he
would condition his support on whether he believes the
Bush administration has done everything it can to gain
the support of other countries, telling Atlantic, "I
will support the President if I believe he has done
everything reasonably possible to build not... not only
to build a broader coalition but to do it within a
framework of trying to strengthen the UN."

But Clinton urged the Bush administration to keep trying
to make Iraq sanctions work rather than rushing into any
military action, arguing that Saddam Hussein is "not
going to live forever."

"I think we have to try to give the sanctions one more
chance. He's not going to live forever, there are
options for regime change short of bombing the living
daylights out of them. And we know that these... we know
that the inspectors have gotten a ton of stuff out of
there."

Clinton said that continuing the inspections effort
"will bring us together."
newsmax.com