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


To: d.taggart who wrote (371935)3/16/2003 12:38:21 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
LOL... the legacy of the loon....
Book Bombshell: Iraq Attack Scrubbed for
Clinton Golf Game

Ex-President Bill Clinton kept a squadron of F-117
stealth fighter-bombers and B-52s waiting to launch a
critical 1996 airstrike on Iraq while he finished
watching a golf tournament - dithering so long that U.S.
pilots lost the cover of darkness and the mission had to
be scrubbed.

That's the explosive charge leveled in a brand new book
by Lt. Col. Robert Patterson, a key Clinton military
aide from 1996 through 1998 whose primary mission was to
carry the president's copy of America's nuclear launch
codes.

"We dispatched eight F-117 stealth fighter-bombers
capable of carrying 2,000-pound bombs into the region
and sent B-52s to Diego Garcia, in the Indian Ocean, in
preparation for action," reveals Lt. Col. Patterson in
his bombshell security scandal tell-all, "Dereliction of
Duty: The Eyewitness Account of How Bill Clinton
Compromised America's National Security."

The Sept. 13, 1996 airstrike was planned as the U.S.'s
response to an August 31 tank attack launched by Saddam
Hussein on the northern Kurdish city of Irbil, a blatant
violation of the 1991 Gulf War surrender accords that
had an estimated 300,000 Kurdish refugees fleeing for
their lives.

At the same time Saddam's Republican Guard had executed
an estimated one hundred Iraqi dissidents and arrested
fifteen hundred more - extinguishing whatever opposition
the Iraqi dictator might have faced from within.

Two days before he attended the President's Cup golf
tournament, Clinton had warned the world that "action is
imminent" and that "the determination of the United
States in dealing with the problem of Iraq should not be
underestimated," reports the national security
whistleblower.

With the F-117s and B-52s ready to take off and the
cover of darkness in Iraq slipping away, National
Security Advisor Sandy Berger placed a series of
desperate phone calls to the Manassas, Virginia golf
course seeking clearance from Clinton. But the president
refused to come to the phone.

"Sir, Mr. Berger is on the line and needs a decision
about the proposed attack on Iraq," Lt. Col. Patterson
remembers telling the president.

Clinton's response? "Tell him I'll get back with him
later."

As mission critical minutes evaporated, an anxious
Berger called again.

"This time he was animated, obviously upset," remembers
Patterson. "Pilots were in the cockpits waiting to
launch, targets were identified, everything was in
place, all he needed was the go-ahead."

The presidential military aide promised the National
Security Advisor that he would do everything he could to
get Clinton to pay attention to the mission at hand.

"This time, the president was engaged in conversations
with several people and was less approachable,"
Patterson reports. "I maneuvered through the crowd and
caught his eye. When President Clinton saw me, he seemed
disturbed at being interrupted again with something
unimportant. He frowned as I neared him."

Still Patterson persisted. "'Mr. President, Mr. Berger
has called again and needs a decision soon.' I explained
in a low tone, 'We have our pilots in cockpits, ready to
launch, and we're running out of the protective cover of
nighttime over there.'"

But Clinton seemed unmoved. "I'll call Berger when I get
the chance," he told the aide.

Less than fifteen minutes later Berger called back.
"This time he was irate," Patterson recalls.

"Where is the president? What is he doing? Can I talk to
him?"

The presidential military aide was forced to explain:

"Sir, he is watching the golf tournament with several
friends. I've approached him twice with your request.
I've communicated your concerns about the window of
opportunity and about the pilots being prepared and
ready to go.

"I'm an Air Force pilot myself, sir." Patterson told
Berger. "I understand the ramifications. I'll try
again."

For the third time in an hour, the military aide
desperately tried to get Clinton to focus on the mission
- hoping he would appreciate that further delay could
jeopardize the lives of U.S. pilots now waiting for his
order.

But Clinton remained oblivious. "Tell Berger that I'll
give him a call on my way back to the White House," he
said, in what Patterson describes as an "indifferent"
tone of voice. "That's all," Clinton added, in words the
military man understood to mean the president didn't
want to hear any more about the problem.

"I called Mr. Berger and explained that the president
would contact him from the limo," Patterson recalled.
"We both knew what that meant. We'd missed our
opportunity."

The trusted soldier says he remains haunted by the
episode. "Human lives were at stake - the lives of
American service members and the lives of our allies who
opposed Saddam at our behest and were now under attack.

"At a time when America's honor and grander principles
were being challenged and the world was watching our
every move...the president was watching golf."
newsmax.com



To: d.taggart who wrote (371935)3/16/2003 6:19:38 PM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Where do you get your info?

My guess is the Star, the Enquirer and his psychotropic medicinal hallucinations and delusions....

JLA