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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (23690)12/4/2003 9:59:23 AM
From: laura_bush  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
White House Changes Story on Bush Plane Incident
Wed Dec 3, 1:46 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House on Wednesday changed
its story of a British Airways pilot's spotting of Air Force One during
President Bush (news - web sites)'s stealth trip to Iraq (news - web
sites) last week.

The original story -- which held that the
airline's pilot had talked to Air Force One
and that he kept the secret of Bush's
Thanksgiving Day flight to Baghdad -- had
been told by White House Communications
Director Dan Bartlett to reporters as he
sought to portray the drama of Bush's trip.

But after British Airways denied such a
conversation took place, White House
spokesman Scott McClellan said on
Wednesday the airline's pilot never
contacted Air Force One. "The conversation
was between the British Airways plane and
the London control tower," McClellan said.

It was also the London control tower, not an
Air Force One pilot as in the original story,
that misidentified Air Force One as a much
smaller "Gulfstream 5" aircraft, McClellan said.

He said Air Force One pilots overheard the conversation while flying over
the west coast of England, and the British Airways plane could be
identified by its call sign when it spoke to the tower.

McClellan declined to say whether Air Force One had sent a false
electronic identification or whether controllers were in on the deception.

British Airways said it could not confirm the new account.

White House officials have said the elaborate secrecy surrounding the
trip was needed to ensure Bush's security in Iraq, but some critics
accused the administration of dramatizing the trip for political purposes.

CHANGE OF STORY

McClellan explained the change in the White House story by saying, "I
don't think everybody was clear on exactly how that conversation
happened."

The White House has come under criticism for backtracking on its
account of other high profile events.

In October it conceded it had helped with a large "Mission
Accomplished" banner on an aircraft carrier where Bush announced in
May that major fighting had ended in Iraq.

Bush had initially said his advance team did not put up the banner,
whose message critics viewed as premature given continued attacks on
occupying forces in Iraq.

The White House also acknowledged in July that a claim by Bush in his
State of the Union address last January that Iraq tried to buy African
uranium was based partly on forged documents.

British Airways said it could not confirm the White House's new version
of the Air Force One story. "We've had no reports from any of our pilots
with regard to Air Force One," airline spokeswoman Honor Verrier said.

story.news.yahoo.com