YOU ARE A LIAR!! NEWS: "BUSH CALLS IRAQ IMMINENT THREAT"
Source: Los Angeles Times, January 29, 2003 THE STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS ph.ucla.edu
BUSH LIED!!!! Now go hide in Cheney's bunker.
dailykos.com Bush's "imminent threat" by kos Thu Jan 29th, 2004 at 21:07:32 GMT
David Sirota at the Center for American Progress' Progress Report lays waste to the administration's claim they never said Iraq was an "imminent threat". In fact, Scott McClellan repeated this ludicrous charge just a couple of days ago: ""I think some in the media have chosen to use the word 'imminent.' Those were not words we used." - White House spokesman Scott McClellan, 1/27/04 Given our muzzled White House press corps, Bush might've been able to get away with rewritting history. But they can't control Google, nor one enterprising think tank fellow who knows how to wield it. "There's no question that Iraq was a threat to the people of the United States." - White House spokeswoman Claire Buchan, 8/26/03
"We ended the threat from Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction."
- President Bush, 7/17/03
Iraq was "the most dangerous threat of our time."
- White House spokesman Scott McClellan, 7/17/03
"Saddam Hussein is no longer a threat to the United States because we removed him, but he was a threat...He was a threat. He's not a threat now."
- President Bush, 7/2/03
"Absolutely."
- White House spokesman Ari Fleischer answering whether Iraq was an "imminent threat," 5/7/03
"We gave our word that the threat from Iraq would be ended."
- President Bush 4/24/03
"The threat posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction will be removed."
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 3/25/03
"It is only a matter of time before the Iraqi regime is destroyed and its threat to the region and the world is ended."
- Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke, 3/22/03
"The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder."
- President Bush, 3/19/03
"The dictator of Iraq and his weapons of mass destruction are a threat to the security of free nations."
- President Bush, 3/16/03
"This is about imminent threat."
- White House spokesman Scott McClellan, 2/10/03
Iraq is "a serious threat to our country, to our friends and to our allies."
- Vice President Dick Cheney, 1/31/03
Iraq poses "terrible threats to the civilized world."
- Vice President Dick Cheney, 1/30/03
Iraq "threatens the United States of America."
- Vice President Cheney, 1/30/03
"Iraq poses a serious and mounting threat to our country. His regime has the design for a nuclear weapon, was working on several different methods of enriching uranium, and recently was discovered seeking significant quantities of uranium from Africa."
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 1/29/03
"Saddam Hussein possesses chemical and biological weapons. Iraq poses a threat to the security of our people and to the stability of the world that is distinct from any other. It's a danger to its neighbors, to the United States, to the Middle East and to the international peace and stability. It's a danger we cannot ignore. Iraq and North Korea are both repressive dictatorships to be sure and both pose threats. But Iraq is unique. In both word and deed, Iraq has demonstrated that it is seeking the means to strike the United States and our friends and allies with weapons of mass destruction."
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 1/20/03
"The Iraqi regime is a threat to any American. They not only have weapons of mass destruction, they used weapons of mass destruction...That's why I say Iraq is a threat, a real threat."
- President Bush, 1/3/03
"The world is also uniting to answer the unique and urgent threat posed by Iraq whose dictator has already used weapons of mass destruction to kill thousands."
- President Bush, 11/23/02
"I would look you in the eye and I would say, go back before September 11 and ask yourself this question: Was the attack that took place on September 11 an imminent threat the month before or two months before or three months before or six months before? When did the attack on September 11 become an imminent threat? Now, transport yourself forward a year, two years or a week or a month...So the question is, when is it such an immediate threat that you must do something?"
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 11/14/02
"Saddam Hussein is a threat to America."
- President Bush, 11/3/02
"I see a significant threat to the security of the United States in Iraq."
- President Bush, 11/1/02
"There is real threat, in my judgment, a real and dangerous threat to American in Iraq in the form of Saddam Hussein."
- President Bush, 10/28/02
"The Iraqi regime is a serious and growing threat to peace."
- President Bush, 10/16/02
"There are many dangers in the world, the threat from Iraq stands alone because it gathers the most serious dangers of our age in one place. Iraq could decide on any given day to provide a biological or chemical weapon to a terrorist group or individual terrorists."
- President Bush, 10/7/02
"The Iraqi regime is a threat of unique urgency."
- President Bush, 10/2/02
"There's a grave threat in Iraq. There just is."
- President Bush, 10/2/02
"This man poses a much graver threat than anybody could have possibly imagined."
- President Bush, 9/26/02
"No terrorist state poses a greater or more immediate threat to the security of our people and the stability of the world than the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq."
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 9/19/02
"Some have argued that the nuclear threat from Iraq is not imminent - that Saddam is at least 5-7 years away from having nuclear weapons. I would not be so certain. And we should be just as concerned about the immediate threat from biological weapons. Iraq has these weapons."
- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, 9/18/02
"Iraq is busy enhancing its capabilities in the field of chemical and biological agents, and they continue to pursue an aggressive nuclear weapons program. These are offensive weapons for the purpose of inflicting death on a massive scale, developed so that Saddam Hussein can hold the threat over the head of any one he chooses. What we must not do in the face of this mortal threat is to give in to wishful thinking or to willful blindness."
- Vice President Dick Cheney, 8/29/02
So we've got Scott McClellan (who speaks for the president) and Donald Rumsfeld saying Iraq is an "imminent threat". Then we've got "mortal threat" and "serious and mounting threat" and "immediate threat" and "unique threat" (e.g. one that doesn't exist?) and so on. The record is clear. The administration made shit up, assuming that Iraq would have banned weapons to vindicate it. But it didn't. It had nothing. Here's David Kay testifying before the Senate:
Let me begin by saying, we were almost all wrong, and I certainly include myself here. Sen. [Edward] Kennedy knows very directly. Senator Kennedy and I talked on several occasions prior to the war that my view was that the best evidence that I had seen was that Iraq indeed had weapons of mass destruction [...]
It turns out that we were all wrong, probably in my judgment, and that is most disturbing.
Some Republicans refuse to accept reality: "It turns out we were all wrong," said David Kay, who resigned last week as head of the Iraq Survey Group. "That is most disturbing." But Sen. John W. Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, wasn't ready to accept it.
Warner, who hastily convened a committee hearing amid a political uproar over Kay's comments, counseled patience and persistence in the hunt for elusive chemical and biological weapons.
"It is far too early to reach any judgment or conclusion," he said.
As the search continues in a country the size of California, Warner insisted, "We could find caches and reserves of weapons of mass destruction, chemical or biological, or even further evidence about their nuclear program."
Poor, poor deluded Warner. But his blinders serve a purpose -- refuse to declare defeat until the issue washes away and everyone forgets the lies that have cost us over 600 dead allies, 300 Iraqi policemen, and countless Iraqi civilians. But the most common strategy, and the one employed by Kay, is to blame the CIA for the failures. The CIA, though, warned that their evidence did not support the administration's claims here and here, to name just to examples). And they won't take the fall without fighting back.
The admininstration is tangled up in its web of lies and failures. This cannot end well. |