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


To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (752359)10/24/2006 7:15:00 PM
From: pompsander  Respond to of 769670
 
Words get in the way for Bush in Iraq debate By Matt Spetalnick
1 hour, 11 minutes ago


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Words have never been a strong point for President Bush, who has even joked about his habit of mangling the English language.

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But two weeks before elections likely to hinge on growing public frustration over Iraq, Bush and his top aides are scrambling to redefine the terms of the wartime debate, hoping it will help stave off a Democratic takeover of Congress.

Critics dismiss the shift in rhetoric as a smokescreen to hide a failed Iraq policy from voters, but analysts say it could be more than just semantics if it leads to a significant change of course.

"It shows political desperation," said Martin Medhurst, professor of rhetoric at Baylor University in Waco. "The question is whether Bush's rhetoric will come into alignment with reality in Iraq, which has not been the case before."

Banished from Bush's vernacular is "stay the course," which was his mantra for conveying America's resolve in Iraq until Democrats seized on the phrase as a sign that he and his fellow Republicans were unresponsive to mounting U.S. casualties.

Bush and his team are also insisting on a distinction between "tactics," which he is willing to change, and "strategy," which he isn't.

And the White House is willing to talk only of "milestones" and "benchmarks" for getting Iraqis to shoulder more of the security burden -- never "deadlines" or "ultimatums," which imply penalties if they fail to do so.

Even the definition of victory has undergone a makeover, with Bush no longer focusing on the goal of transforming Iraq into a flourishing democracy in the Middle East.

Instead, with sectarian violence raging, he now speaks -- as he did at a Florida fund-raiser on Tuesday -- of keeping U.S. troops there until Iraq can "defend itself, sustain itself and govern itself and be an ally in the war on terror."

MUDDLED SYNTAX

The effort to articulate new language on Iraq has been anything but smooth for Bush, whose sometimes muddled syntax, mispronunciation of words like nuclear ("nukular") and verbal gaffes have long been fodder for late-night TV comedians.

Bush has insisted he does not "do nuance," and aides say his folksy style has helped endear him to Middle America.

"It's no surprise that his message on Iraq has not been resonating," said Shirley Anne Warshaw, a presidential scholar at Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Penn. "George W. Bush is not a great communicator."

He acknowledged his limitations at an October 11 news conference, saying, "Nobody has accused me of having a real sophisticated vocabulary," when asked to justify his branding of Democrats as the party of "cut and run" from Iraq.

Bush stirred the debate again last week he was asked in an ABC interview about comments by former Secretary of State James Baker that an Iraq commission he co-chairs is pursuing alternatives to "cut and run" and "stay the course."

"Well, listen, we've never been stay the course...," Bush said. Liberal bloggers immediately flooded Web sites with video clips of Bush repeatedly vowing that America would "stay the course" until victory in Iraq.

Clarifying Bush's comment, his spokesman Tony Snow said the president had stopped using the phrase weeks ago.

"It left the wrong impression about what was going on and it allowed critics to say, 'Well, here's an administration that's just embarked upon a policy and not looking at what the situation is,' when, in fact, it is the opposite."

Democratic critics, who have hammered Bush for an open-ended military commitment in Iraq as they campaign to take over Congress in the November 7 elections, say the administration is just trying to muddy the debate.

"The administration ditched the stay-the-course rhetoric in time for the mid-term elections, but they haven't ditched the failed course and that is immoral," said Democratic Sen. John Kerry, who lost to Bush in the 2004 presidential election.

Normally unflappable, Snow, a former Fox News commentator and conservative radio host, has stumbled in recent days trying to explain the rhetorical twists and turns.

He became so exasperated at one briefing he bumped his head on the microphone as a reporter complained of contradictions in the distinctions he cited between "tactics" and "strategy."

"Sorry, we're talking different languages," he said.



To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (752359)10/24/2006 7:41:03 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Associated Press photographer Emilio Morenatti, center, is escorted by Palestinian police officers after his release at the ...

Kidnapped AP Photographer Freed in Gaza
By KARIN LAUB, Associated Press Writer
1 hour ago

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - An Associated Press photographer was freed unharmed Tuesday after a harrowing day in the hands of Palestinians who abducted him at gunpoint and dressed him in women's clothes to spirit him from one secret location to another.

Emilio Morenatti was brought before midnight to the office of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas by Fatah officials. It was not clear who kidnapped him, though officials said he was taken by criminals.

The government and main Palestinian groups denounced the abduction. No demands were made for his release.

Morenatti, a 37-year-old Spaniard, looked fatigued after his daylong ordeal but said he was unharmed.

"I'm tired but happy to have come back because there were very anguished moments," said Morenatti.

He said the kidnappers held him in a small room, where he was kept for about four hours during which he was visited by masked men. Later he was put in a car dressed as a woman and taken to another location.

"They put a bag on my head and they dressed me up as a woman, as a woman in a long veil," the photographer added.

Morenatti said he was blindfolded for much of the time, and that his captors spoke only Arabic, which he doesn't speak.

"I didn't know at any moment what they were doing," he said. "They moved me but nobody explained anything to me. It was very confusing."

The photographer said he was held in complete darkness for hours. In the second house where he was held, Morenatti said he heard the sounds of a family. He said he was given one meal of cheese and lunch meat early in the day and a portion of fruit later.

Tom Curley, AP's president and chief executive officer, said, "The Associated Press is relieved that Emilio has been released, apparently unharmed. The security of our journalists is always our top concern. We appreciate the assistance offered by so many people in obtaining his release, especially Palestinian and Spanish officials.

"It is crucial, however, that journalists such as Emilio be able to freely report the news in areas of conflict. We will be investigating what happened to assure that he and others can continue their important work," Curley said.

Morenatti's family in Spain rejoiced at news of his release.

"We were all sitting around together and when we heard the news we yelled with joy and then we opened a bottle of rioja (wine) to celebrate," Miguel Angel Morenatti, a brother of the photographer, told the AP.

"I managed to talk with Emilio for about 15 seconds and he told me that he was well both physically and mentally. The most important thing is that he is safe and free,"

Morenatti was seized as he headed out of his Gaza City apartment for an AP car, where Majed Hamdan, an AP driver and translator, was waiting. Hamdan said four gunmen grabbed his keys and cell phone and told him to turn away, pressing a gun to his head and threatening to harm him if he moved.

They took Morenatti, shoving him into a white Volkswagen Golf and driving off, Hamdan said.

Hours later, Morenatti was turned over to Fatah forces.

Abbas is not in Gaza, but his office is a safe Fatah stronghold in the territory, which is in the throes of a sometimes violent power struggle between Abbas' Fatah and the militant Islamic Hamas, which is in charge of the Palestinian government.

In the past two years, militants have frequently kidnapped foreigners as bargaining chips to get relatives released from Palestinian prisons, secure government jobs or settle personal scores. In most cases, the kidnappings were brief and the hostages released unharmed.

But recently, the kidnappers have changed tactics. Two Fox News journalists kidnapped in August were held for two weeks, much longer than previous cases. The men also suffered physical and mental abuse in captivity.

An unknown group calling itself the Holy Jihad Brigades claimed responsibility for the August abduction, and its demand for the release of Muslim prisoners held by the U.S. raised fears that foreign extremists, perhaps al-Qaida, had infiltrated Gaza. But Palestinian security officials said the name was a front for local militants.

The media advocacy groups Reporters Without Borders and the Committee to Protect Journalists condemned Morenatti's kidnapping.

"We're dismayed that journalists have become pawns of Palestinian groups seeking to exploit them for political purposes," said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. "These blatant attacks on journalists will have a chilling effect on their ability to do their work and will ultimately deprive the world of information about this critically important story."

Morenatti, from Jerez, Spain, has been based in Jerusalem since April 2005, handling periodic assignments in Gaza and the West Bank. He has been in Gaza since Sunday.

Morenatti began working for the AP in April 2004, and spent a year in Afghanistan covering the conflict there. He also covered the war in Lebanon and the World Cup soccer tournament in Germany.

In 1992, Morenatti began work as a photographer with EFE, the Spanish news agency, Spain.



To: Sedohr Nod who wrote (752359)10/24/2006 9:35:26 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Obama and Ford of Tennessee...they are trying to sell themselves as centrists....as you said....the voting records better be invisible.