Blue Herald
12
Jul
Bush Denies Intelligence Assessment
by QuestionGirl • 1:28 pm

Ok…..someone needs to catch this guy (our dimwit president) and put him in a rubber room. WTF. No benchmarks met in Iraq…….he denies that. There’s “cause for optimisim.” Intelligence report that al Queda is strong as ever……he denies that. “There’s a perception in the coverage.” Oh so it’s the media lying. That’s not actually what the report says. Riggghhhttt. He tells the Judiciary Committee to go fuck themselves by instructing people to ignore subpoenas….. he thinks Al Queda and Iraqis are part of his “constituency”…… no dumb ass…..they aren’t.

FYI Mr. President:

Main Entry: con·stit·u·en·cy
Pronunciation: k&n-’stich-w&n(t)’sE, -’sti-ch&-, -’sti-chü-&n(t)-
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural -cies
1 a : a body of citizens entitled to elect a representative (as to a legislative or executive position) b : the residents in an electoral district c : an electoral district
2 a : a group or body that patronizes, supports, or offers representation b : the people involved in or served by an organization (as a business or institution)

Can we just impeach this crazy mofo already? He’s not going to listen to ANYONE. He’s going to do nothing but kill more people and drag the U.S. down even further.

By Matt Spetalnick and David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush denied on Thursday that al Qaeda is as strong today as it was before the September 11 attacks.

Bush spoke after media reports, citing a new intelligence assessment, said the militant network is now as great a threat to U.S. soil as in the months before the 2001 hijack-plane attacks.

“There is a perception in the coverage that al Qaeda may be as strong today as they were prior to September 11. That’s just simply not the case,” Bush told reporters.

While administration officials have acknowledged that al Qaeda had recovered somewhat since U.S.-led forces drove its operatives underground in Afghanistan in late 2001, Bush insisted, “Because of the actions we’ve taken, al Qaeda is weaker today than they would have been.”

“They are still a threat. They are still dangerous and that is why it is important that we succeed in Afghanistan and Iraq and anywhere else we find them,” he told a news conference dominated by the release of an interim progress report on the Iraq war.

Bush put much of the blame on al Qaeda attacks for the Iraqi government’s shortcomings in achieving national reconciliation. But sectarian killings between majority Shi’ites and minority Sunnis have also accounted for a large share of the death toll.

More at Reuters



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