In looking at Bush’s press conference today, Part 1 looked at the president’s remarks on Iraq, and Part 2 looked at Scooter Libby, so now let’s look at Bush and al Qaeda.
It’s worth noting from the outset that Bush mentioned al Qaeda by name 31 times during today’s hour-long press conference. That’s … what’s the phrase I’m looking for … a lot.
After a couple of dozen references, including a few lies about al Qaeda’s role in Iraq, a reporter asked a reasonable question.
Q: But, sir, on that point, what evidence can you present to the American people that the people who attacked the United States on September the 11th are, in fact, the same people who are responsible for the bombings taking place in Iraq? What evidence can you present? And also, are you saying, sir, that al Qaeda in Iraq is the same organization being run by Osama bin Laden, himself?
Bush: Al Qaeda in Iraq has sworn allegiance to Osama bin Laden. And the guys who had perpetuated the attacks on America — obviously, the guys on the airplane are dead, and the commanders, many of those are either dead or in captivity, like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. But the people in Iraq, al Qaeda in Iraq, has sworn allegiance to Osama bin Laden. And we need to take al Qaeda in Iraq seriously, just like we need to take al Qaeda anywhere in the world seriously.
Bush has to know how misleading this is. As McClatchy recently reported, “The group known as al Qaida in Iraq didn’t exist before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, didn’t pledge its loyalty to al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden until October 2004 and isn’t controlled by bin Laden or his top aides.”
The question was about “evidence.” The president didn’t have any. Bush wants Americans to believe — in fact, he states it as if it were an obvious truth — that al Qaeda dominates in Iraq and is responsible for the vast majority of U.S. deaths. This is demonstrably false. And yet, the man lies with impunity.
Bush added:
“[B]ecause of the actions we have taken, al Qaeda is weaker today than they would have been.”
Maybe the president was daydreaming during his latest intelligence briefing.
Three top U.S. intelligence officials said Wednesday that a resurgent Al Qaeda had stepped up training and worldwide operations from safe havens in Pakistan, a development they worry could lead to ambitious new attacks. […]
Even without seeing indicators of a specific attack, officials said, they do believe that the overall risk from Al Qaeda is rising. The U.S. attacks on Al Qaeda’s former base in Afghanistan in the fall of 2001 severely disrupted Osama bin Laden’s network. But since then, Al Qaeda has rebuilt its headquarters in Pakistan and is more dangerous than at any time since the Sept. 11 attacks, according to a new classified threat assessment.
Kringen said that Bin Laden is being protected by powerful local tribal leaders along the Afghan-Pakistani border and that the safe haven has enabled his network to regroup and rebuild its ability to strike the United States.
I often wonder how anyone who’s paying attention can take what Bush says seriously.