Bush cranks up the fear factor

The fourth time in nine days, the president delivered yet another speech on Congress’ spending bill for the war in Iraq. That Bush feels this is necessary is open to some interpretation, though I’m inclined to believe the White House thinks it’s losing this fight, so it’s trying to take the offensive, being aggressive on shaping the debate.

Fortunately for those of us who actually read these speeches, Bush’s comments this morning were slightly different than the other three (reading the palaver is tiresome, reading the same palaver repeatedly is mind-numbing). Let’s do a little fact-checking.

“The families gathered here understand that our troops want to finish the job.”

Really? There’s evidence to the contrary. As Greg Sargent noted, a recent Army Times poll found that only about half of U.S. troops think that success in this war is even possible. What’s more, only 38% of the troops expressed support for the president’s escalation strategy.

I’d add that last week, once soldiers started hearing about Bush extending their tours, there were “outbursts of anger and frustration laced with dark humor.” Specialist Rodney Lawson, to no one in particular, said, “If I get malaria, I get to leave, right?”

“Families gathered here understand that America is not going to be safe until the terrorist threat has been defeated.”

I think that’s largely true, which is one of the reasons I support a withdrawal — we’re making the terrorist threat worse, not better, by staying in Iraq.

“We must give our men and women in uniform the tools and resources they need to prevail. Providing these resources is the responsibility of the United States Congress…. Congress’ failure to fund our troops will mean that the readiness of our forces will suffer. This is unacceptable to me; it’s unacceptable to you, and it’s unacceptable to the vast majority of the American people.”

Both the House and Senate spending bills give our men and women in uniform the tools and resources they need. Bush neglected to mention this; it must have slipped his mind.

“[Lawmakers] spend billions of dollars on domestic projects that have nothing to do with the war.”

Really? Then why did Bush’s own budget proposal include lots of funding for projects “that have nothing to do with the war”? As Scott Lilly recently explained, the White House request contained “funds for federal prisons, Kosovo debt relief, flood control on the Mississippi, nutrition programs in Africa, educational and cultural exchange activities around the world, disease control in South Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe, and salaries for U.S. marshals.” Sounds like Congress followed Bush’s lead; so what’s he whining about?

“We should not be substituting political judgment for the judgment of those in our military.”

That sounds perfectly reasonable. Too bad the president identified those commanders in our military who disagreed with him — and fired them.

Ultimately, though, it wasn’t specific comments that were the most troubling, it was a theme that ran through the 13-minute speech. Nico put it all together.

“They know that the enemies who attacked us on September the 11th, 2001 want to bring further destruction to our country.

One of the lessons of September the 11th is what happens overseas matters to the security of the United States of America.

“…to fight the extremists and radicals where they live, so we don’t have to face them where we live.

“…they won’t leave us alone — they will follow us to the United States of America.

“The consequences of failure in Iraq would be death and destruction in the Middle East and here in America.

“We’ll continue to do the hard work necessary to help change the conditions that caused 19 young men to get on airplanes to come and kill thousands of our citizens on September the 11th.

“Enemies that could just as easily come here to kill us.”

Bush didn’t quite say, “Give me a blank check or we’ll all be killed,” but he certainly seemed to be going down that road. It wasn’t pretty.

Bush is usually at his most effective when he appears confident and self-assured. This president appeared panicky and desperate. If the speech was intended to intimidate Congress, it might have backfired.

“Bush is usually at his most effective when he appears confident and self-assured. This president appeared panicky and desperate. If the speech was intended to intimidate Congress, it might have backfired.”

might look that way to us normal folks, cb. but wait until the librul media gets ahold of it.

  • gee, i wonder why polls still show a sizable percentage of Americans incorrectly believe there was a link between Iraq and 9/11? how could they be so clueless?

    “We’ll continue to do the hard work necessary to help change the conditions that caused 19 young men to get on airplanes to come and kill thousands of our citizens on September the 11th.”

    We’re doing something in Saudi Arabia? Really? News to me. . .

  • Lather, rinse, and repeat. And repeat. And repeat.

    We’ve heard it before. Many times. We don’t believe it anymore, George. And we’re really tired of hearing it.

    And we’re tired of proping up a corrupt and crumbling dictatorship that not only can’t manage its own affairs but can’t even find one competent person to manage them for you.

    Get out, George. You have nothing left. Just get out.

  • Is Bush threatening to destroy America himself is we withdraw the oilmen from Iraq? That’s what it sounded like to me…

  • Looky:

    We all know Bush is the most loathed creature on the planet.

    But the real issue here resides in this question and answer:

    Q:
    Can the world wait 2 MORE YEARS before global warming is regarded as its most pressing problem?

    A:
    It can’t. Global warming needs to be ADDRESSED NOW.

    In other words:
    Bush must go.
    By hook or crook.
    Impeach this bastard. Now.

  • I agree that Bush realizes he’s losing the fight. Just let him twist in the twist. Meanwhile,
    Dem’s need to take every one of those statements and throw it back in his face. Hard.

  • Bush the cowardly feral hamster is spinning a tale like he’s never spun before—because he knows that what miniscule credibility he still possesses will evaporate when the troops do come home—and we’re not suddenly overrun by nasty little terrorists.

    And yes, Ohioan, I agree that this latest speech reads as though Bush himself is bending toward threatening the nation, if he doesn’t get his way on this issue. If Dems can play this out in the media, I think we’ll start seeing some very loud utterances of a certain “i” word…..

  • Shameless draft-dodging chicken hawk warmonger. Bush is not the worst president ever. He may be the worst president possible.

  • What’s so utterly ridiculous about most of what Bush says is how easily debunked it is.

    The families of the troops know that the Bush administration has not provided them with the necessary protection or equipment, and there are families who live with the knowledge that their loved ones might be alive otherwise. That was not a Democratic funding lapse – that was SOP from Day One.

    The families of those trying to recover from their injuries – injuries which might have been prevented with proper equipment – know that it is not Democratic failures to fund that have seen their fmailiy members lost in a bureaucratic haze, living in deplorable conditions – that was all Bush from the beginning.

    The families of those who have been deployed thwo, three and four times – each time playing the odds of survival, and each time forced to play those odds in substandard equipment or without equipment know that it was not Democratic failures that are sending them into the maw of the war machine over and over and over – that’s Bush again and again and again.

    Study after study has shown that we are not winning in the fight against terrorism, as it keeps going up worldwide. They aren’t going to follow us here – with or without a war, those opportunities have been there from the beginning, thanks to underfunding of the TSA, the dense bureaucracy and the lack of resources to check cargo.

    What’s sad and pathetic is that Bush still thinks he has a winning argument, even as there are fewer and fewer people willing to stand behind him while he delivers these factually-challenged and propagandistic speeches. What’s next? Life-size, cardboard cutouts?

    Even though his punches are getting weaker, I can find no good reason to stop continuing to hit and hit hard everytime he opens his mouth.

  • Apart from reading the mind numbing repetitive Bush drivel what’s almost equally bad is hearing the boob yammer with his “tough guy” cowboy drawl. It’s too bad we can’t capture the accent with printed text—it would add to the nausea.

    It is also equally silly that we need “…to fight the extremists and radicals where they live, so we don’t have to face them where we live.” They can already follow us here. Nothing Bush has done would really interdict a terrorist attack.

  • Of course the troops want to finish the job, many people don’t like to see their blood, sweat, and tears go down the toilet. That doesn’t however meant, that like to continue on indefinitely. Especially when there will be no serious cange in policy at the political level and no acknowledgement of reality amongst those who need a reality check.

    As for fear, Bush & Co. took the “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself” as advice and are using it so hard that eventually people will listen less than they already are.

  • The man is pathetic.

    “One of the lessons of September the 11th is what happens overseas matters to the security of the United States of America.” WTF?

    Like we never had a State Department before? We didn’t fight WWI and WWII? Like the defining feature of the last half of the 20th Century wasn’t the Cold War? I think the American people are pretty familiar with the concept of overseas events mattering.

    Maybe the ignorant simpleton named George W. Bush only learned about the rest of the world on 9/11, but quite a few of us have been paying attention to it all along. Hearing Mr. Johnny Come-Lately lecture us with all the pretentious wisdom of his kindergarten level of understanding is beyond annoying.

  • […] he knows that what miniscule credibility he still possesses will evaporate when the troops do come home—and we’re not suddenly overrun by nasty little terrorists. — Steve, @9

    No, we won’t be overrun by the kind of terrorists he’s thinking of. But, when the troops come home will the Blackwater thugs come with them?

  • “Enemies that could just as easily come here to kill us.”

    After the school shooting today in Virginia, I’d say there are plenty of people over here already that can kill us too. The chance of the average American getting killed by an Islamic terrorist is tiny compared to the liklihood of crossing paths with some knucklehead with some guns and and a bad attitude wanting to go out in a blaze of glory and take as many folks as he can with him. I wish this world would learn the lesson that killing people doesn’t solve problems, it only spreads more tragedy.

  • the chance of the terrorist in Iraq following us home is very slim… Very slim indeed. They estimate about 30,000 insurgents with at the very most about 5% belonging to Al Qaida, that would be about 1,500 bad asses. Well, how many of those do you think could speak English? How many of those have enough education that they could point to America on a globe? The ones fighting us over there are pions in the grand scheme of things.

    The ones we would need to worry about following us home, wouldn’t come from Iraq, they would come, once again from our friends in Egypt and Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

    Maybe someone needs to take some time and explain that to the simple minded right wingers who still believe Bush is doing a good job.

  • Bush didn’t quite say, “Give me a blank check or we’ll all be killed,” but he certainly seemed to be going down that road. It wasn’t pretty.

    He went down that road.

    The only issue in the 2004 election he carried was “Moslems gonna kill your babies in the food court at the mall”.

    And the rubes with whom I share my country bought it.

  • “Shameless draft-dodging chicken hawk warmonger. Bush is not the worst president ever. He may be the worst president possible.”

    That’s absolutely the greatest description of Bush yet! Thanks, Alibubba!

  • Respnse to #7- “I kicked the habbit” The issue is not so simple. As a cycle commuter who does not own a car, I still have reliance oil becaue I ate food I bought a grocery, delivered by diesel truck, some of it grown with fertilizer. This is a complex, pervasive issue.

  • President Bush didn’t say what is obvious: His warmongering in Iraq has spawned the ever-developing breeding grounds of the very terrorists he insists would attack us here. His destructive warmongering policies–instead of concentrating on productive diplomacy–have been disastrous and counterproductive to the very safety and security of the citizens of our nation and the world.

  • “That’s absolutely the greatest description of Bush yet! Thanks, Alibubba!”

    I’d have to say a few guyz/galz here have to work together to get the greatest desription of Bush… seriously, you should combine these and submit it to wikipedia after he’s out of office and can’t force them to remove it… check it, and tell me its not a perfect intro for wikipedia…

    “BUSH: the cowardly feral hamster.
    Bush is the most loathed creature on the planet. The more he appears in public, the more people get tired of him. He’s circling the bowl, the Incredible Shrinking President. Also a shameless draft-dodging chicken hawk warmonger. Apart from reading the mind numbing repetitive Bush drivel what’s almost equally bad is hearing the boob yammer on with his ‘tough guy’ cowboy drawl. It’s too bad we can’t capture the accent with printed text—it would add to the nausea.

    Bush is not the worst president ever. He may be the worst president possible.”

    *courtesy of Alibubba, Tom Cleaver, ROTFLMLiberalAO, Steve, and -jay-*

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