The [tag]president[/tag] sat down with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer yesterday and addressed the subject of sending troops to bring Osama bin Laden to justice. Unfortunately, the response was a little flawed.
BLITZER: If you had good, actionable intelligence in Pakistan where [Osama [tag]bin Laden[/tag], Ayman al- Zawahiri, Mullah Muhammad Omar] were, would you give the order to kill them or capture them?
BUSH: Absolutely.
BLITZER: And go into Pakistan?
BUSH: Absolutely.
BLITZER: Even though the Pakistanis say that’s their sovereign territory.
BUSH: Absolutely. We would take the action necessary to bring them to justice.
That’s a strong, clear answer. If we learn where these dangerous terrorists are, Bush is committed to going and getting them. Good.
There are just a few problems — including pesky details such as Pakistan disagreeing and the president having said the polar opposite five days ago.
First, [tag]Bush[/tag] may be “absolutely” willing to send troops into [tag]Pakistan[/tag] to bring terrorists to justice, but the government there has a different take.
Pakistan has said it won’t allow U.S. troops to operate within its territory…. Pakistan’s president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, told reporters Wednesday at the United Nations that his government would oppose any U.S. action in its territory.
“We wouldn’t like to allow that at all. We will do it ourselves,” he said.
A January airstrike on suspected al Qaeda figures on the Pakistan border provoked protests by tens of thousands of Pakistanis and complaints by Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who said U.S. officials launched the attack without consulting his government.
Just as importantly, less than a week ago, the president hosted a White House press conference in which a reporter noted that Bush has compared bin Laden to Hitler and asked why the president hasn’t sent special forces troops into Pakistan in order to capture or kill him. Bush responded:
“Pakistan is a sovereign nation. In order for us to send thousands of troops into a sovereign nation, we’ve got to be invited by the government of Pakistan.”
It’s funny how quickly the president can change his mind in an election year, isn’t it? On Sept. 15, Pakistan is a sovereign nation and Bush wouldn’t dream of sending troops in after terrorists uninvited. On Sept. 20, Pakistan’s sovereignty is completely irrelevant and we’ll “absolutely” send troops wherever Bush decides is necessary.
The president’s strength is the consistency with which he approaches the war on terror? I don’t think so.
You might even say he was for going after bin Laden in Pakistan before he was against it.