Tony Snow told reporters yesterday that the administration has seen “a declining level in the overall pace of attacks” in Iraq.
The reality, of course, is far different.
Attacks in Iraq last month reached their highest daily average since May 2003, showing a surge in violence as President George W. Bush completed a buildup of U.S. troops, Pentagon statistics show.
The data, obtained by Reuters from the Defense Department, showed an upward trend in daily attacks over the past four months, when U.S. and Iraqi forces were ramping up operations against insurgents and militants, including al Qaeda, in Iraq.
There were a total of 5,335 attacks against coalition troops, Iraqi security forces, civilians and infrastructure in June, for a daily average of 177.8 attacks per day, the highest since Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” speech more than four years ago.
Now, the administration hasn’t responded to this report yet, but I’m going to go out on a limb and guess the spin: an increase in attacks is good news because it shows the enemy lashing out in desperation. We’ve got ’em on the run.
Of course, if the number of attacks had dropped considerably this, too, would be good news, because it would be proof that the administration’s policies were working.
And of the number of attacks had stayed the same, this would also be good news, because a leveling off would reflect a “cooling” period, harkening a new period of stability after growing tensions throughout 2007.
That’s the fun thing about listening to the White House — the president is always right, facts be damned.