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"America safer": Bush contradicts State Department
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Sat, 09/09/2006 - 00:32.
Unable to keep himself from milking 9-11 for all it's worth, Bush is treading, once again, into the realm of Doublethink. At his most recent in a spate of 9-11-themed speeches, in Atlanta Sept. 7, he said:
VOA in their coverage of the speech quoted "experts" from both sides on this question. Weighing in for the "safer" thesis was Danielle Pletka of the American Enterprise Institute, who said:
This argument is inherently anti-democratic in its insistence that we shouldn't question our leaders, and inherently illogical to boot. It assumes that we were not safe before 9-11—and yet that attack was utterly unprecedented. Therefore, by her own standards the absence of any new attacks cannot be taken as evidence that we are any more secure. On the other side, VOA quoted former Assistant Secretary of Defense Larry Korb takes:
But this needn't be a game of he-said-she-said. As we noted in April, this year's annual State Department report on global terrorism finds that it has surged exponentially since 2001, and especially since the invasion of Iraq. From the LA Times account we quoted when the report came out:
Even Francis Fukuyama, the one-time neocon ally of Bush who has recently come to see the Iraq invasion as an error, is capable of seeing the obvious. In his new book America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy, he writes:
Al-Jazeera is directly engaging Bush in the 9-11 propaganda war. On Sept. 8, it released a video from As-Sahab, al-Qaeda's media wing, of Osama bin Laden meeting with two lieutenants in the mountains of Afghanistan shortly before 9-11 to plan the attacks and send messages of support to the hijackers. The two lieutenants are Muhammad Atef (allegedly killed in Afghanistan in 2001) and Ramzi Bin al-Shibh—who had been mentioned by name in Bush's last speech the day before as one of a small group of captives that had been transfered from secret CIA prisons to Guantanamo to face military tribunals. For more on Ramzi Bin al-Shibh, see WW4 REPORT #s 96, 77, 52, 45, 37 and 20. See our last post on the politics of the GWOT. |
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