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Full Version: "We will settle for nothing less than victory"
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Quote:WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush said Saturday that pulling out of Iraq now is not an option, rejecting calls by some lawmakers and many people asked in polls to start bringing U.S. troops home.

"The terrorists and insurgents are trying to get us to retreat. Their goal is to get us to leave before Iraqis have had a chance to show the region what a government that is elected and truly accountable to its citizens can do for its people," Bush said in his weekly radio address.

"We will settle for nothing less than victory" over terrorists there, he said later.

Bush's radio address is part of a series of appearances and speeches in the coming weeks aimed at countering poll ratings that are near their lowest levels on both the Iraq war and the economy. Bush said his administration is committed to success in both areas of concern for Americans.

(AP) Mark McClellan, Administrator of the Centers for Medicine and Medicaid Services, listens to...
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About six in 10 in a Gallup poll taken in early June said the United States should withdraw some or all of its troops - the highest level of support for withdrawing U.S. troops since the war began.

On the economy, the president said he needs help from Congress to keep the nation on the right track. With some of his signature domestic priorities experiencing difficulties on Capitol Hill, he urged support for his request for a free-trade agreement with Central American and Caribbean nations, an overhaul of Social Security and wide-ranging energy legislation.

And even as Bush just this week delayed another domestic priority - a massive rewriting of the tax code to simplify it - by two months, he said it must be done.

"We need to work together to ensure that opportunity reaches every corner of our great country," Bush said.

But it is the president's Iraq policy that has taken the biggest slide in the polls. Once a mainstay of his public support, his handling of the Iraq war was backed by only 41 percent in an Associated Press-Ipsos poll this month - his lowest level of support yet on Iraq.

(AP) White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, left, and Administrator of the Centers for Medicine...
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Bush acknowledged discontent over his decisions but signaled no shift in policy or timing for the American presence in Iraq.

"Some may disagree with my decision to remove Saddam Hussein from power, but all of us can agree that the world's terrorists have now made Iraq a central front in the war on terror," he said. "This mission isn't easy, and it will not be accomplished overnight."

Amid continuing attacks and suicide bombings in Iraq, a few Republicans and Democrats - including one GOP lawmaker who voted for war in Iraq - introduced a resolution this week calling for Bush to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq by Oct. 1, 2006. There have been nearly 1,100 violent deaths in Iraq linked to the insurgency since a transitional government took office seven weeks ago.

The administration insists no timetable can be set for bringing U.S. forces home from Iraq until enough Iraqi forces have been sufficiently trained to take over the fight against the insurgency. Anything else, the administration argues, would only embolden the insurgency.

Bush also paid tribute to progress seen in Iraq this week. Iraq's Shiite-led parliament and leaders of the disaffected Sunni Arab minority, which is believed to be the backbone of the insurgency, agreed on a process for drafting Iraq's constitution.

"Time and again, the Iraqi people have defied the skeptics who claim they are not up to the job of building a free society," he said. "I am confident that Iraqis will continue to defy the skeptics as they build a new Iraq that represents the diversity of their nation and assumes greater responsibility for their own security. And when they do, our troops can come home with the honor they have earned."

After elections in January, writing a constitution is Iraq's next milestone in its fits-and-starts transition to democracy. Later this year, the document is to put up for a vote in a public referendum and then a new government is to be elected.

First it was weapons of mass destruction, then it was getting Saddam, then it was getting the government in, now it's about fighting terrorists. We can't even control our own borders, how the fuck are we supposed to keep terrorists from pouring into Iraq, if that is truely the case of what's happening.

How exactly are we supposed to win in a war on terrorism?
Quote:How exactly are we supposed to win in a war on terrorism?

Hallmark cards.
by being more frightening and terrafyin' as GW would say, my suggestion would be to dress our soldiers in clown suits, clowns are fuckin scary.
why don't we just have like hot ass solider chicks go over and tempt their asses, and then fucking carve em up like amazon women?
Well, it was obvious three years ago that there's no fucking win in a war against terrorism.

Which is why the war against Iraq was so retarded. At least to anyone who thought it was part of the war against terrorism.

If they thought it it was part of the war for our SHIT. They got it half right.
Everyone who supported the war now has to go and fight it.
In three years we sliced up Africa and Italy back in the day.
Gonzo Wrote:by being more frightening and terrafyin' as GW would say, my suggestion would be to dress our soldiers in clown suits, clowns are fuckin scary.
seriously...I get the creeps just thinkin' about them Confusedhudder:
If the dipshit cocksucker assholes running the show said that clowns would be all it takes to fight off the terrists, half of America would paint their noses red.
If we could get Billy Graham to sing "There's a Goldmine in the Sky," we could pursuade all the Jews to join the airforce.