Thursday, July 24, 2003

Intelligence information was politicized by a White House obsessed with using ANY excuse, even false claims, to enter into a war over the honest facts contradicting such as presented by our nation's intelligence community. Caught in their immoral lies, the President and his political machine have sought at every turn to sidestep any responsibility for their actions while American soldiers and innocents continue to spill blood in Iraq.

Questions dog the White House
Judy Keen USA TODAY

WASHINGTON -- It's not over yet.

The White House can't seem to put an end to questions about disputed intelligence on Iraq ( news -web sites )'s nuclear weapons program. The issue dominated the daily White House news briefing again Wednesday.

On Capitol Hill, Democrats continued to criticize President Bush ( news -web sites )'s assertion in his State of the Union speech Jan. 28 that Iraq tried to buy uranium from an African nation. ''This is not just a dispute about a certain number of words,'' said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. ''It's a dispute about politicizing intelligence and falsifying facts...





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