Information from sources in Washington suggest that
the President gets intelligence reports on the state
of Iraq’s nuclear capabilities every two years, and
that he doesn’t do anything about them.
Brigadier General Hardis Nailes, assistant associate
sub-director to the deputy for public information at
the Pentagon’s Strategic Information Diffusion
Directorate, said Tuesday that the latest information
on Iranian nuclear capability "is informative, while
not really shedding any light on any of the facts."
When asked exactly what that meant, Nailes replied,
"It’s up to the interpreters to interpret what the
anualysts anualyze, and then we information distributors
will distribute information. It’s all about which
facts we wish to consider as facts."
The announcement came on the heels of new criticism
over the handling – and meaning – of intelligence
reports, and how the President reacts to them. Mr.
Bush said the new assessment that Iran had no nuclear
weapons underscored the need to intensify
international efforts to prevent Iran from acquiring a
nuclear weapon.
Only George W. Bush could make Mahmoud Ahmadinejad look good.