Monday, September 11, 2006

Clinton Would Have Spent Two Hours Talking About his Feelings

President Bush remembered the victims of 9/11 by respectfully keeping his silence.

Bush salutes ground zero with silenceBy Joseph Curl
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
September 11, 2006
NEW YORK -- President Bush and first lady Laura Bush yesterday descended somberly into the rubble-strewn chasm of ground zero to set afloat two wreaths of red, white and blue flowers in reflecting pools at the site where Islamic terrorists killed 2,749 persons five years ago today.
The president and his wife, holding hands, walked down a long ramp into the hole where the World Trade Center towers once stood.
On a gray afternoon threatening rain, they stepped through a phalanx of soldiers holding U.S. flags, accompanied by former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, Gov. George E. Pataki and current Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.
The Bushes stood silently for more than a minute, watching as the wreaths floated into the center of the water-filled wooden boxes, where families of those killed on September 11 will lay roses today.
After two weeks of speeches connecting the war in Iraq with the global war on terrorism and urging Americans to stay the course, Mr. Bush let the wordless image speak for itself.
He and Mrs. Bush walked away with heads bowed as bagpipes played "America the Beautiful."
Earlier in the day, Vice President Dick Cheney said the nation has "made significant progress" in its fight against the Islamic extremists who perpetrated the attacks.
"We've done enormous damage to al Qaeda, to the leadership of al Qaeda," Mr. Cheney said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Democrats kept up their political battle against the Bush administration's response to terrorism, particularly the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
"Cheney represents what's wrong with this administration policy," Sen. Charles E. Schumer, New York Democrat, said on CBS' "Face the Nation," arguing that the administration has not shown "enough smarts" in its policies. "And that's why the things in Iraq are getting worse."
Mr. Bush will address Americans tonight at 9 in a speech from the Oval Office.
The polarization of the nation was evident near ground zero, where hundreds of protesters chanted "Out of Iraq now" and held signs that said "Bush lied."
The immediate aftermath five years ago brought Americans together and sent Mr. Bush's popularity soaring, especially after he grabbed a bullhorn at ground zero on Sept. 14, 2001, and promised that "the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."
But support for the president plummeted after U.S. casualties in Afghanistan and Iraq increased. Now, both parties are engaged in a war of words in the lead-up to the November elections, which some analysts say could cost the Republicans control of one or both congressional chambers.
In three speeches and a White House statement on his administration's policy on detention of suspected terrorists, the president laid out the case for war in Iraq, justified his counterterrorism efforts, including a terrorist-surveillance program, and warned Americans that the United States is safer but still not safe from attack.
In one speech, he mentioned al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden 17 times; in another, he divulged details of plots that have been foiled -- the first time many of those details had been released.
"This time, we're not waiting for our enemies to gather in strength. This time, we're confronting them before they gain the capacity to inflict unspeakable damage on the world. And we're confronting their hateful ideology before it fully takes root," Mr. Bush said last week, defending his doctrine of pre-emption laid out in the months after the attacks.
A new poll released yesterday found his effort may be having some effect.
Just over half of those surveyed by ABC News think the country is safer from attack than on September 11, and that the fight against terrorism is going well. While other polls show American support for the Iraq war waning, the administration has gone on the offensive to paint Iraq as crucial to the war on terrorism.
Democrats have charged that the president is politicizing the anniversary of the September 11 attacks, but Mr. Bush plans only silent observances today.
He plans no comments during appearances this morning when he meets with New York City firefighters and police, or at noon in the Pennsylvania field where one plane crashed after passengers battled terrorists, or at the Pentagon crash site this afternoon. Then he will speak to the nation tonight.
Mr. Bush has led an orchestrated campaign to remind Americans of the attacks. He has framed the November elections as a choice between Republicans, who say they are best able to secure America and have done so for five years, and Democrats, some of whom have opposed the president's efforts at every turn.
Democrats oppose Mr. Bush's contention that Iraq is crucial to the war on terror.
"There is simply no way to overstate how Iraq has subverted our efforts to free the world from global terror," said Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat, who Mr. Bush defeated in the 2004 election. "The demagogic drumbeat about fighting terrorists over there instead of here -- even though they weren't in Iraq until we went in, and it's now a civil war we're fighting -- has compromised America's real interests and made us less safe than we ought to be five years after 9/11."
Today's three stops will mark the first time the president has visited each site since 2002. During the past two years, the anniversary fell on a weekend day, and the Bushes did not travel to all three sites.

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