The President's Inflated Ego Posted: Wednesday, August 6, 2003
The hypocrisy of Western debates on the Iraq war
Iraq Was Not Involved In 9-11 Terrorist Attacks, No Ties To Al-Qaeda
Prewar statements by Cheney under scrutiny
Blair's press office admits campaign to discredit Kelly
Saudi Secrets Are Safe With Bush At the nexus of diplomacy and secret intelligence, governments almost never speak forthrightly about their purposes. When ranking officials decide what can be revealed and what must be concealed, political expedience is at least as important as national security. And on the rare occasion when such an official publicly demands the disclosure of embarrassing information, as the Saudi foreign minister did last week, an ulterior motive should be assumed.
It's the security fence or loans, US tells Israel Bush threatens to withhold loans if Israel continues security wall Rice: Security fence will not affect loan guarantees
Iraq continues resistance to US troops
Bush Plays the Good Cop While Schumer Blasts Saudis
The President's Inflated Ego President Bush has long held the attitude that he (and only those who favor his actions, particularly his war in Iraq)) is the epitome of patriotism. But in late July, dubya took it one step further; he appointed himself the father of patriotism and our country.
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