Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Bush's Apology (Not)

The text of the national address you should see, but never will, from George W. Bush.


My Fellow Americans:

Good evening.

I apologize from the bottom of my heart. The most difficult thing for a President to do is make the decision to send our nation to war. It is a decision that should only be undertaken with the greatest care and with the greatest certainty that war is the correct, and last, option. Never should our great nation invade another country on anything but the most solid, indisputable evidence of a threat to us or one of our close allies.

As you know, I came before you in the Spring of 2003 to tell you of the grave menace that Saddam Hussein and Iraq posed to the United States. I told you, and I dispatched then-Secretary of State Colin Powell to the United Nations to tell them, that Iraq posed an immediate threat to our people. I told you then that we had good intelligence that Iraq possessed stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction and was ready to use them. I led you to believe that there was a connection between Saddam and the same group of terrorists who inflicted such horrible damage to our country on September 11, 2001. The United Nations told you otherwise. They said there was no solid evidence that Saddam possessed weapons of mass destruction. The UN, and others, said there was no solid evidence linking Saddam to al Qaeda in a significant way.

They were right, I was wrong. It wasn’t just me, of course. The majority of Congress, from both parties, supported me in this venture. As your President and the Commander-in-Chief of our armed forces, though, responsibility lies with me, and I take the blame.

My administration promised you that Saddam would be swiftly conquered and the country of Iraq would gratefully accept our guidance toward becoming a peaceful democracy in a matter of months. I promised “shock and awe,” but now I must admit that I am the one who is shocked and awed at how badly things in Iraq have gone. We should have foreseen the sectarian strife that was held in check for so many years, in a brutal manner, by Saddam, and we should have had a better plan for dealing with it. Foremost, though, the United States should never have invaded Iraq to begin with.

I apologize to you, the American people, and I apologize to the families of countless others who have lost their lives because of my mistake. May God bless, and forgive, the United States of America.

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