Bush Pledge: “We will not run”

During the lavishly overproduced appearance, which seemed to mark the re-emergence of Karl Rove as splashy theatrical stage manager, Bush offered a new strategy, apparently designed to confront his falling popularity ratings,

Tacitly acknowledging that everything he had once claimed as justification for a foreign invasion was no longer applicable, though stopping short of an admission, Bush sought to give the American people a new rationale for staying in the war: Americas must continue to fight to defend the Iraqi people from car bombs.
As the scenes of trampling during the Black Friday shopping rush demonstrated,

Prior to 9/11, polls showed that 99.9% of Americans could not identify Iraq on a map of the world. However, in the flood of propaganda that followed the attack normal Americans were influenced to “love” the Iraqi people with their strange customs, lilting death keening and obviously bad personal hygiene. Marketing schools are still studying the phenomena in the hope of developing new, more efficient advertising methods.
Addressing increasing congressional criticism

Later, at a White House press briefing, spokesman Scott McEllen explained the President’s comments, "While the original intelligence supporting the invasion has proven to be faulty, and some congressional radicals claim the Vice President concocted them,

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid responded to the President’s remarks saying, “Let’s take him at his word. If he said that the US will not leave Iraq, as long as he is ‘Commander-in-Chief,’ we can fix that. I’ll start the impeachment paperwork tomorrow morning!”
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