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Transcript of Dr. Rice Condoleezza Rice Sept. 19 Press Briefing
US Newswire ^ | 9/19/2001 | Dr. Rice Condoleezza

Posted on 09/19/2001 5:39:29 PM PDT by Utah Girl

Transcript of White House Press Briefing with Rice
U.S. Newswire
19 Sep 19:28

Transcript of Dr. Rice Condoleezza Rice Sept. 19 Press Briefing
To: National Desk
Contact: White House Press Office, 202-456-2580

WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The following is a
transcript a White House Press Briefing by Dr. Condoleezza
Rice:

5:38 P.M. EDT

DR. RICE: Good afternoon, everyone. I'm here principally to
answer questions. But I thought I might just give you a little
feel for what today has been like for the President.

He has, of course, had several meetings, including a very
successful with President Megawati of Indonesia. He took that
opportunity at this meeting, which was planned before, but,
nevertheless, came in the middle of this situation, to express
to President Megawati -- where there is, of course, the largest
Muslim population in the world in Indonesia -- his very great
desire that everyone understand that America believes that the
terrorism that we experienced is not the work of Islam, it is
not the work of Islamic people, it is not the work of Arabs, it
is the work of extremists. And he used the opportunity again to
underscore his message of tolerance that he has been
underscoring all week.

He also met with German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, who
delivered a message of support from Chancellor Gerhardt
Schroeder; with Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov of Russia, who did
the same from President Putin. And he had a couple of phone
calls this morning -- one with President Mbeki of South Africa,
and another with President Kim Dae Jung of South Korea.

The President has met with his National Security Council this
morning. The pattern is that he meets with his National Security
Council in the morning. He chairs those meetings, himself. And
then the principals reassemble later in the day to share notes,
to consult and coordinate, and to prepare the next day's
national security meeting.

The President also received the leadership of the Congress,
the two House leaders, Speaker Hastert, Leader Gephardt, and the
two Senate leaders, Senator Daschle and Senator Lott. And he was
delighted to receive from Speaker Hastert an invitation to go
and address the Joint Session of Congress tomorrow.

So it was a very busy day, but I think again, a very
successful day as the President begins to lay out the first
phases of this campaign that he wants to underscore is going to
be a very long campaign in this war against terrorism.

Q: Condi, will you tell us what he hopes to accomplish
tomorrow? And will the American people have any better idea of
who he's going to strike, where he's going to strike, when he's
going to strike, what he's going to strike?

DR. RICE: Ron, this is not a speech to announce military
action. The President has made very clear that he intends to be
patient, that he is going to review his options, that he is
going to look for ways to be effective in whatever it is that we
do, and that we are now launched on a long campaign.

So what the President will do tomorrow is to use the
opportunity to talk to the American people about the kind of
threat that we face. The American people have a lot of questions
about what kind of people would do this to the United States,
why this kind of hate would exist against the United States. So
we'll get a clearer picture of the enemy that we're facing.

I think the President is going to use this as an opportunity
to talk about the sustained nature of this campaign, that this
cannot be a campaign that is thought of like the Gulf War, where
there was a capital with a leadership that one understood fully
in the way that we traditionally understood leadership. I think
he will use it as an opportunity to urge patience and reason,
and to demonstrate again that his resolve is going to be over a
long period of time, not in a single moment.

One other thing, Ron, I would just like to mention is that
he's going to talk about what Americans can do to prepare for
this effort, and he's going to talk some about the nature of the
support that we're getting from around the world, which is
really quite extraordinary. I think everybody understood that
this was not just an attack on America, this was an attack on
freedom.

Q: You said that the President reiterated the message of
tolerance and the importance that this is not a campaign against
Islam or Arab nations, generally. Has it been communicated to
the administration from those nations from that part of the
world that you've been talking to recently that it is a highly
critical thing for the President to do, not just once, but over
and over and over again? And President Megawati has returned to
the building; we've seen her enter the West Wing just a few
moments ago. Can you tell us with whom she is meeting and what
we can read into that?

DR. RICE: I believe President Megawati was scheduled a long
time ago during this to have a meeting with the Vice President.
She's meeting with the Vice President. But it was not arranged
hastily or anything like that; it was scheduled as a part of her
program.

In terms of the tolerance message, it was very much the
President's instinct from the very beginning that it was
extremely important that he, first as President of the United
States, make very clear that we had a lot of Muslims in the
United States of America who are patriotic people, who salute
the flag just like all of us do, who were appalled and saddened
by what happened on September 11th, and that we are a country
that judges people not by their religious beliefs or by their
color, by the fact that we're all Americans.

So that was the first part of the message. The second part
of the message is that we have a lot of friends around the world
who are Muslim. We have countries that are long friends of the
United States who are of the Islamic faith. And the President
wanted to be very clear that this is not a war of
"civilizations," that this is not a war against Islam. This is
a war against people who in many ways pervert what Islam stands
for. Islam stands for peace and stands for nonviolence. And he
wanted to make that very, very clear.

Q: If I may follow up --

DR. RICE: Yes, sure.

Q: -- did that need become more pronounced after the
President invoked the word "crusade" on Sunday, and that raised
some alarms within the Muslim community in America and
internationally?

DR. RICE: This has been part of our -- the message from the
very beginning. And in every conversation that the President has
had with leaders of all countries, but also with Muslim
countries, he has been saying this from the very beginning.

Q: Is the President prepared for the inevitable comparisons
with President Roosevelt, vis-a-vis tomorrow's speech?

DR. RICE: Well, I think the President is going to deliver the
speech on its own terms. But it allows an interesting point,
which is that this isn't Pearl Harbor. I know that there are a
lot of comparisons to Pearl Harbor, but this is different. And
it's different in a lot of ways. This is the first war of the
21st century.

In that case, we had a country with a capital, with marching
armies and beaches to storm, and islands to take, and in the
last war, deserts to cross. That is not the nature of this war.
There will be, undoubtedly, some things that our military forces
and the military forces of others can do. But this is also a war
of will and mind. It is a war in which information may be the
most important asset that we have. And so we're asking a lot of
countries to help us with information. These are not traditional
enemies, and so he's going to have a very different task.

Q: -- will have a different speech for us than the one
Roosevelt delivered?
 

DR. RICE: This is a speech that will seek to start to broaden
and deepen the American people's understanding, indeed, people
around the world -- the understanding of what it is we face and
how we're going to have to face it. Because we're in this for
the long haul.

Q: Condi, does the President believe and will he try to
prepare people tomorrow night for some sort of sense of
sacrifice? For instance, we're already talking about spending
some $100 billion on things other than what it would have been
spent on. Clearly, something has to give.

DR. RICE: I think that every American understands that life
changed on September 11th. Now, what didn't change is our way of
life. And we have to, as the President said when he welcomed
workers back here at the White House Complex, it's every
American's duty to try to get back to doing the things that make
us American: Going to work and going to shop and taking your
kids to school.

But there is no doubt that the country faced a severe shock
and blow. And we have to respond to that. And he said to the
leaders that this country is going to respond and its leadership
is going to respond. He's been heartened by the fact of unity
between the Congress and the Executive Branch on exactly this
point.

But, yes, this is going to be a time of sacrifice. I think
the President is not afraid to say that, and he will make that
case.

Q: Dr. Rice, a lot of nations around the world are calling
for the United States to act with restraint, China, Egypt,
Jordan, saying that we should act with restraint. Some are even
suggesting we operate through multilateral institutions. What's
the balance between this coalition-building that the President
is doing, and the U.S. exercising its right under the UN Charter
to act unilaterally?

DR. RICE: The United States faces a situation in which we
really are in a situation of self-defense. If no one believes
that these are dangerous people to the health and well-being of
the United States, then just look again at that tape on
September 11th.

I would caution that this is a different kind of coalition.
This is not the Gulf War coalition where we all mobilize our
military forces and march off to war after 100 days. This is a
coalition in which I think a lot of states have recognized that
this is not just an attack on the United States, this is an
attack on freedom-loving peoples everywhere. This is an attack
that was meant to generate maximum fear in countries that don't
want to close their borders, that don't want to act in a fearful
way.

Now, there are going to be a lot of different fronts in this
war; some on the information side, some on the financial side,
some on the military side, some on other fronts. And I think
that we will have broad support, different countries are going
to play different roles. There are going to be countries that
you may never hear of their contribution. But it might actually
be the most important contribution in locating this network.

So this is a different kind of coalition. The President is
absolutely committed to doing what the United States has to do.
But I think that we have tremendous support and understanding
that there have to be several phases to this, and this has to go
on for a long time.

Q: A quick follow-up. Does the U.S. feel constrained at all
by the calls from other nations, especially as time passes
and the urgency of the moment fades -- does the United States
feel constrained about that?

DR. RICE: The President's made clear that he's not going to
lose his focus. And with every foreign leader -- and I've sat in
now on lots of meetings with leaders -- every conversation is
about how the world cannot lose its focus on what happened;
cannot start to get back to normal life -- we want to do that --
but forget that this is a threat that is out there and that will
strike again if we don't take the necessary measures to root it
out, to draw them out of their holes, as the President said, to
bring them to justice. And so we are not going to lose focus,
and we don't think that the rest of the world will lose focus.

But the main thing here is to do something effective; to do
something effective in the first phases, but also to continue to
do something effective over the long haul.

Q: In my mind, the President left the impression today that
in terms of coalition-building, the first objective is that
the U.S. has the right and the obligation to retaliate against
those who are responsible for the World Trade Center attacks and
the attack on the Pentagon, and that that's first. And that for
the longer part of the sustained effort, the coalition-building
may come after that. Is that a fair reading?

DR. RICE: No, I think that we believe that this first phase
in which the President demonstrates, if you will, that what he
said about being determined to root out those who perpetrated
this act and those who harbor them -- in other words, that there
isn't a distinction here -- that that is an important part of
the next phase of this; that you have to be able to demonstrate
to states that might harbor terrorists that that's not going to
be a good thing to do in the future, and to give states that
have been harboring terrorism a chance to change their ways.

But the President is committed to the coalition because the
coalition is being committed to him. And I want to caution:
Talking about the coalition again, we tend to think of the last
war and we tend to think of the way that the Gulf War coalition
was put together. But countries are going to contribute
different things. And the most important contributions may come
down the road as we deal with the financial networks of these
organizations, that we deal with rooting them out of countries
in which they are burrowed in and ready to strike.

This is a long conflict, a long struggle, and there are going
to be a lot of different contributions along the road from
a lot of different countries.

Q: As you say, the President isn't going to announce military
action tomorrow night, so what will he say that we have
not already heard from him? Is he going to tell us anything new?

DR. RICE: The President will take this opportunity to make
a case, I think, to the American people of why we are entering
this long struggle and to understand better its nature. This is
not something that is going to be over in a matter of months.
And so the President feels, I think, an obligation to bring the
American people along with him in his thinking, to bring them
along with him in his deepening understanding of what it is we
face, to understand that there may be sacrifice along the way.
Also to rally the country and the world to understand that this
really is an attack on freedom. It's a chance to bring this
together in a way that lays the foundation for what is really
going to be a long struggle.

Q: Did the President today, Condi, sign any deployment order,
as was reported on at least network, regarding additional
airplanes to the Gulf region, to beef up the no-fly zone forces
there and potentially clear up other forces to deal with
something in Central Asia?

DR. RICE: The United States is repositioning some of its
forces to support the President's goal. I'm not going to talk
about operational matters or further about troop movements. I
can refer you to the Pentagon for anything further. But we are
repositioning some forces.

Q: But can you -- at least, without the specifics, as an
order signed and approved by the President, whatever the order
says?

DR. RICE: Well, you understand that the President has done
a couple of things. The order on the call-up of the Reserves;
he's talked with the Secretary of Defense about what is
necessary to prepare the United States for any action that it
might wish to take in accordance with the goals that he's laid
out.

Q: Dr. Rice, the Chinese President, Jiang Zemin, has been
raising a quiet campaign that's quite different from the United
States. He called several world leaders, including President
Chirac, just been here yesterday. And what they are saying
basically is that the United States, if you want to wage a war,
you have to go through the United Nations Security Council and
respect the so-called territorial integrity and the sovereignty
issue. A lot of analysts are saying that the Chinese real target
is Taiwan and Tibet. I just wonder whether the President has any
idea on this. I mean, the Chinese Foreign Minister is due here
tomorrow.

DR. RICE: Yes, the Chinese Foreign Minister is due here. But
let me say that one of the first phone calls that the President
had was with President Jiang Zemin. It was a very positive phone
call that promised cooperation.

Again, we do not expect every country in the world to be
involved in every phase of this operation, or in every aspect of
it. We expect, though, that everybody understands that terrorism
is a real threat to civilization, to freedom-loving peoples, and
that we believe the Chinese understand and understand fully.

Q: Do you need another U.N. resolution to do it?

DR. RICE: Look, the United States -- first of all, we had an
expression from the U.N. of support for the United States, and
an understanding that there are things that may have to be done.
I can't tell you what further U.N. activity there may be or we
may request. We have had several expressions of support from a
number of countries, from a number of alliances, and I think the
most remarkable in this regard was NATO's invocation of Article
Very, that an attack upon one is an attack upon all.

But the United States, of course, has certain rights to
self-defense. I think people understand that. Again, if you
don't think that this is about self-defense, just look at those
pictures on September 11th.

David.

Q: Condi, several of the leaders have asked for evidence
of Osama bin Laden's involvement. We heard this today from
Pakistan; we've heard it from Chinese, as well. Within the
constraints that you have, given the classification of the
material, what are you prepared to go do, and what model -- in
the way of sharing this evidence to help build the coalition?
And what model do you use for this? Does it go back to sort of
the Cuban missile crisis, where obviously some intelligence data
was shared? What do you do and how central is that?

DR. RICE: Well, David, the first thing to say is that,
obviously, there's an ongoing investigation, and so I can't get
into details of what is being looked at. But I will say this:
The organization that were talking about has a history. There
are already indictments out against members of this organization
and against Osama bin Laden, himself. This is an organization
that is well-known to have been involved in several other
terrorist incidents or attacks against American interests. There
are a number of operatives whose names have popped up during
this investigation that are known to be linked to Osama bin
Laden.

I think that we know who we're dealing with and what we're
dealing with here, and we've known for a long time. I would just
say that we are more than happy to talk with allies and friends
in the rest of the world about what it is we need to do. But the
United States is going to have to take measures in self-defense
to deal with this problem.

Let's be very clear: The President is concerned to protect
the United States in any way that he can. And rooting this
cancer out of the tens of countries that are out there in which
it's operating has got to take place because that is in the
self-defense of the United States, and frankly, in the
self-defense of all countries that favor freedom.

Q: Can you tell us anything about the speech preparation
-- how long has his speech been in the works, and how is he
putting it together? And what is the explanation for why people
would do this?

DR. RICE: I'm sorry?

Q: What is the explanation for why people would do this?

DR. RICE: Well, I think that I'd refer you to the President's
speech tomorrow night. I think that he's going to really lay out
this case for the American people as a fundamental, a foundation
for what we're about to face. And I urge you very much to listen
to it in its totality. The speechwriting process is, you know,
the speechwriting process. There have been a number of people
involved in it. It wouldn't surprise you that --

Q: When did it start?

DR. RICE: You know, a couple of days. The President's been
thinking about the speech for a couple of days, but not with a
specific date in mind. I think he's known for quite some time
that he wanted to make the case to the American people for what
it is we're about to embark on, and he wanted to do that in a
way that is not hurried, not a press sound byte here or there,
but really lays out the case.

Q: As far as the message of returning to a normal life,
returning to school, returning to jobs, what does the President
intend to do for those people who have no job to return to you
in the wake of massive layoffs, particularly in certain sectors?
Is he going to outline in any way or reassure the American
people of any economic stimulus package, any assistance, to
particular sectors that have been hit in the wake of all this?

DR. RICE: You know that the President is in discussions with
his economic advisors and also with the Congress about what can
be done to deal with the national emergency that we have faced.
I think the President is quite aware, as everyone is, that there
have been effects on the economy of what happened.

But I know that he said to the leaders today that he wants
to work with them and that he is prepared to try to think about
what it is that he needs to do. But beyond that, the details
will come.

Q: Many Americans expect some kind of decisive military
action. From all that you've said, this being a campaign of mind
and will and so forth, is part of the President's intention to
suggest that perhaps what will be decisive here will not be
military action?

DR. RICE: The President is going to be results-oriented. And
he is bringing to bear all of our instruments of national power.
He is also bringing to bear the assets and instruments of
national power of a vast number of countries around the world.
 

I have no doubt that military power is some part of that. But
we are not facing a traditional enemy here; we're facing a
quite unconventional enemy. The President, though, made very
clear that while he wants to root out those who are hiding who
we've gotten accustomed to as the car bomber who runs and hides,
but who, this time, perpetrated this well-orchestrated terror
attack on some of the most important symbols of power and
authority and prosperity of the United States, that he's got to
get them. He's got to root out that organization, wherever it
may be, but that he also believes that those who harbor them
need to be -- it needs to be demonstrated to them that harboring
these terrorists is not good for one's well-being.

So there will be a host of instruments brought to bear on
this problem, and that's the case that the President is going to
make tomorrow.

Final, final question.

Q: On the coalition, are you suggesting today that it might
be useful to think of this as multiple coalitions for multiple
purposes? And second, this 192 countries that have responded
with condolences or offers of help include a lot of countries
that are not, as you describe, freedom-loving countries, people
that the Vice President's described as some unsavory characters.
And I'm wondering, some of these countries are able to provide
the most help in rooting out this terrorist threat. I'm
wondering how you're going to be guided in striking
a balance between how far the United States can go in dealing
with these countries to get at this threat?

DR. RICE: Our values matter to us. And I want to make the
point that our values matter to us internally as we try to think
about how to secure ourselves better. Civil liberties matter to
this President very much, and our values matter to us abroad. We
are not going to stop talking about the things that matter to
us, human rights, religious freedom and so forth and so on.
We're going to continue to press those things; we would not be
America if we did not.

We have a particular threat here to our -- not just our well-
being, but to our way of life. And the coalition and what
countries can bring to it, it's very important to take advantage
of what can be brought from a variety of different countries and
a variety of different means to address that threat. And yes, I
think the notion of multiple coalitions is probably a good one.

There is clearly one, big, over-arching coalition that says,
this could have been us, and we understand that when America was
attacked, more than America was attacked. But what different
countries will bring to the equation, what different fronts
people will fight on against this war on terrorism I think will
unfold over this period of time.

But I do want to say that the really interesting thing about
what happened on Tuesday, if you try and step back from the
horrors of it -- and it's just really horrible -- is that when
the World Trade Center went down, the world's trade center went
down. There were citizens from numerous countries that died in
the World Trade Center. This was not just Americans. These were
Pakistanis and Brits and people from the continent of Africa and
Latin Americans.

What really was attacked was this world community that trades
and works and tries to make people more prosperous and enjoys
the freedoms and the kind of freedom of life that we're
so accustomed to in the United States. And so when the President
says that he is doing this to rally the world, we have a very
visible symbol of the fact that it was the world that was
attacked, and it was the multiple nationalities that were
attacked in the World Trade Center.

Thank you very much.

END 6:05 P.M. EDT


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
This press briefing will also be re-broadcast on C-Span I at 2:32 AM and again at 5:54 AM. You can also watch the briefing on RealPlayer here.
1 posted on 09/19/2001 5:39:29 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
She is awesome. I would love to see a Bush/Rice ticket in 2003.
2 posted on 09/19/2001 5:55:18 PM PDT by Galtoid
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To: Galtoid
She is totally awesome. Graceful under pressure and so well-informed. Plus she nails the press corps. I'd love to see her as VP or President some day.
3 posted on 09/19/2001 5:58:12 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
Oh, thak you for posting this ... I never would have found it otherwise. LET'S ROLL!!!
4 posted on 09/19/2001 6:05:37 PM PDT by BunnySlippers
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To: Utah Girl
"Q: Condi, will you tell us what he hopes to accomplish tomorrow? And will the American people have any better idea of who he's going to strike, where he's going to strike, when he's going to strike, what he's going to strike? "

Idiot reporters never get it, do they? Idiot questions. Do they honestly think they will get these answers?

5 posted on 09/19/2001 6:05:50 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: Utah Girl
She is so quick on the uptake ... no hesitation. She is a true hero!
6 posted on 09/19/2001 6:11:27 PM PDT by BunnySlippers
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To: the Deejay
Idiot reporters never get it, do they? Idiot questions. Do they honestly think they will get these answers?

So true. What is she supposed to answer? We're striking HERE at this TIME on this DATE? You're right, what morons!

7 posted on 09/19/2001 6:13:19 PM PDT by BunnySlippers
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To: BunnySlippers
So true. What is she supposed to answer? We're striking HERE at this TIME on this DATE? You're right, what morons!

I've been saying it for donkey's years about the press! I'm glad to see others are seeing this, too.

8 posted on 09/19/2001 6:27:47 PM PDT by the Deejay
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To: Utah Girl, BunnySlippers
Flashback to 1991:

So, General Powell, when will the ground war begin?

Didn't this reporter watch the Saturday Night Live skit back then blasting the press over this? Ha!

9 posted on 09/19/2001 6:37:55 PM PDT by Miss Marple
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To: the Deejay
I object to them calling her "Condi." As if they're her buddy. Sounds to me as if they're talking down to her, when she could obviously eat them for lunch.
10 posted on 09/19/2001 7:16:32 PM PDT by gymbeau
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To: gymbeau
I've heard several in the Bush administration call her Condi also. That said, the press should address her as Dr Rice.
11 posted on 09/19/2001 7:48:02 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: Miss Marple
What makes me crazy is the reporters ask this same question day after day in Ari Fleischer's press briefing, in Colin Powell's briefings, in John Ashcroft's briefings, etc. I think they think someone in the Bush administration will slip up and reveal a plan. I don't think so, Donald Rumsfield has told DOD employess that the press is off-limits, if anyone is caught giving information to the press that they shouldn't be, their career is over. Finally!!!
12 posted on 09/19/2001 7:52:43 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: gymbeau
EXACTLY my reaction. I hope this brings back some formality and respect into peoples day to day dealings.

FReegards,

13 posted on 09/19/2001 7:53:28 PM PDT by VMI70
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To: gymbeau
THANK YOU! That guy from Fox News Channel,I can't remember his name always calls her Condi and it irritates me no end.He should call her Dr.Rice.
14 posted on 09/19/2001 7:57:04 PM PDT by Lady In Blue
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To: Utah Girl
But the United States, of course, has certain rights to self-defense. I think people understand that. Again, if you don't think that this is about self-defense, just look at those pictures on September 11th.

This is a very important statement, in response to a question about the UN. It suggests that the liberals crowing about the end of Bush's "unilateralism" may be rejoicing too soon. They never have understood that what they call Bush's "unilateralism" does not mean acting without allies and coalitions. It's about not letting the "process" of multilateralism trump the substance of foreign policy, which is to protect our interests in a fair and reasonable way.

It is good to hear Dr. Rice affirm that the United States has a right to defend itself and does not need the approval of the UN in order to act.

15 posted on 09/19/2001 8:21:31 PM PDT by Southern Federalist
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To: Utah Girl
She is totally awesome. Graceful under pressure and so well-informed. Plus she nails the press corps. I'd love to see her as VP or President some day.

If, god forbid, a future terrorist attack takes out either our President or VP (or natural causes catch up with them), I think the survivor should instantly appoint Dr. Rice as the new VP.

16 posted on 09/19/2001 8:28:56 PM PDT by Dan Day
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To: Southern Federalist
Yes it was good hear her affirm that today yet again. The press has been harping on this issue in almost every press briefing I've seen lately. Ari Fleischer nailed Major Garrett of CNN and some other reporter for asking the same exact question three days in a row, that the US has the right to defend herself without the UN's sanction. I think the reporters think they're going to find someone who will give them a secret, exclusive answer. Not from this administration, they won't.
17 posted on 09/19/2001 8:29:17 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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To: gymbeau
I object to them calling her "Condi."

I agree--all the more so because she's a) a woman, b) black, c) relatively young. Sounds demeaning.

At the same time, though, I do not think she--or President Bush, for that matter--should call reporters by their first name, either. That did not used to be the case a couple of decades ago. It was always, "Miss Thomas" or "Mr. Danaldson," etc. That keeps a proper, formal distance, to my mind. Call me old-fashioned.

Charlie

(aka, The Rev. Charles M. Henrickson)

18 posted on 09/19/2001 8:33:09 PM PDT by Charles Henrickson
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To: Utah Girl
She is awsome...she was a frequent guest on KSFO Hot Talk 560 in the mornings with Lee and Mel prior to the elections...they always chided her that an offing of NSA was coming...she would brush off this attention...what a wonderful lady...what a patriot...AND I AM SO DAMN HAPPY ADULTS ARE IN CHARGE HERE.........
19 posted on 09/19/2001 8:57:10 PM PDT by oneway
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To: oneway
Not to mention she is a total babe....
20 posted on 09/19/2001 9:07:08 PM PDT by oneway
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