Hullaballo Over “Mission Accomplished” Banner – Shrub Says It Wasn’t His Idea, Sorry For The Miscommunication — White House Press Release Suggests Otherwise

As if the “Mission Accomplished” banner was the only thing that implied “Mission Accomplished,” during the Shrub’s memorable flight suit May 1 extravaganza.
Oh you thought I meant the mission was accomplished. I just meant a mission was accomplished: The mission of the USS Abraham Lincoln, of course… Sorry to give the wrong impression.
Gee, you don’t think anyone got that wrong impression because the White House sent out a press release that said President Bush Announces Combat Operations in Iraq Have Ended or anything, do you?

Bush Disavows ‘Mission Accomplished’ Link

In The Guardian UK.

When it was brought up again Tuesday at a news conference, Bush said, “The ‘Mission Accomplished’ sign, of course, was put up by the members of the USS Abraham Lincoln, saying that their mission was accomplished.”
“I know it was attributed somehow to some ingenious advance man from my staff – they weren’t that ingenious, by the way.”
That explanation hadn’t surfaced during months of questions to White House officials about proclaiming the mission in Iraq successful while violence continued.
After the news conference, a White House spokeswoman said the Lincoln’s crew asked the White House to have the sign made. The White House asked a private vendor to produce the sign, and the crew put it up, said the spokeswoman. She said she did not know who paid for the sign.
Later, a Pentagon spokesman called The Associated Press to reiterate that the banner was the crew’s idea.


Full text of press release below.
Here is the full text of the article in case the link goes bad:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-3321684,00.html
Bush Disavows ‘Mission Accomplished’ Link
The Guardian UK
Wednesday 29 October 2003
WASHINGTON (AP) – Six months after he spoke on an aircraft carrier deck under a banner proclaiming “Mission Accomplished,” President Bush disavowed any connection with the war message. Later, the White House changed its story and said there was a link.
The “Mission Accomplished” boast has been mocked many times since Bush’s carrier speech as criticism has mounted over the failed search for weapons of mass destruction and the continuing violence in Iraq.
When it was brought up again Tuesday at a news conference, Bush said, “The ‘Mission Accomplished’ sign, of course, was put up by the members of the USS Abraham Lincoln, saying that their mission was accomplished.”
“I know it was attributed somehow to some ingenious advance man from my staff – they weren’t that ingenious, by the way.”
That explanation hadn’t surfaced during months of questions to White House officials about proclaiming the mission in Iraq successful while violence continued.
After the news conference, a White House spokeswoman said the Lincoln’s crew asked the White House to have the sign made. The White House asked a private vendor to produce the sign, and the crew put it up, said the spokeswoman. She said she did not know who paid for the sign.
Later, a Pentagon spokesman called The Associated Press to reiterate that the banner was the crew’s idea.
“It truly did signify a mission accomplished for the crew,” Navy Cmdr. Conrad Chun said, adding the president’s visit marked the end of the ship’s 10-month international deployment.
The president’s appearance on the Abraham Lincoln, which was returning home after service in the Persian Gulf, included his dramatic and much-publicized landing on the ship’s deck.
Bush’s disavowal Tuesday brought new criticism from at least three of the Democrats seeking their party’s nomination to run against the president – John Kerry, Wesley Clark and Joe Lieberman.
“Today was another banner day in George Bushs quest to bring honor and integrity to the White House,” Lieberman said. “If he wanted to prove he has trouble leveling with the American people, mission accomplished.”
Here is the full text of the press release in case the link goes bad:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/05/20030501-6.html
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
May 1, 2003
President Bush Announces Combat Operations in Iraq Have Ended
Event Backgrounder
The President Visits the USS Abraham Lincoln
BACKGROUND
USS Abraham Lincoln set the record for the longest naval deployment by a nuclear powered aircraft carrier in history, deploying for almost 10 months, and steaming over 100,000 miles. For a Carrier Strike Group, this is the longest deployment in the last 30 years. The USS Lincoln Strike Group was involved in combat in support of three major operations: Operation Southern Watch, Operation Enduring Freedom, and Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Click here for a USS Abraham Lincoln photo essay.
The Air Wing will depart the USS Lincoln while off the coast of San Diego on May 1. The ship will then pull into Naval Air Station North Island (San Diego) on May 2 to off load the rest of the Air Wing equipment. The Lincoln will return to her homeport of Everett, Washington on May 6.
The Lincoln supported one of the largest media embed operations on any ship in naval history by embarking 31 media organizations that included CNN, MSNBC, the BBC, Los Angeles Times, and the New York Times.

9 thoughts on “Hullaballo Over “Mission Accomplished” Banner – Shrub Says It Wasn’t His Idea, Sorry For The Miscommunication — White House Press Release Suggests Otherwise

  1. FreedomHaters.com

    How interesting. If you visit the press release, you wouldn’t think it was a press release stating that major combat operations in iraq have ended. Rather you WOULD think it was part of the Navy’s mission. Maybe they have changed the website (maybe I say?), however we will never know now unless someone has the page archived and the whitehouse website has been set up not to let search engines archive their site.
    Anyway its irrelevant, this has got to be the biggest whopper I have ever heard. This really is propaganda at its worst. I wonder how many people are just lapping it up and believing this bullshit. Surely, your most ignorant members of society could see this.
    Cheers, Adrian

  2. Killebrew

    This is the text of Shrubs “Mission Accomplished” speech from the USS Abraham Lincoln on May 1, 2003. It leaves no doubt what ‘Mission Accomplished’ was intended to mean http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/05/iraq/20030501-15.html
    Some choice Shrub quotes of this May 1 speech:
    “In the images of celebrating Iraqis, we have also seen the ageless appeal of human freedom.”
    “The battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on terror”
    Can we expect this to be removed by the administration sometime soon in case this “The war? Gosh no, by ‘Mission Accomplished’ I meant my mission to get a good photo op!” back peddling starts causing some media controversy (which it richly deserves).

  3. Killebrew

    This is the text of Shrubs “Mission Accomplished” speech from the USS Abraham Lincoln on May 1, 2003. It leaves no doubt what ‘Mission Accomplished’ was intended to mean http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/05/iraq/20030501-15.html
    Some choice Shrub quotes of this May 1 speech:
    “In the images of celebrating Iraqis, we have also seen the ageless appeal of human freedom.”
    “The battle of Iraq is one victory in a war on terror”
    Can we expect this to be removed by the administration sometime soon in case this “The war? Gosh no, by ‘Mission Accomplished’ I meant my mission to get a good photo op!” back peddling starts causing some media controversy (which it richly deserves).

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