Bob
Woodward
Brent
Scowcroft
Woodward Says His Reporting Of Comments By
President George H.W. Bush Is Based On What Former President Bush Told Brent
Scowcroft.
WOODWARD: "And [President
George H.W. Bush] said that to Brent Scowcroft, who was his National Security
Advisor. And I reported that out
thoroughly. And as you see, there's
a kind of vagueness in the, well, I don't know what's said in the book, I like
[Condoleezza Rice]. Well, I didn't
say he didn't like her. I said that
he told Brent Scowcroft, who's one of his closest friends and aides … [Condi's]
a disappointment, isn't she?"
(CNN's "The Situation
Room,"
Ø
Brent Scowcroft Says He Did Not Speak To Bob
Woodward And Never Discusses His
Personal Conversations With President George H.W.
Bush.
SCOWCROFT: "I have spoken to Bob Woodward a number of times about a
variety of subjects over the years, but I did not agree to be interviewed for
his latest book. Further, there are
statements in the book, directly or implicitly attributed to me, that did not
and never could have come from me.
I never discuss any personal conversations that I may have with President
H.W. Bush, and he never discusses with me any conversations that he has with
President George W. Bush."
(Brent Scowcroft,
Statement,
July 10 Rice-Tenet
Meeting
On CNN, Woodward Claims The White House
Initially Denied The July 10 Meeting.
WOODWARD: "Now, when this book was
published, the first reaction was, oh no, there was no such meeting."
(CNN's "The Situation
Room,"
Ø
Last Friday, Immediately Upon Learning Of
Woodward's Claims, The White House And State Department Confirmed That The July
10, 2001, Rice-Tenet Meeting Took
Place.
"White House and State Department officials yesterday confirmed that the
July 10 meeting took place, although they took issue with Woodward's portrayal
of its results."
(Peter Baker, "White House
Disputes Book's Report Of Anti-Rumsfeld Moves," The
In His Book, Woodward Claims Tenet Felt That
He Was Brushed Off.
(Bob Woodward, State Of
Ø
On CNN, Woodward Says Rice Responded
Seriously To Tenet's
Briefing.
WOODWARD: "They then present this information and as now they've
revealed, which I did not know, that Rice then asked Tenet, in fact, ordered him
to give the briefing to Don Rumsfeld and John Ashcroft who was then Attorney
General. I know of no other
incident where she requested or ordered that a briefing be given to those two
officials. So obviously, there was
a seriousness to it. Tenet and
Black wanted to move faster. It's
also reasonable, her position, which is reflected in the book – namely, they
didn't come in and say, hey, there's going to be a terrorist attack in 60 days,
this is how they're going to do it, and these are their targets."
(CNN's "The Situation
Room,"
Ø
9/11 Commission Member Richard Ben-Veniste
Says Tenet Testified That Rice Understood The Gravity Of Tenet's
Briefing.
"According to three people present at the session, including Ben-Veniste,
Tenet believed that Rice responded seriously to what she had been told. 'We particularly questioned him about
whether he had the sense that Dr. Rice and the others on the White House side
understood the gravity of what he was telling them,' said Ben-Veniste, a former
Watergate prosecutor. 'He said that they believed that they did. … We asked him
further whether Dr. Rice just shrugged this off, and he said he did not have
such an impression.'"
(Dan Eggen and Robin
Wright, "Tenet Recalled Warning Rice," The
Reports On Violence Levels In
Today, Woodward Said He Was "Really
Surprised To Discover The Level Of Violence In Iraq, And You See That They Go
Out And Say, Oh, The Terrorists Are In Retreat, We Have Turned A Corner And The
Secret Intelligence Flatly Contradicts That."
In
his book, Woodward charges that a secret Pentagon report saying the insurgents
and terrorists retained the resources and capabilities to "sustain and even
increase current levels of violence through the next year" conflicts with a
public report sent to Congress two days later.
(MSNBC's "Hardball With
Chris Matthews,"
Ø
In His Book, Woodward Confuses How The
Pentagon's Public 9010 Report Defines The
Opposition In
Ø
In His Book, Woodward Inaccurately Claims
The Public Report Defined "Iraqi Rejectionists" As "Former Regime Loyalists,
Saddamists, And Terrorists, Including Al Qaeda."
(Bob Woodward, State Of
Ø
The Excerpt From The Public Report That
Woodward References Is About The "Appeal And Motivation" Of Rejectionists
–
It Is NOT About Violence Caused By
Insurgents Or Terrorists.
It
is accurate and consistent to note that
terrorists and
insurgents will "retain the capabilities" to "sustain
violence levels through 2007," but that "appeal and motivation for rejectionist
elements will wane in 2007" as the political process consolidates with full
Sunni participation.
Ø
For Terrorist Elements Such As Al Qaeda, The
Public Report Says Nothing About "Waning" Violence – But Says Terrorists Remain
"Resilient."
"Of the groups described above, terrorists
and foreign fighters posed the most serious and immediate threat during this
reporting period. Although the
overall level of support to terrorists and foreign fighters among Iraqis is
apparently declining, Al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI), which is suspected of conducting
the attack on the Golden Mosque in
Ø
The Public Report Contains Charts Showing An
Increasing Trend In Violence And Casualties.
Far from hiding an increasing trend in
violence, the report notes that "overall, average weekly attacks during [this]
period were higher than any of the previous periods."

Ø
The Statistics Woodward Claims To Have Been
Hidden From Public View, Were Clearly Presented In The Same Public Report On
Which He Bases His Charge.

Ø
President Bush Has Been Clear With The
American People That We Are In A Tough, Critical Struggle.
THE
PRESIDENT: "Our nation has been
through three difficult years in