He'd certainly be in *good company*.
He seems like such a staple in Bush's Middle East policy. And he's wanted for bank fraud in Turkey, and doubles as an Iranian spy too.
At the State of the Union, 2004
With Rumsfeld
With Powell
With Lott
With Wolfowitz
With Woolsey
With Jesse Helms
Chalabi with Iranian President Mohammad Khatami (center) at an official meeting in Tehran, Iran, on Saturday March 13, 2004.
At American Enterprise Institute
Friend and propagandist Judy Run Amok Miller
And now,
Petraeus Personally Introduces Disgraced Ahmed Chalabi To U.S. Troops In Iraq, October, 2007
I find this a monumental insult to our troops. General Betrayus lives up to his name.
After
pledging to "sprint to the finish" the next two years, the president said that the "true history" of any president is not written until "long after the person is gone" and that most "short-term historians" have political biases that make their analyses suspect. ----December, 2006
And I include these excerpts as a grim reminder of the last 7 years.
Bush insists he'll "sprint to the finish line"-----October 18, 2007
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With 15 months to go in office, President George W. Bush wants the U.S. Congress to know he has no plans to fade quietly away.
He might not have been "dialed in" on a children's health bill pushed through this month, but, in his own words at a news conference on Wednesday, he's sprinting to the finish line with the help of a bully pulpit and a veto pen.
On a collision course with the Democratic-led Congress on issues like domestic spying, the budget and Iraq, the Republican president rebuffed a questioner who asked if he was becoming irrelevant.
"Quite the contrary," he declared. "I've never felt more engaged and more capable of helping people recognize -- American people recognize -- that there's a lot of unfinished business."
.....
He later gleefully reminded reporters that the news conference was "not my first rodeo," as he easily sidestepped a question he did not want to answer about reports that North Korea might have helped Syria develop a nuclear weapon.
Bush, who had once hoped to make an overhaul of the Social Security retirement program his signature domestic achievement for his second term, is now focusing on trying to acquire the mantle of a fiscal conservative by blocking Democratic spending proposals.
But he faces obstacles in some of those escalating spending battles, including one over bill to expand a popular children's health program, which he has vetoed. Bush accused Democrats of not seeking his input before settling on their bill.
He also insisted it was the Democratic leaders who control Congress -- not him -- who were running out of time in pressing their agenda and noted they were having difficulty completing spending bills before their session ends in a few weeks.
He did bring up the issue of his own future when asked to comment on speculation that Russian President Vladimir Putin may try to maintain some control after a scheduled handover of power in Moscow next year.
Bush said he has been unsuccessful in getting Putin to discuss his plans when they met earlier this year.
"He wouldn't tip his hand. I'll tip mine," Bush said. "I'm going to finish -- I'm going to work hard to the finish. I'm going to sprint to the finish line, and then you'll find me in Crawford," he said, referring to his Texas ranch.
Certifiable.