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Sunday, June 16
The Indiana Daily Student

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Bush slams Iraq War critics on trip to Asia

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE -- President Bush hurled new criticism at Iraq war critics Monday as he headed for Asia, accusing some Democrats of "sending mixed signals to our troops and the enemy."\n"That is irresponsible," Bush said in prepared remarks he planned to deliver to U.S. forces during a refueling stop in Alaska. Excerpts were released by the White House as Bush flew to Elmendorf Air Force Base on the initial leg of an eight-day journey to Japan, South Korea, China and Mongolia. Bush had hopes of improving his image on the world stage.\n"Reasonable people can disagree about the conduct of the war, but it is irresponsible for Democrats to now claim that we misled them and the American people," Bush said in his prepared remarks.\n"Only one person manipulated evidence and misled the world -- and that person was Saddam Hussein," Bush added.\nThe president sought to defend himself against criticism by Democrats that he manipulated intelligence and misled the American people about Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction as he sought grounds to go to war against Saddam's regime in 2003.\nMeanwhile, National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley told reporters aboard the presidential aircraft that two agenda items on Bush's Asia trip were the huge Chinese trade surplus with the United States and a U.S.-Japanese dispute over U.S. beef imports.\nNeither dispute was expected to be resolved on the president's trip, Hadley said.\n"I don't think you're going to see headline-breakers" from the president's trip, Hadley said.\nOn Sunday, Hadley acknowledged "we were wrong" about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, but he insisted in a CNN interview that the president did not manipulate intelligence or mislead the American people.\nIraq and other problems -- from the bungled response to Hurricane Katrina to the indictment of a senior White House official in the CIA leak investigation -- have taken a heavy toll on the president's standing. Nearing the end of his fifth year in office, Bush has the lowest approval rating of his presidency, and a majority of Americans say Bush is not honest and they disapprove of his handling of foreign policy and the war on terrorism.\nIn his prepared Alaska remarks, Bush noted that some elected Democrats in Congress "have opposed this war all along.\n"I disagree with them, but I respect their willingness to take a consistent stand," he said. "Yet some Democrats who voted to authorize the use of force are now rewriting the past. They are playing politics with this issue and sending mixed signals to our troops and the enemy."\nIn the Senate, 29 Democrats voted with 48 Republicans for the war authorization measure in late 2002, including 2004 Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts and his running mate, John Edwards of North Carolina. Both have recently been harshly critical of Bush's conduct of the war and its aftermath.\nOn Capitol Hill, top Democrats stood their ground in claiming Bush misled Congress and the country. \n"The war in Iraq was and remains one of the great acts of misleading and deception in American history," Kerry told a news conference.\nDemocrats offered a proposal urging the president to outline an estimate for a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops. The Senate was expected to vote on it Tuesday, as well as on a rival GOP Iraq policy proposal that does not include a withdrawal provision.\nBush is expected to get a warmer welcome in Asia than he did earlier this month in Argentina at the Summit of the Americas, where Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez led a protest against U.S. policies, and Bush failed to gain support from the 34 nations attending for a hemisphere-wide free trade zone.\nJapan, the first stop on Bush's trip, and Mongolia, the last, are likely to give him the most enthusiastic response, while China and South Korea probably will be cooler but respectful.\nIn South Korea, Bush also will attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Conference summit in Busan, where 21 member states are expected to agree to support global free-trade talks. The summit is also expected to agree to put early warning and information-sharing systems in place in case of bird flu outbreaks.\n"It is good for the president to show up in Asia and say, 'We care about Asia,' because that is in doubt in the region," said Ed Lincoln, senior fellow in Asia and economic studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

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