BUSH: SADDAM BOUGHT GERANIUMS, NOT
URANIUM
White House Defends War Decision Based on Typo
In an extraordinary retraction of key elements in his last State
of the Union Address, President George W. Bush revealed today that Iraqi
strongman Saddam Hussein did not attempt to buy uranium in
"As I was reading the speech to the nation, I should have caught that
typo," the President told reporters today. "My
bad."
While the news about the uranium/geranium goof stunned diplomatic circles, Mr.
Bush remained resolute about his decision to go to war, arguing that buying
geraniums, while not as potentially dangerous as buying uranium, still
represented a "suspicious" activity on the part of the Iraqi madman.
"The question we have to ask is, who was he
buying these geraniums for?" Mr. Bush said. "Was he buying them for Osama bin Laden or Kim Jung-Il or some other evildoer?
Luckily, we'll never find out."
Mr. Bush said that, thanks to Operation Iraqi Freedom, "Saddam Hussein is
no longer free to terrorize the world with his evil flower-buying sprees."
While the President may have been trying to quell international criticism, his
comments instead sparked more controversy, as French President Jacques Chirac
challenged the
In response, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
said that while the
Asked by reporters about the flowerpots, Mr. Bush gave a thumbs-up gesture and
said, "