Thursday, September 13, 2007

Who said anything about benchmarks?

Steve Benen for Crooks and Liars: Sometimes, these guys make it too easy. White House Press Secretary Tony Snow, yesterday, in his final appearance:

“No, benchmarks were something that Congress wanted to use as a metric. And we’re going to produce a report. But the act is that the situation is bigger and more complex, and you need to look at the whole picture.”
Reality, as reported last week:
It was the White House and the Iraqi government, not Congress, that first proposed the benchmarks for Iraq that are now producing failing grades, a provenance that raises questions about why the administration is declaring now that the government’s performance is not the best measure of change.

The administration presented a to-do list and said, “Judge us in September on these points.” They’ve successfully completed three of the 18 tasks. In response, the new line is, “To-do lists are stupid.”

LSB: We're waiting until next Spring now. Is there anything this White House won't lie about?

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