For speechwriters, a harrowing account of a high-stakes screwup
September 11, 2012
An excerpt of a Vanity Fair excerpt of the new book 500 Days, about the Bush Administrationโs push to go to war in Iraq shows President Bush at the United Nations giving a major address. He finds a critical sentence missing:
The words continued to scroll by on the teleprompter mirrors. Bush was reaching the critical point, where he would declare his commitment to a renewed U.N. diplomatic effort to disarm Iraq.
โMy nation will work with the U.N. Security Council to meet our common challenge,โ Bush said. โIf Iraqโs regime defies us again, the world must move deliberately, decisively to hold Iraq to account.
โรขโฌยจรขโฌยจรขโฌยจHe glanced at the teleprompter, looking for the phrase calling for a new resolution.
It wasnโt there.
But the purposes of the United States should not be doubted.
That was the next sentence on the teleprompter-an attestation to the countryโs might and willpower. There was nothing about diplomacy. The words that had been the subject of such great debate had simply disappeared.
Bush took a breath. And then he winged it.
โWe will work with the U.N. Security Council for the necessary resolutionsโฆโ he began.
Resolutions? Thatโs odd, [UK to US Ambassador] Meyer thought.
He was flummoxed by Bushโs use of the plural. Blair had been pushing for two resolutions, of course, but Bush had always demurred. Now, after all the fighting over whether to accept even one, the President announced he would go for two? Without warning?
It was almost as if Bush had reached his decision at the last second. Meyer had no way of knowing that he had just witnessed the President of the United States announce what seemed to be a major international initiative by mistake, owing to a technical flub.
Slips of the tongue donโt establish national security policy, and so the calls went out quickly to inform allies that the President had misspoken. He wanted one resolution, not two.
Rice delivered the message to the Blair government in a phone call to David Manning. There had been a slip-up, she explained, and Bush had gone farther in his statements than he had intended.รขโฌยจรขโฌยจรขโฌยจโWe gave the President the wrong text,โ she said. โHe was ad-libbing.โ
Hat tip to Vital Speeches correspondent Pete Weissman, who passed this item along.