Bush is a commander guy, not the commander guy
Updated on
Saturday, May 05, 2007, 00:00
IST

Washington, May 05: The White House is trying to clarify
something: President George W Bush is ''a commander guy'' but not
''the commander guy.''
Or something like that.
On Wednesday, speaking to a friendly audience, Bush talked
about his troop buildup in Iraq and rejected efforts by the
Democratic majority in the US Congress to force him to accept
a withdrawal timetable.
Bush, whose approval ratings have dropped as the Iraq war
moves into its fifth year, contended that he had the authority
to send the troops.
''The question is, who ought to make that decision? the
Congress or the commanders? And as you know, my position is
clear -- I'm a commander guy,'' Bush said.
The official stenographer of the event recorded Bush as
having said he was ''the commander guy'' and some reporters did
as well. It was not far off from his past description of
himself as ''the decider.''
But the quote prompted chuckles around Washington that Bush
had given a new nickname to his constitutional role as the
Commander in Chief.
So the White House sprang into action to try to put the
toothpaste back into the tube.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino took to the podium on
Friday to clarify, while acknowledging to reporters that ''You
might find it a little strange.''
''It's been reported that the president said, 'I'm the
commander guy.' he did not. What I recalled was that he said
'I'm a commander guy,' meaning that he's one of the people that
listens to the commanders on the ground,'' Perino said.
''Does he consider himself over the other commanders?'' A
reporter asked.
''He is the Commander in Chief,'' Perino said. ''But the
context of what the president was saying is that when it comes
to making decisions about Iraq or war policy, that the
president listens to commanders on the ground, not politicians
in Washington.''
Bureau Report