CNN Video Transcript Reveals Rumsfeld's Slip on Flight 93
"shot down"
"And I think all of us have a sense if...the people
who attacked the United States in New York, shot down the plane over Pennsylvania
and attacked the Pentagon..." U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, Dec. 24, 2004, Camp Victory. Baghdad, Iraq
[Editor's Note: Below is an excerpt from a CNN transcipt
of CNN video aired on December 24, 2004. Near the end of the video transcript,
CNN anchor Betty Nguyen introduces a video clip from Iraq where Rumsfeld
is addressing American troops at Camp Victory in Iraq. Rumsfeld's remark
about Flight 93 being 'shot down' over Pennsylvania on September 11, 2001,
occurs during Rumsfeld's opening remarks. In an amazing interview last year
with Alex Jones, Col. Donn de Grand-Pre revealed that Flight
93 was shot down by an American fighter plane from the North Dakota Air
National Guard (http://www.prisonplanet.com/022904degrand.html). I found
the Rumsfeld's slip posted at http://www.libertythink.com/....Ken Adachi]
From CNN (Video Transcript)
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/rumsfeldsliponCNN24dec04.shtml
December 24, 2004
Surprise Trip for Donald Rumsfeld; Interview With Brigadier
General James Marks; Christian in Iraq
Aired December 24, 2004 - 12:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL
FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
BETTY NGUYEN, CNN ANCHOR: Hello. I'm Betty Nguyen here in
Atlanta. Thanks for joining us today. Here's the NEWS FROM CNN.
Rumsfeld on the frontlines. The embattled defense secretary makes a surprise
Christmas Eve visit to Iraq. We are live on the story from Baghdad.
[snip]
[snip]
NGUYEN: We want to go back now to that video that we're just
getting in from Donald Rumsfeld's visit to Iraq, a surprise visit, he is
at Camp Victory here in Baghdad in this video speaking to soldiers in the
mess hall. Let's take a listen.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
DONALD RUMSFELD, SECRETARY OF DEFENSE: And to change that
way of living, would strike at the very essence of our country.
And I think all of us have a sense if we imagine the kind
of world we would face if the people who bombed the mess hall in Mosul,
or the people who did the bombing in Spain, or the people who attacked the
United States in New York, shot down the plane over Pennsylvania
and attacked the Pentagon, the people who cut off peoples' heads on television
to intimidate, to frighten -- indeed the word "terrorized" is
just that. Its purpose is to terrorize, to alter behavior, to make people
be something other than that which they want to be.
And that is exactly what we cannot allow to happen.
The American people recognize the importance of your mission:
that you're here for a purpose, and that purpose is not to run the country
of Iraq. That's for the Iraqi people. It's not to find an American solution
for Iraq.
Indeed, it is to be here, to try to help train and equip and
organize and assist the Iraqi security forces so that they, over time, will
be able to take on responsibility for their country. And this country will
find a solution that will be uniquely Iraqi.
If you think about what's happened in Afghanistan, three years
ago it was the training ground for terrorists. It was the place that the
attacks against the United States were hatched and launched. And today they've
elected their first popularly elected president in the history of the country.
They are moving toward parliamentary elections in April. They have established
a democratic system that's respectful of all of the various diverse elements
in that country.
Women are voting for the first time. They're able to go outside
by themselves without being accompanied. Young children can fly a kite,
can sing and dance, which they were not allowed to do under the Taliban.
The soccer stadium in Kabul is being used for soccer instead of beheading
people.
So the accomplishment in Afghanistan was a truly breathtaking
experience. I was there for the inauguration. And President Karzai, from
the bottom of his heart, thanked the American people and said that without
that help they would not be a free society, they would not have been able
to what they are doing, that people would not be going to school.
Here's a country that doesn't have any of the capabilities
that this country does. It doesn't have the water, it doesn't have the oil,
it doesn't have the population that is as well-educated as Iraq. This country
has every chance in the world to make it.
And it's in an important location. It will have a big affect
on this region. They've made good progress. If you think about it, they've
gone from an Iraqi Governing Council to an interim government, moving toward
elections at the end of next month, moving toward then the development of
a constitution.
I've lived a few years -- a lot of years. And I have seen
fascism rise and fall. I've seen communism rise and fall. We've seen the
Berlin Wall get built and get torn down. And if you think about the message
in all of that, we've seen Afghanistan go from a terrorist training ground
to a democracy.
Now, what does that say? It says that the great sweep of human
history is for freedom. And that is the side we're on. And that's the side
you're on.
Just a few weeks ago, Falluja was controlled by assassins
and today it's a free city. Something like 140,000 refugees have come to
this country from other countries, Iraqis. Why do they do that? Why do they
get up one morning and say to themselves, "I'm going to leave where
I am that's safer to be sure, and I'm going to go back to Iraq"?
They are voting with their feet. They are convinced that life
is going to be good here, that there is a chance of making it, and that
people do need to pitch in and see that it happens.
I must say, as a personal message, before I come out and shake
hands and have a chance to tell you how much we appreciate your service,
let me just say that we know that you sacrifice. We certainly know your
families do. And they certainly serve, just as you do. And they are strong.
I get a chance to see them in Bethesda and Walter Reed and
other hospitals. And I meet the families of people who have been wounded,
your colleagues, people who have been here and gone back and are recuperating.
And I must say, the families are the most amazing thing. They are truly
extraordinary.
They are proud of what their sons and daughters do. They have
strength and courage. And I don't think anyone can come away from being
with them without gaining inspiration for the tough tasks ahead.
Now, it's Christmas Eve. And I don't want to, in any way,
paint a picture that's pretty, because it isn't pretty. This is a tough
part of the world. This is a tough country. Your friends and your associates
are at risk, as you are. And I wish I could stand here and say that the
incidents of violence were going to calm down between now and the elections.
I wish I could stand here and say that the incidents of violence
will calm down after the elections. I can't say that.
The people that we're up against have a lot to lose, a lot
to lose. They also have brains. And they watch what we do, and they adjust
to what we do. And they're determined.
But so are we. We are in a test of wills. There isn't a battle
anyone could bring against you that you couldn't win. You're not going to
be faced with battles. You're going to be faced in the shadows, in the side
streets and with people who are using every conceivable time, task and way
of attacking you where you're most vulnerable.
And that's what we face.
So there isn't any way that foreign troops, our troops, coalition
troops or any other troops from any country can provide security in this
country.
What we can do is contribute to security. What we can do is
help to train the Iraqis and mentor the Iraqis, and see that the Iraqis
develop the capability, the equipment, the training, the organization, the
chain of command, the experience, the rib cage, the officer leadership,
the non-com leadership, the experience to take over responsibility for their
own security.
And that's our task. That's what we have to do. That's what
is being done. And we've got wonderful people working on it, and I'm here
to simply to look you in the eye and say, "Thank you, every one of
you. God bless you."
(APPLAUSE)
MILES O'BRIEN, CNN ANCHOR: The secretary of defense, Donald
Rumsfeld, recorded within the past couple of hours at a place called Camp
Victory near Baghdad at a mess hall in the wake of that Mosul bombing. Let's
listen back in, he's saying a few more things.
RUMSFELD: But I did today. And I'm glad I did.
(APPLAUSE)
O'BRIEN: What you missed was the secretary of defense said
he doesn't do hats. Apparently he was offered one of the unit hats there.
In any case, giving a speech which was pretty much almost word for word
what he has said at several previous locations on his whirlwind Christmas
Eve visit to buck up the troops there in Iraq, particularly in the wake
of the Mosul suicide bombing.
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