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Update [2004-10-27 14:13:36 by Al Rodgers]:----Watch Bush's Face in this:
Video Clip Here
Bush is happy, as he works the rope line.
Then a CNN producer asks him "WHO'S RESPONSIBLE FOR THE WEAPONS MISSING IN IRAQ, MR. PRESIDENT?" You can see the women on the right look back at the Producer.
SCOWL !
SCOWL !
[At this point a Women yells at the Producer "LEAVE HIM ALONE"]
Bush works his way down the line, as you can see all the people have changed, yet he's turn back to face the Producer again, and SCOWL !
Talk about Too Angry !
Talk about Not having the right Temperament
Talk about being Thin Skinned.
Well George, you can RUN, but you can't HIDE !
see the TRANSCRIPT below the fold
PAULA ZAHN, CNN ANCHOR: And with just a week to go, a bombshell hits the campaign trail. Tons of powerful explosives left unguarded at this site in Iraq are now missing, warnings apparently ignored,
and the White House today mostly silent.
And that's where we begin tonight. The Kerry campaign is hammering President Bush about those missing explosives, which brings us to a second mystery. Why does the issue seem to have caught the White House flat-footed for a second day in a row?
ZAHN (voice-over): President Bush's campaign bus rolls through the battleground state of Wisconsin. The crowds are large, friendly and there are no questions about charges there are 380 tons of explosives missing in Iraq, nor did the president bring it up in his stump speech. Senator John Kerry senses an opening.
ZAHN: Former President Bill Clinton, who is still in Florida campaigning for Kerry, is getting laughs by tying the missing explosives to the president's campaign ad featuring wolves.
CLINTON:, I was wondering when I saw that whether the wolves were smelling all that -- those explosives out of that dump that disappeared in Iraq.
ZAHN: Back on the campaign trail, reporters directly asked the president about the missing explosives story.
Question: WHO'S RESPONSIBLE FOR THE WEAPONS MISSING IN IRAQ, MR. PRESIDENT?
[A Women Yells "Leave Him Alone"]
ZAHN: Again, there is no comment. Finally, at a late-afternoon stop in Florida, Vice President Dick Cheney tells a rally it is not at all clear that the missing explosives were even at the facility near Baghdad when U.S. forces arrived in the area.
ZAHN: But, again, the vice president offers no explanation of what happened to the 380 tons of missing explosives.
ZAHN: The Kerry campaign already has a new ad that highlights the explosive story.
Joining me from Washington are former assistant Secretary of State Jamie Rubin, now a foreign policy adviser to the Kerry campaign, and Dan Senor, the former spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority now representing the Bush campaign.
ZAHN: So, Dan, I'd like to start with you this evening.
You've heard Kerry blasting the president all day long, accusing him of trying to hide this story about these missing explosives. The president asked repeatedly on the campaign trail about this, refusing to answer questions. Isn't the American public entitled to hear from the president on this dangerous story?
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0410/26/pzn.01.html