Before looking at today's White House press briefing, let's take a look back at what the administration was saying on the day George Bush announced his so-called new way forward in Iraq:
Well, here's -- but you're going to have to -- you're going to have some opportunities to judge very quickly...So people are going to be able to see pretty quickly that the Iraqis are or are not stepping up. And that provides the ability to judge.
But now, with reports saying that the report the White House will be delivering to Congress on July 15th will show that the Iraqis have failed to meet any of the benchmarks set down by Bush in January, our ability to judge will have to wait because according to Scott Stanzel:
The shift in strategy occurred with the new way forward, which is now two weeks underway.
And so the many "hopeful signs of progress" that the White House has been blathering about for the past six months are meaningless? Were a lie? Whatever the case, we now learn that the surge is just beginning and we must give it a chance to work. After all, we haven't even had the bloody August that Bush promised us. We must wait for September before we can judge anything and next week's report is simply, "an initial snapshot."
And the White House is sick and tired of the press ignoring the fact that Bush wants the troops home as much as anyone else.
MR. STANZEL: But you're not reporting it, Martha.
Q Yes, we have. Of course, we have.
MR. STANZEL: That's the key difference here, is there is this impression that the President doesn't want to bring the troops home. He does.
Of course just yesterday, Tony Snow said, when asked whether there was any debate in the White House about bringing the troops home:
No, the conversation is always about what do you do to succeed in Iraq.
And what about reports that Alberto Gonzales told Congress that the FBI had not abused its powers under the Patriot Act, even though he had FBI reports of multiple legal or procedural violations?
MR. STANZEL: I'm not aware that that's the assertion. But maybe that's the assertion you're making, but the President has said repeatedly that he has great faith in the Attorney General, and that has not changed.
Q Will the White House be looking into and evaluating his performance in this regard?
MR. STANZEL: With response to the story, you mean?
Q With response to these reports that the FBI had --
MR. STANZEL: What reports?
And finally, on Bush's upcoming speeches on Iraq:
So the President will continue to talk about how he believes that we should try to get to the goal that all Americans, we believe, want, and that is a stable, peaceful Iraq where they can be an ally on the war on terror and not a home base for al Qaeda, which is what would happen if we had a precipitous withdrawal.
In the coming days, watch for the "precipitous withdrawal" charge. It seems to be the favorite new Republican talking point.