Rumsfeld greeting Indian Minister of Defense Pranab Mukherjee at the Pentagon
Rumsfeld walks with Indian Minister of Defense Pranab Mukherjee (second from right) through an honor cordon at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia
All clear.
OUR PRESIDENT WAS AWESOME LAST NIGHT!!
[STARWISE: Thank you for posting the photo which captured my favorite moment during the speech -- the President 'tearing up' at the conclusion of his remarks when complimenting his beloved troops!!]
BTW: I agree with POWERLINEBLOG'S assessment of the speech:
"EXCELLENT SPEECH
Clear, confident, substantive. There was nothing in it that we and our readers didn't already know, but the message is one that many rarely hear. And the networks all carried it after all. That's good; President Bush nearly always does well when people see him, instead of seeing Democrats talking about him, as they will on the evening news.
The only thing I thought was odd was the unnatural quiet in the hall. It was like the audience at a Presidential debate, which has been cautioned not to express approval or disapproval. Only at the end, apparently, were the soldiers permitted to applaud.
The touch of emotion at the end was genuine and powerful. His appeal to Americans' pride and determination resonated, no doubt, with many who haven't spent much time understanding the strategic underpinnings of the conflict.
. . . The Associated Press reports on soldiers' reaction to the President's speech:
In the gymnasium at Fort Bragg, Staff Sgt. Daniel Metzdorf who lost his right leg to an improvised explosive device while serving in Iraq in 2004 was inspired by Bush's words. He was among the 700 soldiers who stood silently at attention when their comamnder-in-chief took the stage.
Metzdorf, 28, of Altamonte Springs, Fla., has rejoined the 82nd Airborne since losing his leg and said Bush delivered the right message: "We're doing a great job over there, but the job is not over with."
http://www.powerlineblog.com
GALLUP FLASH POLL
74% rated the speech positively (46% VERY positively)
"A CNN/USA Today/Gallup instant-reaction poll shows that President Bush apparently persuaded many viewers of his speech Tuesday night to be more optimistic about the war in Iraq. Compared with their responses before the speech, people who tuned in are now more likely to say the United States is winning the Iraq war, that Bush has a clear plan for handling the war, and that the United States should keep troops in Iraq until the situation there gets better. These changes occurred despite the fact that this was not one of Bush's more highly rated addresses since he became president."
http://gallup.com/