Durran Korr wrote:Grave does not by definition mean dangerous. It can also be used in this case to suggest looking at something with seriousness. In any case, whatever Bush said in the past is made irrelevant by his SoTU comments. In the plainest language possible he states that there is no imminent threat.
Uh-huh, so you are picking and choosing which adjective out of a dozen of so meanings that grave as an adjective can hold in order to support your point. Unfortunately for you, context of a phrase matters and the context of the statement indicates more the "significantly serious" definition of the word.
But that's semantics and I hate getting into semantics fights almost as much as I hate peole who use semantics to try and win tiny technical victories, like you are doing. The point is that that statement seriously implies that Iraq is dangerous, which was the intent of the statement. Continued below.
Actually, most of the intelligence and statements concentrated on future threats as well. The infamous uranium statement, for example, was clearly alluding to a possible threat that could emerge in the future - the development of a nuclear program in Iraq. I will admit that there may have been a few times when the Bush administration made claims of the regime being dangerous currently if not a huge threat to America, but the overall focus was not what Iraq could do to us now, only what they could do to us in the future, and preemptively acting to neutralize the threat.
First of all, you are dodging my point. No politician, in this day and age,
ever makes the direct sort of statements that you are looking for, especially not the President of the United States. Their speeches and commentary are always carefully planned out in advance to be full of the semantic loopholes that you are now seizing on, for their own protection at a later date if what they are saying turns out to be hogwash. Even though now you are backpedalling and admitting that the Bush Administration
did sell Iraq as a dangerous threat, you still seem to be ignoring that all their statements were designed to heavily imply in the minds of the American public that Iraq was a danger to them. That's why they said the Iraq was working with Al-Qaeda, tried to sell the WMD story that the country was packed with them, et cetera et cetera. All of that, of course, meant to scare the American people into supporting them (until, finally, they gave up and went with the humanitarian angle*). They were being incredibly heavy handed about it, actually. You have to admit that they were in fact trying to make the American people think that they were in danger from Iraq, and if you deny that, then you are bullshitting almost as much as they were.
*(even though you and I both know that the humanitarian angle was just another try to gather support because they weren't gathering very much support any other way)