In
a post on Wednesday (6/20/07), left-wing site Think Progress blared
a headline, "Laura Bush Falsely Claims That 'Many' Iraqi Refugees Have
Been Welcomed Into The U.S."
The problem? Mrs. Bush didn't say that. Quite simply, an
intern at the site (with a wishful ear, maybe?) misquoted the First Lady
when she was discussing World Refugee Day in a segment on CNN. Here's
what Think Progress says that Mrs. Bush said:
"We welcome many of those refugees, both from Iraq and
Afghanistan into the United States."
However, if you listen to the segment, which Think Progress provides
(!), you can clearly hear what the First Lady actually
said (emphasis from me, not her):
"We will welcome many of those refugees, both from
Iraq and Afghanistan into the United States."
Mrs. Bush certainly did not say that many Iraqi refugees "have been
welcomed" into the U.S.
The headline and the transcript at Think Progress are both erroneous.
It looks like the site owes its readers a correction.
P.S. - It should be noted that what Mrs. Bush said is a goal
of the administration.
A
recent Baltimore Sun article (linked at the post, by the way)
reported that the U.S. has pledged to take in 7000 Iraqi refugees this
fiscal year. (Unfortunately, the U.S. has only welcomed 69 so far. But
the article discusses recently implemented "enhanced security screening
procedures" at the DHS that "refugee advocates have applauded.") Also,
an Iraqi news outlet
reported this week that under Secretary of State Paula Dobriansky
said that the U.S. has a "moral duty" to accept refugees. "She confirmed
that the United States will receive around 7000 Iraqi refugees before
the end of the current year," reported the network. Indeed, as the
Sun article states, "America has a long and proud tradition of
resettlement and is still the largest refugee resettlement country in
the world ... In the last several months, the U.S. government has begun
to show signs of recognizing the scale of the [Iraqi refugee] crisis and
the need for broader humanitarian action."