Iraq: Then & Now

Out of context: Reply #36

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    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

    QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. You do have now the personal gun of Saddam Hussein.

    Are you willing to give it to President al-Yawar as a symbolic gift, or are you

    keeping it? (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: What she's referring to is a -- members of a Delta team came

    to see me in the Oval Office and brought with me -- these were the people that found

    Saddam Hussein, the dictator of Iraq, hiding in a hole. And, by the way, let me

    remind everybody about Saddam Hussein, just in case we all forget. There were mass

    graves under his leadership. There were torture chambers. Saddam Hussein -- if you

    -- we had seven people come to my office. Perhaps the foreign press didn't see this

    story. Seven people came to my -- they had their hands cut off because the Iraqi

    currency had devalued. And Saddam Hussein needed somebody to blame, so he blamed

    small merchants. And their hands were chopped off, their right hand.

    "Fortunately, a documentary film maker went to Baghdad and filmed the -- filmed

    these seven men. And their story was picked up around the nation, particularly in

    Houston, Texas, where a person named Marvin Zindler, who runs a foundation, took

    great sympathy and flew them over and had new hands put on. The latest prosthesis

    were put on their hand -- were put on their arms. And their hands worked. I remember

    the guy signing 'God Bless America' with his new hand in the Oval Office.

    "So this is the person. So needless to say, our people were thrilled to have

    captured him. And in his lap was several weapons. One of them was a pistol. And

    they brought it to me. It's now the property of the U.S. government. And I am --

    I am -- it -- I'm grateful for their bravery. I'm also grateful that that part of

    the mission was accomplished, for the good of the Iraqi people."

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