PublicSecrecy
Especially when you have a country to run. And others to bomb. And people's lives to ruin. And taxes to double. And benefits to cut. And pensions to eliminate.
And you know how having to double the tax rate can ruin a round of golf, what a pain
Oh well, you don't like Bush, no matter what he does, and I'm not even going to try and change that. What President didn't have any critics...that's the price they pay, they are hated and loved at the same time.
Don't make it personal...Bush doesn't run the country, he has a huge staff of advisors behind him, as I said earlier. It is not a one man show, the odd thing is in US government, is that the Whitehouse staff remains largely unchanged, no matter who wins the election..unlike UK where the whole house of commons changes sides.
It makes US policy very slow, as there are probably still things being put through from the previous administration.
It takes a long time for change to happen there, don't be so quick to condemn the figure head, as he is probably trying to deal with policy that he inherited

If Kerry had won, do you really think anything would have changed?
Personally I'm glad things happened as they did. I would hate to see a weak US. It would only encourage further attacks. (I used to hate the Iron lady here in the UK, but her stance on terrorists during the Iranian Embassy siege has meant that we are not considered viable targets any more...god bless her

Her exact words to the SAS were "don't leave any loose ends"...30 bullets per body...job done.)
To go on the offensive, maybe, over the top aggressive, is a wise move in the long run. There are absolutely no links between Saddam and Al-Qaeda, in fact Saddam despised them, but even if the US get a sniff of your plot to use chemical or biological weapons against them, they invade you...now that's a big deterrent. Right or wrong, its a prudent move.
Lastly...just because they didn't find any weapons, doesn't mean there weren't any. X