WASHINGTON D.C. - The rest of the world: No shit.
Undaunted by the difficult war in Iraq, President Bush reaffirmed his strike-first policy against terrorists and enemy nations on Thursday and said Iran may pose the biggest challenge for America.
In a 49-page national security report, the president said diplomacy is the U.S. preference in halting the spread of nuclear and other heinous weapons.
The president believes that we must remember the clearest lesson of Sept. 11: that the United States of America must confront threats before they fully materialize, national security adviser Stephen Hadley said.
The president s strategy affirms that the doctrine of preemption remains sound and must remain an integral part of our national security strategy, Hadley said. If necessary, the strategy states, under longstanding principles of self defense, we do not rule out the use of force before attacks occur, even if uncertainty remains as to the time and place of the enemy s attack.
Bush also had tough words for North Korea, which he said poses a serious nuclear proliferation challenge, counterfeits U.S. currency, traffics in narcotics, threatens its neighbors and starves its people.
Bush then issued rebukes to Russia and China and called Syria a tyranny that harbors terrorists and sponsors terrorist activity.
The president continued, "You know, frankly, the whole world pisses me off."