If there was one thing Tony Blair's backbench rebels did not want to hear from the prime minister during his trip to Texas, it was the threat of military action against Iraq.
But that is exactly what they got when Mr Blair made his keynote speech at the end of the visit.
After speaking of the need to act against terrorism and the development of weapons of mass destruction - the charge always aimed at Saddam Hussein - he went on to declare: "if necessary the action should be military.....".
His words were unambiguous and will spark a major row with his critics in the cabinet and on the backbenches.
Peace initiative
No one who heard the speech was in any doubt about the message or that it was a significant hardening of the prime minister's stance.
They also underlined as important Mr Blair's offer to help monitor any ceasefire between Israel and Palestine.
And those elements of his speech were certainly significant.
Particularly if they meant, as was suggested, that President George W Bush now supported a peace plan which calls for Israel to withdraw to its pre-1997 boundaries.
Council of war
The spokesmen were also at pains to point out that military action against Iraq was not the first option against Saddam Hussein.
But it was the reference to possible future military action which was without doubt the most controversial aspect of his speech. And it will cause huge ripples.
The prime minister was always eager that his summit with President Bush was not seen as a council of war.
And much of Downing Street's sensitivity to the concentration on that section of his speech was for fear it suggested that was precisely what the summit had been about.
Special relationship
What was abundantly clear during the trip was that, while there is deep opposition in Britain and the EU to military action against Iraq, things are very different in America and in the White House.
One of the prime minister's jobs was to underpin his post-11 September alliance with President Bush - whose rhetoric on Saddam has been particularly robust - while, at the same time, avoiding suggestions he was preparing for war.
He certainly seems to have strengthened his bond with the president but he flies back into a political storm at home.
Backbench critics are likely to question whether Mr Blair's reference to military action was part of a deal to swing the president behind the Abdullah peace plan, or something else.
And, while this visit to the president's home has undoubtedly served to underline the so-called special relationship between Mr Bush and Mr Blair, it may have done little to improve his relationship with sections of his own party.