Ilan Goldenberg's right to be troubled [http://www.democracyarsenal.org/2008/03/its-not-the-exe.html] by this New York Times retrospective on Iraq [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/opinion/16intro.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin]. There are some good pieces in here, but it's striking that they're all focuses on the execution of the war and none treat the strategic issue of Iraq.But Iraq has been, first and foremost, a strategic miscalculation based on a disastrously wrongheaded conception of the strategic challenge revealed on 9/11/01. The United States had a chance to implement a focused, disciplined effort to go after al-Qaeda and remove the threat but instead George W. Bush, aided and abetted by a wide swathe of elites, chose to go in for a broad-brush vision of a "war on terror" whose centerpiece would be the invasion and occupation of a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 and no meaningful relationship with al-Qaeda. The costs of that decision have been enormous, not just in terms of the tragedy that's played out for American soldiers and Iraqis of all stripes, but in terms of the opportunity cost of totally reorienting America's foreign policy and defense priorities away from useful things and toward Iraq instead.Today, America faces not just political choices about the future of our Iraq policy, but also choices about whether future policy in other areas will continue to be guided by the strategic vision that led us into Iraq, or whether we'll return to something sounder. To just take the invasion for granted and argue about the handling of the occupation obscures much more than it reveals. Warren Strobel for McClatchy does a much better job of highlighting the big picture [http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/30413.html].
Obama would offer us good options that no other President would have available.How do you see the situation?
But Iraq has been, first and foremost, a strategic miscalculation based on a disastrously wrongheaded conception of the strategic challenge revealed on 9/11/01
The Bush Administration has led America into disgrace with the rest of the world.The audacity of the U. S. to think they had a right to invade another country and get rid of their devil dictator. It was not our place to do it, theIraqi people should have done this on their own. It was the wrong war, the wrong foe and the wrong time, as wasmentioned in the article. There were no weapons of mass destruction or links with al Quieda.We were lied to. Now we are depending on the next Presdent to clean up this mess. And that is almost an impossibility.We must have a President who will carefully intercede for us and gain back the respect of the world. Therefore,I truly believe, that Clinton or McCain would be our best bet They each have the experience and are level headedenough to go about this awesome task. Obama, I am sorry to say, is young and inexperienced. And some of hisproposed tactics scare me to death. America needs to be very, very careful who she elects to get our countryback in shape. I am sorry, I know this position makes some people very angry, but this is my viewpoint the situation.Mimi
Quote from: Mimi on March 17, 2008, 03:59:47 PMThe Bush Administration has led America into disgrace with the rest of the world.The audacity of the U. S. to think they had a right to invade another country and get rid of their devil dictator. It was not our place to do it, theIraqi people should have done this on their own. It was the wrong war, the wrong foe and the wrong time, as wasmentioned in the article. There were no weapons of mass destruction or links with al Quieda.We were lied to. Now we are depending on the next Presdent to clean up this mess. And that is almost an impossibility.We must have a President who will carefully intercede for us and gain back the respect of the world. Therefore,I truly believe, that Clinton or McCain would be our best bet They each have the experience and are level headedenough to go about this awesome task. Obama, I am sorry to say, is young and inexperienced. And some of hisproposed tactics scare me to death. America needs to be very, very careful who she elects to get our countryback in shape. I am sorry, I know this position makes some people very angry, but this is my viewpoint the situation.Mimi My how LITTLE you even know about the subject to come up with that!You should quit relying on ignorant liberal media outlets spewing bs misinformation about the subject.
Well if I know so LITTLE about the subject,BigSky, why don't you tell us what you think. Then we will find outhow ignorant you are on the misinformation.Mimi
That was a wonderful post Mysty. Thank you for it. I totally agree. And good for you for helping the Vets and others.And thanks Bill I was just about to do some quotes on the link. BTW BigSky, the weapons found were thought to be manufactured before 1991. The chemical weapons were not in useable condition. A report given by Rep. Pete Hoekatra in June, 2006 says this does not reflect a capacity that was built up after 1991. These munitions are not the WMD that this country and the rest of the world believed Iraq had and not the WMD for which this country went to war.And what does the world think of us? The post 9/11 perception in Europe is that the U. S. is acting solely in its own interest without regard to the interests of traditional allies including 68% of Italians, 73% of the British, 80%of the French and 85%of Germans. (Numbers from the Nat'l Public Radio.) As far as I'm concerned that is disgrace.How ignorant is that, BigSky?Mimi
Quote from: Mimi on March 17, 2008, 11:01:56 PMThat was a wonderful post Mysty. Thank you for it. I totally agree. And good for you for helping the Vets and others.And thanks Bill I was just about to do some quotes on the link. BTW BigSky, the weapons found were thought to be manufactured before 1991. The chemical weapons were not in useable condition. A report given by Rep. Pete Hoekatra in June, 2006 says this does not reflect a capacity that was built up after 1991. These munitions are not the WMD that this country and the rest of the world believed Iraq had and not the WMD for which this country went to war.And what does the world think of us? The post 9/11 perception in Europe is that the U. S. is acting solely in its own interest without regard to the interests of traditional allies including 68% of Italians, 73% of the British, 80%of the French and 85%of Germans. (Numbers from the Nat'l Public Radio.) As far as I'm concerned that is disgrace.How ignorant is that, BigSky?MimiUmm the whole concept of Saddam not complying with destruction of wmd has been going on since 1991. DUHYou might note that the UN NEVER said Saddam could have one, two, some, a few,or a couple of WMD. IT SAID NONE! Is that concept a bit much for you to grasp?Actually they were WMD as classified by the UN. In fact US troops got sick from sarin exposure when insurgents used one as a bomb did they not. So evidently they were usable to some degree now huh! From the very beginning there was a long list of things this war was going to be over. So the innuendo that it was over only WMD is disingenuous.Damn right we should act in our interest. Saddam wasnt the one trying to commit terrorist attacks on the Italians or British. Nor was he trying to commit it on the French or Germans who where violating UN sanctions by illegally trading with Iraq. We were the ones in his cross hairs. Not them. Since they were not in his cross hairs, they have NO right to question what we did.Saddam committed acts of war on the US and we acted. We NEVER have to apologize for defending ourselves from terrorists.
Allow me to correct YOUR ignorance, I think you will find, it was Osama Bin Laden operating possibly from Afghanistan or Pakistan borders that actually committed or organised terrorist attacks on US soil and not Saddam at all. Saddam may have attacked Kuwait originally which is when US troops got involved in the Gulf Wars to protect oil interests and of course, the sovereignty of Kuwait.Maybe the figures should be explained a bit better about percentages here. 73% of people in the UK believe they were misled by the government and the leader of that government at the time when he said that that Saddam did have WMD. Before he left government, Tony Blair, our previous Prime Minister admitted that there was no evidence to support this and that he and the cabinet had acted on a report which said it was "highly likely there were WMD's which could reach the UK in a matter of minutes."Please folks get your facts right before you start ranting and raving.
Well BigSky DUH- the UN never said Bush could go to war either, but he DID.
So one bomb that the insurgents used AFTER we invaded their country and killed their citizens. DUH
And - there were other things the war was going to be over, but the main reason we went to war was theface that the Govt. scared us to death about WMD And also claims that Saddam was linked to 9/11.That is the ingenuous and sincere fact.
I never said we shouldn't protect ourselves or that we needed to apologize. Neither do I want to see the U. S.go down in history books as war mongers. Mimi