Here is a summary of the Iraq war's impact - mostly in their own words http://nsnetwork.org/node/257
It's unknowable but would it have been worse if we had pulled back to northern Iraq and let the Baath Party sort it out once we found Saddam in his spider-hole? I think we would have avoided a lot of heartache and be in a better position today with regard to Iran. I think we still have that option except now we've entrenched the shiites but that really is water under the bridge. We're not getting that one back. Iraq and Iran will be strategic allies in the 21st century.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 19, 2008, 10:15:35 AMHere is a summary of the Iraq war's impact - mostly in their own words http://nsnetwork.org/node/257Bad form IMO for a site to try to lay claim to as being authority such as the claim of their name: National Security Network and taking quotes and not putting them into context of the speech they were used with or responses to questions that were posed to them.
Each quote comes with a link taking you to the context of the statement. In what case does the context of the quote change the meaning of the statement? Does it matter that President Bush was wearing a flight suit, standing on the USS Abraham Lincoln and had a giant banner behind him that said "Mission Accomplished" (as someone who makes banners I find it curious that an aircraft carrier would have the ability to produce an over sized banner) when he said “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”I don't think anyone who is quoted has walked back from those statements? I think Rummy still thinks "stuff happens".
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 19, 2008, 02:13:11 PMEach quote comes with a link taking you to the context of the statement. In what case does the context of the quote change the meaning of the statement? Does it matter that President Bush was wearing a flight suit, standing on the USS Abraham Lincoln and had a giant banner behind him that said "Mission Accomplished" (as someone who makes banners I find it curious that an aircraft carrier would have the ability to produce an over sized banner) when he said “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed.”I don't think anyone who is quoted has walked back from those statements? I think Rummy still thinks "stuff happens".Ohh please. The reason it was done like that is because you know as well as I know the vast majority of people who read it will never click on each link and thereby will run with their own idea of what was said. You brought up the "banner" and that is the perfect example.That banner signified on thing. The combat operations with Iraq (Saddam) was over. It had nothing to do with the eventual fight with terrorists in Iraq but yet liberals point to the banner incident as some premature claim of victory by Bush. Fact is the fight with terrorists is ENTIRELY separate and different from what our combat operations were against the government that was run by Saddam.
Remember we can have a debate and not call each other names in the middle of the argument.
Quote from: kitkatz on March 19, 2008, 01:06:20 PMRemember we can have a debate and not call each other names in the middle of the argument.Where was that done?
President Bush: Out of such chaos in Iraq, the terrorist movement could emerge emboldened -- with new recruits, new resources, and an even greater determination to dominate the region and harm America. An emboldened al Qaeda with access to Iraq's oil resources could pursue its ambitions to acquire weapons of mass destruction to attack America and other free nations.
Hi Bill, and anyone else who is interested, Interesting series in Slate (the online magazine) last week: To mark the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, Slate asked a number of writers who originally supported the war to answer the question, "Why did we get it wrong?" Here's the link: http://www.slate.com/id/2186757/Several of the essays discuss the subject of good intentions gone awry, and I feel that cumulatively, the series does a good job of grappling with the many complexities of the situation. If only there were simple answers . . . . sigh . . . .
Pentagon Study of 600,000 Iraqi Documents Finds No Link Between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein
David Horowitz began the Center for the Study of Popular Culture in 1988 to establish a conservative presence in Hollywood and show how popular culture had become a political battleground. Over the next 18 years, CSPC attracted 50,000 contributing supporters and established programs such as The Wednesday Morning Club, the Individual Rights Foundation, and Students for Academic Freedom.FrontPage Magazine, the Center’s online journal of news and political commentary has 1.5 million visitors and 620,000 unique visitors a month (65 million hits) and is linked to over 2000 other websites. DiscoverTheNetworks.com, launched in 2005, is the largest publicly accessible database defining the chief groups and individuals of the Left and their organizational interlocks. DTN has had more than 8 million visitors so far this year.Since 2003, the Center has promoted an Academic Bill of Rights to support students’ academic freedom, and free the American university from political indoctrination and renew its commitment to true intellectual diversity. In 2006, the Center established another organization, Students and Parents for Academic Freedom in K-12 schools, modeled on the university campaign and with the same agenda: to take politics out of the public school classroom.In 2006, the Center’s Board of Directors decided to change the name of the organization to the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
Sure count the Pentagon report as unreliable and everything published by a neocon think tank as unimpeachable. I don't think very many voters will find reports from the David Horowitz Freedom Center very persuasive.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 25, 2008, 01:31:17 PMSure count the Pentagon report as unreliable and everything published by a neocon think tank as unimpeachable. I don't think very many voters will find reports from the David Horowitz Freedom Center very persuasive.Horowitz never wrote the article nor employed the person who wrote it.Before you try telling me about the Pentagon report bill, Try reading it. You will see how the headline misconstrued what the report actually talked about.
Five years on, few Iraq myths are as persistent as the notion that the Bush Administration invented a connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda. Yet a new Pentagon report suggests that Iraq’s links to world-wide terror networks, including al Qaeda, were far more extensive than previously understood.Naturally, it’s getting little or no attention. Press accounts have been misleading or outright distortions, while the Bush Administration seems indifferent. Even John McCain has let the study’s revelations float by. But that doesn’t make the facts any less notable or true.
In the period after the 1991 Gulf War, the regime of Saddam Hussein supported a complex and increasingly disparate mix of pan-Arab revolutionary causes and emerging pan-Islamic radical movements. The relationship between Iraq and the forces of pan-Arab socialism was well known and was in fact one of the defining qualities of the Ba’ath movement. But the relationships between Iraq and the groups advocating radical pan-Islamic doctrines are much more complex. This study found no “smoking gun” (i.e. direct connection) between Saddam’s Iraq and Al-Qaeda.
No one says Iraq in January of 2002 presented no danger. The documents show that he was a typical danger. An average danger, in a dangerous world.What has happened because we chose to attack Iraq is so extremely bad that Iraq would have had to have been a danger a few magnitudes larger than it was to contemplate our actions. Like a thousand times bigger danger, to even risk what has happened. To even risk the possibility of being in the situation we find ourselves in, let alone get us here, simply to risk putting the United States in this position Iraq would have had to pose a thousand times greater danger to the US than it did.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 26, 2008, 08:31:53 PMNo one says Iraq in January of 2002 presented no danger. The documents show that he was a typical danger. An average danger, in a dangerous world.What has happened because we chose to attack Iraq is so extremely bad that Iraq would have had to have been a danger a few magnitudes larger than it was to contemplate our actions. Like a thousand times bigger danger, to even risk what has happened. To even risk the possibility of being in the situation we find ourselves in, let alone get us here, simply to risk putting the United States in this position Iraq would have had to pose a thousand times greater danger to the US than it did.Hmm so in other words how many more 9/11's would it have taken bill before you deemed fighting terrorists necessary?Saddam was removed and it went well in terms of war.As far as what we are doing now in Iraq fighting terrorists was bound to happen somewhere sooner or later. We couldnt just ignore the problem with them forever as you seem to suggest.
ah so now it's not just connection to AQ - In the way that they were supporting individuals who were part of organizations that were linked to Al Qaeda. - it is responsibility for 9/11 that you are assigning to Iraq/Saddam. Total BS.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 27, 2008, 02:31:03 PMah so now it's not just connection to AQ - In the way that they were supporting individuals who were part of organizations that were linked to Al Qaeda. - it is responsibility for 9/11 that you are assigning to Iraq/Saddam. Total BS.I never assigned any responsibility to Saddam for 9/11 nor did I say he was involved with Al-Qaeda on 9/11. The stuff you make up sometimes is frightful. No wonder you do not understand the issue.So just how many 9/11 type attacks should occur before we fight terrorists bill?Should we wait until 10,000 are dead? 20,000 dead? Maybe a smallpox epidemic? Maybe a mushroom cloud over a US city?What is it?BTW bill. Just so you know. All Al-qaeda members are terrorists, not all terrorists are members of al-qaeda, ohh and saddam was a terrorist.