dartagnan wrote:Is there supposed to be a point in there?
I nevers aid McCain didn't agree with Bush on Iraq. I said I don't think McCain would have initiated the war.
True, unless they held the market on hops.
dartagnan wrote:Is there supposed to be a point in there?
I nevers aid McCain didn't agree with Bush on Iraq. I said I don't think McCain would have initiated the war.
http://www.counterpunch.org/andrew09292007.htmlOn March 26, 1997, she strode on to the stage at Georgetown University to deliver what was billed as a major policy address on Iraq. Many in the audience expected that she would extend some sort of olive branch toward the Iraqi regime, but that was far from her mind.
Instead, she was set on making sure that Saddam effectively ended his cooperation with the inspectors. "We do not agree with the nations who argue that if Iraq complies with its obligations concerning weapons of mass destruction, sanctions should be lifted," she declared. Sanctions, she stated without equivocation, would remain unless or until Saddam was driven from power.
Ekeus understood immediately what Albright intended. "I knew that Saddam would now feel that there was no point in his cooperating with us, and that was the intent of her speech."
Sure enough, the following day he got an angry call from Tariq Aziz, Saddam's deputy prime minister and emissary to the outside world. "He wanted to know why Iraq should work with us any more."
From then on, the inspectors found their lives increasingly difficult, as Iraqi officials, clearly acting under instructions from Saddam, blocked them at every turn.Ekeus resigned in July 1997, to be replaced by the Australian Richard Butler. Butler was soon embroiled in acrimonious confrontation with the Iraqis. Later the following year, all the inspectors were withdrawn from Iraq and the US mounted a series of bombing raids.
Clinton's strategy had been successful. Iraq remained under sanctions, while in Washington the neo-conservative faction spun the wildest conjectures as to what evil schemes Saddam, unmolested by inspectors, might be concocting with his weapons scientists.
In fact Saddam had long abandoned all his WMD programs, but as the CIA had no sources of intelligence inside Iraq, no one in the West could prove this.
Finally, following 9/11, the war party in George Bush Jr's administration was able to make the case for invasion on the grounds that Saddam had refused to comply with UN resolutions on disarmament by refusing to grant access to the weapons inspectors. The Iraq disaster has many fathers.
Is there supposed to be a point in there?
I nevers aid McCain didn't agree with Bush on Iraq. I said I don't think McCain would have initiated the war.
“I think that Blix’s report will be fairly definitive. But Mr. Blix has made a lot of reports over the years, and I think the judgment made by the United States of America will — and the president of the United States — will prevail here.” [NBC, 2/12/03]
“I believe as strongly today as ever, the mission [in Iraq] was necessary, achievable and noble. For his determination to undertake it, and for his unflagging resolve to see it through to a just end, President Bush deserves not only our support, but our admiration.” [GOP Convention, 8/30/04]
“The fact is that I have agreed with President Bush far more than I have disagreed. And on the transcendent issues, the most important issues of our day, I’ve been totally in agreement and support of President Bush.” [Meet the Press, 6/19/05]
MR. GREGORY: Do you, do you have confidence in the president and his national security team to lead the war at this stage?
SEN. McCAIN: I do. I do. I have confidence in the president and I believe that he is well aware of the severity of the situation. [Meet the Press, 8/20/06]
“I’m sticking with the president in this respect [on Iraq]. This is our last chance. The consequences of failure are catastrophic.” [CNN, 2/13/07]
“I am proud of this president’s strategy in Iraq.” [Receiving Bush’s endorsement, 2/13/08]
I hardly expect beastie can drudge up old republican comments that prove as embarrassing as these. After all, Bush is hated for essentially finishing what these guys started. He is accused of lying as if he made it up out of thin air. This is why he planned the invasion. As governor of Texas, he was actually paying attention to the Clinton administration's Iraq fear campaign.
Not only is there every indication that he would've gone to war in his statements, he probably was more likely to go to war in Iraq than Bush because the ideological motivations for it surround him far more than they do Bush.
LOL! Yeah, McCain agrees with Bush on all the transcendent issues, but he wouldn’t have initiated the war. Riiiight.
Where has McCain ever stated that invading Iraq was a mistake?
The only mistake he’s recognized is the management of the war, not the idea of invading itself.
McCain has made his support of Bush’s war policy clear, many times.
While this is a biased website, it has a good collection of McCain’s comments proving just that.
Heh. This proves my point. Yes, the intelligence was faulty, and other administrations believed that Saddam had WMD.
and, by the way, the long-term problem of faulty intelligence is important to remember in today’s rhetoric about Iran
Even believing this, they did not invade Iraq.
This is what I want – a leader who has the judgment to evaluate and synthesize all the information, a leader who has the ability to think through long-term unintended consequences before acting rashly.
And what I want from our future president is the ability to recognize – even in hindsight – that, given all the information, invading Iraq was a serious mistake.
The mistake wasn’t just in Bush’s mishandling of it (and there’s no denying the Bush administration has been incompetent in just about everything they’ve done, the real question is whether or not that incompetence is deliberate or accidental) – the mistake was ever invading in the first place.
For those who truly believe, like dart, that Obama is “stupid” ought to compare his academic career to Bush and McCain’s.
Of course, academic success does not predict governing success, but it certainly has something to do with intelligence.
Having said all that, I do recognize the Antishock is likely correct, and few Americans really care about a war being waged far away, on credit.
They’re not being asked to pay any price for this war, and our military families who are paying the price volunteered, so that mutes some of the effect.
I think it’s an unfortunate reality of the human species in general, and Americans in particular, that we seem rarely concerned with anything that does not have an obvious immediate negative impact. Our children, and their children, however, will be concerned. They will be forced to be concerned.
Giggles and sarcasm does not an argument make. If agreeing with the war is proof he would have started it himself, then by that logic so would any of the dozens of democrats who supported it.
In any event, recent history has taught us that if anyone could have pulled off a successful war with Iraq, it is John McCain. He is the man responsible for the recent surge. If this had been initiated from the beginning, the number of casualties on both sides would have been very different from what we've seen over the past few years. In fact it seems like the war never really got on the right path to success, until McCain's surge idea became realized. Now victory seems within reach. If it had been implemented from the start, this thing might have been over already.
You're ignoring the point and trying to change the argument. Post-Katrina, Obama passed legislation regarding natural disasters. Republicans agreed with it. Republicans didn't believe it was a mistake. Republicans helped pass it. By your logic, if Obama had not proposed these bills, one of the republicans would have.
The only mistake he’s recognized is the management of the war, not the idea of invading itself.
Uh, ya think? That's obvious. Maybe you should try harder to learn these distinctions.
So have many Democrats. Just because they later whimped out and apologized, doesn't change the fact that when the war started, they agreed with it and supported it fully. By your logic, since they agreed with it, they would have done it if they were in Bush's position.
Still trying to tear down straw men I see.
"Other adminsitrations"? Why can't you just say it? There was only one. It was the Clinton adminsitration that was entirely responsible for this myth.
We need not rely on intelligence agencies when we have the President of Iran telling the world point balnk, "Yes, we will develop nuclear technology whether you like it or not - oh yea, and Isreal needs to be destroyed." At least Hussein had the sense to deny having WMDs. There is no mystery about Iran's goals or intentions.
New Delhi: Saddam Hussein's threats of raining down weapons of mass destruction on his enemies was an elaborate smokescreen, claims a former FBI special agent.
Former FBI agent George Piro — who interrogated the late Iraqi leader — said the smokescreen was basically to deter an Iranian attack.
Even believing this, they did not invade Iraq.
You don't listen very well do you? Clinton did in fact attack Iraq in 1998.
So when Clinton bombs Iraq because he thinks Hussein has WMDs, this is good. But when Bush does it, it is bad? We invaded Iraq to do what Clinton declared to be necessary. Clinton is the one who made Hussein spit in the face of the weapons inspectors. He was complying up until the point when he sent Madeline Albright to tell the world, "Ya know, it doesn't matter if he complies or not, we want him out of power." Of course, they didn't have time to plan a war just before the end of his term, the same way Bush won't start a war in Iran at this point, but the Clintons did set the current US policy on Iraq in motion back in 1998. Bush simply followed up with it. It was easy for him to get democrat support for the war because virtually all of them had been wailing and moaning about Saddam's WMDs during the Clinton administration. How could they say, "Uh, sorry W, we need more evidence he has them," when they had previously declared with certainty that he did have them? As far as Obama, he was a legislator for Illinois at the time. His opinion was worthless. He had no credibility nor accountability, so he could say whatever the hell he wanted at that point.
McCain is the man. His surge idea proved successful. I submit that if it were implemented from the get-go, that the insurgents never would have had the time to organize and cause as much damage and death as they did in the early years of the war.
That remains to be seen. You're already giving up, because you want it to be a failure. You think that it is a failure just because 4000 soldiers died? We expected ten times that when we first went in.
This is your own opinion that is not factual. It is based in your liberal need to see the Iraq war a failure.
Oh, they rode in on their skin color too? Obama is an idiot because of his idiotic comments, and so is Bush. Hell, even Bush went to Harvard and the guy can hardly speak two back to back coherent sentences
No it doesn't. Most of these institutions are simply hyped up money-making businesses looking to add celebrity to their list. Wasn't it Yale that admitted a former Taliban commander into its classroom, even though the guy barely spoke English? Diversity is more important than any intelligence requirement.
There is no guarantee of intelligence with a degree. If you need an example you can agree with, just look at Bush. His degree was bought and paid for in every way.
Having said all that, I do recognize the Antishock is likely correct, and few Americans really care about a war being waged far away, on credit.
What makes this "likely"? Your say so?
Beastie thinks the Iraq situation is the biggest issue, but I think it is the energy crisis, and most Americans agree. Iraq is dwindling down now that the violence has subsided and the surge seems to have beens uccessful. We now know how to win in Iraq. The surge proved that. But democrats like Obama don't want that to happen and neither does beastie. They want to carry this in their back pocket as the proved "disaster" that they can bring up for eternity to show how the republicans have bad judgment, etc. They don't want us to win in Iraq and they never did. Once things took a drastic turn for the worst in Iraq, Democrats saw a glorious opportunity, and they have been exploiting it ever since.
Palin doesn't pay much attention to Iraq? Good for her. I don't either. Nowadays from Iraq we hear more good news than bad. I'm worried about our energy crisis and Obama has NO PLAN. Nothing. His idea is to get people to inflate their tires and get a tune up! He said this would save us just as much gas than if we started tapping into Anwar and elsewhere. This is a bonafide MORON we are talking about, pure and simple. Ahd his idea of capturing Osama bin Ladin is to invade Pakistan! What an idiot.
Speaking of military families, shouldn;'t it matter what they have to say? Do they all disagree with the war? I mean hell, they're neck deep in it, so one would think they'd be the first to admit the "mistake."
This, coming from someone who supports Obama, who wants to abandon Iraq and watch the entire country burn from afar. I mean why should democrats care, right? Those are just Iraqi people, they're not Americans. They can all suffer like they did with Hussein. Let the country go to the pot, you can always blame the republicans while pretending to care about human lives.
Let the country go to the pot, you can always blame the republicans while pretending to care about human lives.
According to CNN, Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) pulled out of a scheduled interview with the network after a segment with Campbell Brown and a top McCain spokesman Monday night in which Brown asked for examples of a foreign-policy decision made by Republican vice president pick Sarah Palin.
McCain was scheduled to appear on Larry King Live, but CNN's Wolf Blitzer said Tuesday that the campaign told the news network they thought Brown's interview with spokesman Tucker Bounds was "over the line."
CNN said it disagreed and it is committed to covering both sides of issues.
The McCain campaign was checking into the report of the interview’s cancellation at press time.
Only hours after CNN said McCain pulled out of the interview with King, ABC News announced that it has "the only interview" with the candidate during the Republican National Convention. That will be Wednesday night (Sept. 3) with Charlie Gibson for World News, Nightline and Good Morning America (Thursday morning).