Jump to content
TSM Forums
Sign in to follow this  
Big Ol' Smitty

4,000 dead Americans

Recommended Posts

I think it was just an odd post in this thread. That's why Jerk said that, I mean. It's a thread about Iraq.

 

Well, yeah, that and the fact that the leadership of both parties have pursued free trade policies pretty vigorously for the last 15 years.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/11/14/...main/index.html

 

You know shit has to be terrible to close down colleges. Can you imagine people surrounding a cabinet-level office in Washington and kidnapping a hundred people inside? This is the kind of activity that makes the "California comparison" and other spin completely ludicrous.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Seriously I was about to post a story about this.

 

How can you possibly create a University system and run a city when the cops are kidnapping the professors?

 

Come on.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Didnt LBJ's 'credibility gap' teach people anything?

 

How do polititians get so far without understanding basic politics/consequences in their own country?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Boy, I'm sure glad we had that Iraq Study Group.

 

It took a whole lot of reeeal hard thinkin' and research to say that Iraq is fucking mess & a disaster. Because most of us didn't already know that.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

What it looks like is that all the former Bush aides/chiefs/consultants etc.....knew this was a doomed war from the get-go, and while they still have a chance to leave their legacy for our grandchildren to read about in history books, they are making the choice to come off as LIARS instead of IDIOTS.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Boy, I'm sure glad we had that Iraq Study Group.

 

It took a whole lot of reeeal hard thinkin' and research to say that Iraq is fucking mess & a disaster. Because most of us didn't already know that.

You don't see the benefit of having a bipartisan panel of experts explaining our mistakes and giving recommendations on what to do next?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

It makes sense I guess, but I could've told you our mistakes and made similar recommendations a couple of years ago. Also, I'm not exactly sure how Sandra Day O'Connor & Vernon Jordan (for example) are Iraq experts. And some of their recommendations were just silly. I can give examples if you want.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

The thing is, even after the report from the study groups, you know that he's still not going to pull out of Iraq, no matter what. If you aks me NoCalMike, this whole thing really proves that the administration is made up of people who are both liars and idiots, which is a dangerous combination.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I'm not sure how Jordan got on the panel except for his close ties to the Clinton Administration, but if you can mount an argument that O'Connor (who used to be on the Supreme Court) is incapable of studying a complex issue and coming to a conclusion based on available evidence, go ahead.

 

The entire panel consisted of:

James Baker, former Secretary of State

Sandra Day O'Connor, former Supreme Court Justice

Lawrence Eagleburger, former Secretary of State

Edwin Meese III, former US Attorney General

Alan K. Simpson, former Senate Republican Whip

Lee Hamilton, former Congressman and member of the 9/11 Commision

Vernon Jordan, Jr., former Clinton Administration advisor

Leon E. Panetta, former White House Chief of Staff

William J. Perry, former Secretary of Defense

Charles S. Robb, former Senator

 

The country is probably more interested in what they think than what you think.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

From the ISG report:

 

Current U.S. policy is not working, as the level of violence in Iraq is rising and the government is not advancing national reconciliation. Making no changes in policy would simply delay the day of reckoning at a high cost.

 

No shit?

 

Iran should stem the flow of arms and training to Iraq, respect Iraq’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and use its influence over Iraqi Shia groups to encourage national reconciliation...

 

Syria should control its border with Iraq to stem the flow of funding, insurgents, and terrorists in and out of Iraq.

 

...The Iraqi government should accelerate assuming responsibility for Iraqi security by increasing the number and quality of Iraqi Army brigades.

 

Also, everyone in Iraq should get a shiny new pony.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I'm not sure how Jordan got on the panel except for his close ties to the Clinton Administration, but if you can mount an argument that O'Connor (who used to be on the Supreme Court) is incapable of studying a complex issue and coming to a conclusion based on available evidence, go ahead.

 

The entire panel consisted of:

James Baker, former Secretary of State

Sandra Day O'Connor, former Supreme Court Justice

Lawrence Eagleburger, former Secretary of State

Edwin Meese III, former US Attorney General

Alan K. Simpson, former Senate Republican Whip

Lee Hamilton, former Congressman and member of the 9/11 Commision

Vernon Jordan, Jr., former Clinton Administration advisor

Leon E. Panetta, former White House Chief of Staff

William J. Perry, former Secretary of Defense

Charles S. Robb, former Senator

 

The country is probably more interested in what they think than what you think.

 

Okay, you got a good quip in on O'Connor...but I think there would probably be a great number of people out there with significantly more foreign policy expertise that O'Connor. You make a good argument though, and maybe it would be good to have someone not from the foreign policy mandarin class who would not be hemmed in by conventional wisdom.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I always thought it was 'Higgins'. I guess I was wrong about one thing with him.

 

And, no, I still haven't spent all of my 96% tax cut yet. Up next- Another trip to Colombia.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

From what I understand, James Baker (who's probably in the pocket of the Saudis) in particular recommends that Iraq basically be turned over to a panel consisting of its neighbors, the EU, and UN. Of course Israel would have no part in it, while other regional countries like Egypt and the Gulf states would...

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Saint John McCain, exactly one year ago:

 

I think the situation on the ground is going to improve. I do think that progress is being made in a lot of Iraq. Overall, I think a year from now, we will have made a fair amount of progress if we stay the course. If I thought we weren’t making progress, I’d be despondent.

 

The Hill, 12/8/05

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I'm not sure how Jordan got on the panel except for his close ties to the Clinton Administration, but if you can mount an argument that O'Connor (who used to be on the Supreme Court) is incapable of studying a complex issue and coming to a conclusion based on available evidence, go ahead.

 

The entire panel consisted of:

James Baker, former Secretary of State

Sandra Day O'Connor, former Supreme Court Justice

Lawrence Eagleburger, former Secretary of State

Edwin Meese III, former US Attorney General

Alan K. Simpson, former Senate Republican Whip

Lee Hamilton, former Congressman and member of the 9/11 Commision

Vernon Jordan, Jr., former Clinton Administration advisor

Leon E. Panetta, former White House Chief of Staff

William J. Perry, former Secretary of Defense

Charles S. Robb, former Senator

 

The country is probably more interested in what they think than what you think.

 

Well, the country should care more about what I (or people who opposed the war in general) think.

 

Because every single person on this list was wrong on the Iraq war in 2003.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Feingold said it better than I can:

 

The fact is this commission was composed apparently entirely of people who did not have the judgment to oppose this Iraq war in the first place, and did not have the judgment to realize it was not a wise move in the fight against terrorism. So that's who is doing this report. Then I looked at the list of who testified before them. There is virtually no one who opposed the war in the first place. Virtually no one who has been really calling for a different strategy that goes for a global approach to the war on terrorism. So this is really a Washington inside job and it shows not in the description of what's happened - that's fairly accurate - but it shows in the recommendations. It's been called a classic Washington compromise that does not do the job of extricating us from Iraq in a way that we can deal with the issues in Southeast Asia, in Afghanistan, and in Somalia which are every bit as important as what is happening in Iraq. This report does not do the job and it's because it was not composed of a real representative group of Americans who believe what the American people showed in the election, which is that it's time for us to have a timetable to bring the troops out of Iraq.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

looks like Colbert was right, reality does have a liberal bias.

 

I frankly think its pretty despicable the way reality is politicizing the Iraq War and our brave soldier sacrifices to suit its anti-Bush rhetoric.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I could be wrong. Which ones opposed the war, Jerk?

That's not what you said, and I'm not playing the negative-proof game.

 

We don't know what they thought one way or the other. None of those Democrats were even in office in 2003. And except for O'Conner, neither were any of the Republicans. O'Conner COULDN'T take a position because she was on the Supreme Court. In other words, we don't know WHERE most of those people stood, but for either you or Feingold to assume that they supported it because they didn't say is the same kind of "if you're not with us you're against us" bullshit tactic the Bush Administration has used for the last 5 years.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Um, our lord & savior Jim Baker wrote an op-ed ENDORSING the war back in 2003. And we are supposed to be led to salvation by this guy who exercised tremendously bad judgment then? Please.

 

Would it have killed them to include one person who vocally opposed the war? Because they sure as fuck made someone who vocally supported the debacle the chair of the study group. The membership of the study group was not respresentative of the public consensus that has emerged on the war, and the report reflects that, tacitly supporting a continued US presence in Iraq. Why? Because only "serious" folks like Baker, John McCain, or Joe Lieberman are taken seriously in the media & in conventional wisdom with respect to foreign policy despite the fact that their policies have proved undeniably distastrous failures.

 

Howard Dean was right.

 

Nancy Pelosi was right.

 

Hell. Dennis fucking Kucinich and fat Mikey Moore were right. France was right.

 

Yet for some reason the neoconservative Kool-Aid gang are still treated like the Grand Wise Men of Washington. When in any sane world they would be laughed the fuck off my teevee, the op-ed pages of any major newspaper outside of the New York Post, & relegated to diatribes in the American Spectator & on freerepublic.com. Or the Pit.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

What about O'Connor, Eagleburger, Meese, Simpson, Hamilton, Jordan, Panetta, and Robb? Can you show in any way that "every single one of them" supported it?

 

How credible could this commision had been if it'd included people who'd publicly taken sides? This group was set up to figure out what to do about Iraq, not rake the Bush Administration over the coals for screwing up in the first place. Yes, some people WHO ONLY HAD WHAT INFORMATION THE BUSH ADMINISRATION WAS TELLING THEM TO GO BY mistakenly believed that Iraq had WMDs. Oh, no. We can never listen to their ideas ever again. Because Howard Dean is always right, I guess.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Feingold said it better than I can:

 

The fact is this commission was composed apparently entirely of people who did not have the judgment to oppose this Iraq war in the first place, and did not have the judgment to realize it was not a wise move in the fight against terrorism. So that's who is doing this report. Then I looked at the list of who testified before them. There is virtually no one who opposed the war in the first place. Virtually no one who has been really calling for a different strategy that goes for a global approach to the war on terrorism. So this is really a Washington inside job and it shows not in the description of what's happened - that's fairly accurate - but it shows in the recommendations. It's been called a classic Washington compromise that does not do the job of extricating us from Iraq in a way that we can deal with the issues in Southeast Asia, in Afghanistan, and in Somalia which are every bit as important as what is happening in Iraq. This report does not do the job and it's because it was not composed of a real representative group of Americans who believe what the American people showed in the election, which is that it's time for us to have a timetable to bring the troops out of Iraq.

Did I miss something here? Didn't this bipartisan group advocate for a withdrawal?

 

I'd think Feingold would be jumping for joy that an independent voice is calling for exactly what he wanted.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×