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It’s Hard to Continue to Support the War in Iraq after Obama Lost It
Townhall.com ^ | May 19, 2015 | John Hawkins

Posted on 05/19/2015 4:35:27 AM PDT by Kaslin

Back in 2003, I was strongly in favor of the invasion of Iraq.

I thought George Bush made an excellent case for the war; he gave Saddam every chance to avert the fight; he bent over backwards to bring in more allies and he took his case to Congress and got approval to go to war.

Knowing what we know now, it’s very unfortunate that the linchpin of his case was that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. At the time we went in, that wasn’t very controversial. Saddam was trying to make everyone think he had WMDs, Intelligence agencies all over the world believed he had them and the Democrats who looked at the same intelligence reports Bush did drew the same conclusions. For example, here’s Hillary Clinton – who also voted to go to war – making the case for war (Emphasis mine).

“In the four years since the inspectors left, intelligence reports show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability, and his nuclear program. He has also given aid, comfort, and sanctuary to terrorists, including Al Qaeda members, though there is apparently no evidence of his involvement in the terrible events of September 11, 2001. It is clear, however, that if left unchecked, Saddam Hussein will continue to increase his capacity to wage biological and chemical warfare, and will keep trying to develop nuclear weapons. Should he succeed in that endeavor, he could alter the political and security landscape of the Middle East, which as we know all too well affects American security.” — Hillary Clinton, October 10, 2002

Yes, Iraq did actually have WMDS – but, they were old weapons from before the Gulf War. Saddam also had all the pieces in place to restart his program and fully intended to do so. If we hadn’t stopped him then, we’d have had to stop him later – and there were a lot of reasons beyond that to go after Saddam.

He was an avowed enemy of America; he tried to assassinate former President Bush; his men were regularly firing on American aircraft; he provided a safe haven for terrorists of global reach including the men behind the 1993 WTC bombing and he provided Al-Qaeda training, shelter and contacts.

The world, the Middle East and Iraq are all better off without Saddam Hussein in it.

However, like most of the American public, I was unpleasantly surprised by the fact that we had to station large numbers of American troops in Iraq over the long term. The Bush Administration did nothing to prepare the American people for that possibility. I later found out from Donald Rumsfeld that was because the Bush Administration thought it was very unlikely. Here’s an excerpt from our interview.

As someone who supported the war from the beginning all the way to the present, there’s one thing I found particularly disappointing and puzzling. In the run-up to the war, the Bush Administration really didn’t do much to prepare the public for the idea that we’d be spending blood and treasure fighting an insurgency there for years to come. How did that come to be the case?

“Well, first I would say that the intelligence assessment did not suggest that would be the case. As a result, the people involved did not raise that to the public as a high likelihood. George Tenet, in his book, acknowledges that fact and says that had they thought that was a high probability, they would have presented it as a serious probability and put it in the executive summary to make sure that it was considered and evaluated.

If one goes to my Web site Rumsfeld.com and looks up the memo that since then is described as the Parade of Horribles…I sat down before the war and wrote down a series of things that could be serious problems. One of them I included would be not to find weapons of mass destruction stockpiled. I put down the fact that the war could last eight to 10 years because of exactly what you’ve said. There’s a list of about 20 or 30 other things that people can go and see. I sent it to the President and sent it to the members of the National Security Council — so people were thinking about those problems. They just were not considered high probability.” – Donald Rumsfeld

Like most Americans, I was not happy to have American soldiers bleeding and dying in the streets of Iraq year after year. It is one thing to invade, depose a tyrant and try to start a fledgling democracy, but it’s another thing entirely to commit north of 100,000 American soldiers to a long-term guerilla war/police action in another country. Had Americans known that was going to happen, even Republicans wouldn’t have supported the war in the first place.

However, once we were there, it didn’t make sense to give up and signal to the world that we were paper tigers by abandoning Iraq to Al-Qaeda and the insurgency. Had we simply turned tail and run, it would have been a disaster.

So, I supported hanging in there – and contra what you heard from John McCain – like the majority of Republicans, I supported the surge. Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were all against it.

They were all wrong.

The surge was extremely successful and generally pacified Iraq.

Had that been the end of the story, despite all the soldiers who died, despite all the money we spent, I’d have still felt like we made the right decision. We had largely neutralized a threat in the Middle East, set up a shaky republic in Iraq, demoralized Al-Qaeda and killed massive numbers of Jihadis while drawing them into a fight away from America. It was far from an ideal situation, but at least we had a significant pay-off in hand for all the blood and treasure we spent in that godforsaken country.

Then Barack Obama became President.

He was told over and over again that it was extremely risky to pull all of our troops out of Iraq for political reasons. Our own generals told him he should leave a residual force of 23,000 men there like we do in nations like South Korea, Japan and Germany. There would have been no need for them to police the country and casualties would have likely been extremely light. Our troops could have continued training the Iraqis, provided key intelligence, and helped lead Iraqi troops. A lot of us tried to tell him that it was essential we keep troops in the country to keep things from falling apart.

“There’s a big problem with timetables — and for that matter, the whole “Are we gonna stay or are we gonna go?” debate.

...When we, as Americans, make it clear that the Iraqis can’t rely on us to honor our commitment to help them build a democracy, the Iraqis are going to start trying to figure out who’s going to be around after we’re gone and guess what? A lot of the groups that will be around, like Al-Sadr, Al-Qaeda, the Badr Brigade, etc. are bad actors. But, if America is going to run and they’re going to stay, the Iraqis are going to feel like they have no choice except to turn to the people who are going to be around long-term.” – John Hawkins, 2007

Even as things looked much better and Republicans started to come around to the idea of withdrawing troops, we still warned that it couldn’t be done at the expense of losing the war.

“Now, if Obama can get all of our combat troops out in 16 months without Iraq flying apart at the seams, more power to him — and who knows? Maybe the situation will improve enough in the coming months that we can have our combat soldiers out by May of 2010. If so, that would be fantastic.

But, if not, Obama should remember that he is inheriting a war that is being won. If it’s lost, it will be Barack Obama not George Bush, who gets the blame — and make no mistake about, whatever the American people’s feelings about Iraq are today, their fury at seeing defeat snatched from the jaws of victory because of political gamesmanship would be absolutely titanic.” – John Hawkins, 2008

I don’t know if the public is furious that Obama’s incompetence has “snatched defeat from the jaws of victory because of political gamesmanship,” but I am.

Had Obama left residual troops in place, ISIS would have never been able to invade Iraq and it would be fighting and dying in a proxy war against Iran in Syria, a country that was already hostile to us.

Instead, Obama has frittered away all the blood, sweat and tears our troops shed to get Iraq under control and has allowed Iraq to devolve into a winner-takes-all fight between Iran and ISIS. Despite Obama’s halfhearted bombing, ISIS is still gaining ground and what will happen over the long-term is unknown. Whatever it may be, it’s unlikely to be good for us or the Iraqi people. Worse yet, the only real fix for it would be a time machine because there’s no way we can morally ask our troops to go back into Iraq in large numbers after Obama carelessly tossed their victory away because he thought it polled well.

Barack Obama lost Iraq after a Republican won it, just like the Democrats did in Vietnam and knowing THAT, I can no longer say it was a good idea to go into Iraq.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: barack0bama; georgewbush; iraqwar; isis; war
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1 posted on 05/19/2015 4:35:27 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Barack Obama lost Iraq after a Republican won it, just like the Democrats did in Vietnam and knowing THAT, I can no longer say it was a good idea to go into Iraq.

150 years of 'Rat segregation and losing the war on poverty after the Republican Lincoln won it.

Knowing THAT, I can no longer say it was a good idea to win the Civil War.

2 posted on 05/19/2015 4:40:15 AM PDT by C210N (When people fear government there is tyranny; when government fears people there is liberty)
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To: Kaslin

I’m so disgusted. I want our guys out of the middle east but Obama has made such a mess it will take decades to clean up.

The white house acts like letting ISIS take Ramhadi was some kind of brilliant military strategy. We could have at least made it painful for them by bombing the miles long column heading into the city.


3 posted on 05/19/2015 4:45:30 AM PDT by cripplecreek ("For by wise guidance you can wage your war")
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To: Kaslin

Not that I would ever defend George W Bush, but a soldier just back from the Iraqi war at the time told me his unit was attacked with mustard gas.


4 posted on 05/19/2015 4:46:12 AM PDT by odawg
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To: Kaslin
Neither Vietnam nor Iraq were ever won, because of inadequate grand strategy.

Saying Obama "lost" Iraq (or that the Congress of 1974 "lost" Vietnam) mistakes the footprint for the shoe.

The catastrophic military-strategic malpractice in Vietnam and Iraq was the CAUSE of the 1974 Congress and of "Obama".

As long as Americans get to vote, the only wars we can fight to a successful conclusion are massive multi-divisional wars of conquest (against powerful enemies) and colonial-type constabulary actions (like Granada and Panama).

5 posted on 05/19/2015 4:46:51 AM PDT by Jim Noble (If you can't discriminate, you are not free)
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To: All
Yes, Iraq did actually have WMD's – but, they were old weapons from before the Gulf War.

THAT is only because Saddam shipped all the newer materials to Syria in 2002, just before the kickoff.

One long truck convoy on sattelite imagery, headed over al-Anbar Province's best hardball road to the Syrian border.

6 posted on 05/19/2015 4:55:54 AM PDT by Old Sarge (Its the Sixties all over again, but with crappy music...)
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To: Jim Noble
"Saying Obama "lost" Iraq (or that the Congress of 1974 "lost" Vietnam) mistakes the footprint for the shoe."

Curious, are you saying that if Obama had hammered out a deal where 15,000 troops remained in Iraq that ISIS would have still conquered Al Anbar province?

Are you also saying that after the 1973 peace treaty with North Vietnam if we would have kept the funding up in 1974 for military supplies, troops and training of South Vietnam the North Vietnamese would have still invaded?
7 posted on 05/19/2015 5:00:07 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: Old Sarge

We, of course, are entirely sure what was in those trucks.


8 posted on 05/19/2015 5:02:04 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Kaslin

The more interesting question is should we have gone into Iraq in the first place back in 2003 under the leadership of a Bush or am I reading a post designed to get me to like the name “Bush” for some reason....Sarc....

Iran had the drive and determination going from the moment W Bush became president until he left office in its nuclear program. What was done about Iran? When our troops were in Iraq Iranian IED’s killed our soldiers and President Bush did nothing about the Iranians.

The Taliban in Afghanistan that were driven from power and went to the country that created them, Pakistan. What did Bush do about Pakistan?

Saudi Arabia was also overlooked after 9/11, the heartland of the terrorist ideology and the homeland of its leader Bin-Laden.


9 posted on 05/19/2015 5:05:12 AM PDT by Nextrush ( FREEDOM IS EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS, DON'T BE PASTOR NIEMOLLER)
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To: Kaslin
Yes, and I said it then, the Bush Administration should not have hung their hats on Saddam and WMDs, but his direct sponsorship of terrorism, not necessarily Al Qaeda, but Hamas, Fatah, PLO, PFLP, etc. which had killed many Americans over the years and was then blowing up Israelis with suicide bomb attacks. I remember our troops finding several suicide bomb vest "factories" once Baghdad fell, but those stories soon went down the memory hole as the search for WMDs took center stage.

Bush also failed when he let the Turks block the 4th ID, which gave Saddam and many terrorists an escape route to the north. Finally, after briefly resting, regrouping, repairing, and reloading, the military should have right wheeled straight for Tehran---the Iranians were terrified at the time that they were next, now not so much.

All of this was authorized under Congress' GWOT resolution, but Bush and Rumsfeld lost their nerve at critical moments during the campaign and ended up in the old nation building trap he had long criticized himself, with a full blown "dead end" insurgency on his hands, backed by Al Qaeda in the north and the Iranians in the south.

10 posted on 05/19/2015 5:12:06 AM PDT by Timber Rattler (Just say NO! to RINOS and the GOP-E)
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To: odawg
Not that I would ever defend George W Bush, but a soldier just back from the Iraqi war at the time told me his unit was attacked with mustard gas

I mean, honestly, so what?

Stipulate that Saddam Hussein's army had mustard gas, or sarin. Stipulate that they had mobile germ warfare labs. OK, go all the way and stipulate that they had guys in a bunker somewhere playing with U-235.

THAT DID NOT MEAN WE SHOULD REFIGHT THE VIETNAM WAR IN SOUTH ASIA.

The existence, or non-existence, of "WMDs in Iraq" does not excuse the failure to plan for war and occupation, even if you grant (which I do not) that Iraq as such had any strategic value in the war against the Wahabi/Deobandist Islam which attacked us on 9/11/01.

The main enemy remains, and sleeps securely in his beds in Riyadh and Islamabad.

11 posted on 05/19/2015 5:15:12 AM PDT by Jim Noble (If you can't discriminate, you are not free)
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To: Timber Rattler
All of this was authorized under Congress' GWOT resolution, but Bush and Rumsfeld lost their nerve at critical moments during the campaign and ended up in the old nation building trap he had long criticized himself, with a full blown "dead end" insurgency on his hands, backed by Al Qaeda in the north and the Iranians in the south.

The way I see it, if we are going to be building nations, we get to pick the puppet dictator because the idea of muslim democracy is pure fantasy.
12 posted on 05/19/2015 5:16:41 AM PDT by cripplecreek ("For by wise guidance you can wage your war")
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To: Kaslin

Those who ignore the lessons of history are condemned to be suborned and betrayed by democrats; the blacks by LBJ, and the rest of the world by Barack 0bama.


13 posted on 05/19/2015 5:20:49 AM PDT by NicknamedBob (I could win the Lottery! It only slightly skews the odds against me somewhat that I don't play.)
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To: Old Teufel Hunden
are you saying that if Obama had hammered out a deal...Are you also saying that after the 1973 peace treaty with North Vietnam if we would have kept the funding up...

Not exactly.

I'm saying that the failure to do those things is not explained by "Obama" or by "Democrats", because both of those things are EFFECTS, not CAUSES.

The cause is giving the voters a say in the way their armed forces are deployed and used.

As I predicted right here on 9/13/01, George W. Bush chose to fight a Vietnam war in South Asia, IOW, a war to make a point, to demonstrate that we were tough, and serious, but that, at its foundation would demonstrate that were were a friendly and a generous people who meant the enemy no lasting harm.

This stupidity, of course, produced a catastrophe even worse than the radical Congress of 1974, which itself was caused by similar geostrategic incompetence.

The American people will not tolerate wars like Vietnam and Iraq. That's all.

Scenarios where we elect a government that actually STAYS in a place like Vietnam or Iraq without crushing the enemy to the point that they willingly, even eagerly, submit to our will are just mental you-know-what, because that never will happen.

14 posted on 05/19/2015 5:24:38 AM PDT by Jim Noble (If you can't discriminate, you are not free)
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To: Kaslin

If I were one who lost a family member in Ramadi...right now I would be thinking insurrection.


15 posted on 05/19/2015 5:26:47 AM PDT by ThePatriotsFlag ($$$$$ Don't Defund the Government...Defund Obama and his illegal policies $$$$$)
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To: Kaslin

HERE IS WHAT I WANT TO SEE
strategic airstrikes, no boots on the gorund
FOR EXAMPLE
today ISIS is holding a big parade in Ramadi, where 228 Amerians DIED....our blood in the sand
WHY NOT BOMB THE BEJESUS OUT OF THEM....
we know they are parading, a perfect opportunity to kill them
And tell me how they are able to OCCUPY such large areas of real estate with such a small number of troops.... BECAUSE THEY CANT.. they are always concentrated in one area giving us the opportunity to KILL THEM ON THE MOVE...FROM THE AIR.... that woudl weaken them to the point that the local Iraqi forces could finish them off...
OBAMA AND HILARY SHOULD PAY THE PRICE FOR SUPPORTING ISIS AND SHIPPING WEAPONS FROM BENGHAZI AND KILLING THE AMBASSADOR..... we had 10 days prior notice of the pending attack AND THEY DID NOTHING..... THEY SET HIM UP
WHAT WAS THE SECRET DEAL...????


16 posted on 05/19/2015 5:27:27 AM PDT by zzwhale
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To: zzwhale
today ISIS is holding a big parade in Ramadi, where 228 Amerians DIED....our blood in the sand WHY NOT BOMB THE BEJESUS OUT OF THEM....

Public opinion. The world was horrified by the highway of death in gulf war 1. All the world's bed wetters cried that it was unfair, it was a turkey shoot, they were retreating.

So freakin what. You go to war to kill the enemy and destroy his will and ability to fight. If it means killing him while he's retreating, so be it.
17 posted on 05/19/2015 5:35:17 AM PDT by cripplecreek ("For by wise guidance you can wage your war")
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To: Jim Noble

Interesting, but I disagree with you about the reason we went. I don’t think it was to show we were tough or to make a point. I believe there were a lot of valid reasons to go which have been hashed and rehashed in posts like this ad infinitum. I won’t go into them in this post.

I do want to elaborate on your point about the American people and their backlash which produced the radical 1974 congress and also allowed Obama to come to power in 2008. Perhaps that is the Bush’s administrations biggest failure. That is to say, to not pin so much on the WMDs (there were a number of other valid reasons) and also to better prepare the American people for the task at hand. The other huge mistake was Bremmer and his de-Bathification of the whole country. When we de-Nazified Germany after WWII we did not simply dismiss all former Nazis from power. We got rid of the worst, but the beauracrats underneath we kept to keep a somewhat functioning country. This should have been done in Iraq, especially the military part. We let that Army disintigrate and that is why we have a lot of the problems in the Iraqi army even today.


18 posted on 05/19/2015 5:42:23 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden
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To: Old Teufel Hunden

I always thought Tony Blair made the better case for war based on humanitarian reasons.

I do think we should have used more of Saddam’s government to keep things functioning and we should have imposed someone of our choosing at the top.

I’m reminded of a recording of a radio broadcast to all of Germany at the end of WWII. Something along the lines of “We aren’t here to be your friends or rebuild your nation. We’re here to impose civil society because you started this war and lost.”


19 posted on 05/19/2015 5:51:27 AM PDT by cripplecreek ("For by wise guidance you can wage your war")
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To: Jim Noble

About the mustard gas attack, I was merely pointing out an event that was never reported nationally. I am not sure the comparison of Iraq with the Viet Name war (domino effect) is valid. The Iraq war was won, and Iraq was successfully pacified. The destruction of Iraq, and the Isis horror, results from the fact that Obama withdrew American troops from Iraq. Couple that fact with today’s headline news, that American Intelligence was warning about Isis, and the withdrawal seems to have been deliberate, to allow the Isis takeover. And, as it has been pointed out many times on this site, Isis moved in through the desert in convoy and could have been obliterated, but Obama would not allow it.


20 posted on 05/19/2015 6:02:49 AM PDT by odawg
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