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Bush's War Drums Unamerican (Helen Thomas Soggy Diaper Alert)
Boston Channel | October 11, 2002 | Helen Thomas

Posted on 10/11/2002 10:54:59 AM PDT by Lance Romance

Bush's War Drums Unamerican
President Still Hasn't Made Case There's Urgent Need For War

POSTED: 1:29 p.m. EDT October 11, 2002
UPDATED: 1:46 p.m. EDT October 11, 2002
WASHINGTON -- Try as he might at every forum, President George W. Bush still has not made a case for his claim that there is an urgent need for war against Iraq.

His frenzied effort to whip up public support and retain the backing of Congress verges on the hysterical.

Every time he speaks of the tyrannical Saddam Hussein, he depicts the Iraqi leader as more diabolical, more monstrous. That makes it all the harder to take Bush seriously when we recall that Republican leaders themselves once willingly did business with the so-called Butcher of Baghdad.

Is Bush afraid that Americans may question the reason for an attack now after 11 years in which Iraq has been contained, locked down with total surveillance from the air and hobbled by economic sanctions and bombings in its no-fly zones?

Many wonder what is driving Bush so headlong into war that he is pushing other issues -- the dismal economy, the stock market meltdown, corporate greed and skyrocketing health care costs -- off the table.

Does he really believe that Saddam, whom he now calls "a student of Stalin," is going to launch a war with the United States, a military colossus? Get real, Mr. President.

We already have thousands of American troops, along with fighter jets, missiles, tanks and gun ships stationed in the Persian Gulf, and four carriers are on the way.

So what is this straining-at-the-leash all about?

Speculation here and abroad is that Bush is driven by many motives. One is his desire for Republicans to win next month's elections. Another is his determination to get revenge against "the guy who tried to kill my father."

A third is said to be his secret goal of American control over the vast Iraqi oil reserves and, indeed, the whole Gulf region.

Bush also may be trying to test and make permanent his questionable doctrine of preemptive war, which allows the United States to attack any nation and depose any leader without immediate threat or provocation.

I ask you, is this policy really consistent with our tradition of morality?

For the past year, we in the White House press room had been told the administration could not establish a positive direct link between al-Qaida and Iraq or between the anthrax attacks and Iraq.

But in his speech Monday night in Cincinnati, Bush said Iraq had trained members of the terrorist group in "bomb-making, poisons and deadly gases."

Bush failed to mention that in the mid- to late-1980s, when his father was vice president in the Ronald Reagan administration, the United States allowed the Iraqis to buy from American suppliers equipment and other materials, including disease-producing bacteria that could be used to make such biological weapons as anthrax.

And, according to Newsweek, the United States knew from satellite imagery that Saddam was using poison gas on Kurdish rebels in 1988. In those days we were secretly glad when Iraq attacked Iran, which was our nemesis at the time.

Even though Bush is now playing up the alleged tie between Iraq and al-Qaida, and Americans are gung-ho to pursue the terrorist network, the public is ambivalent about going to war without strong allied support and without giving U.N. weapons inspectors a chance to examine Iraq's arsenal.

This Congress obviously has no institutional memory of the Vietnam War. Have we really recovered from that historic debacle? The free hand Congress would give the president under the pending joint resolution authorizes him "to use the armed forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate."

That mandate is painfully reminiscent of the arbitrary power Congress bestowed on President Lyndon Johnson in August 1964 to step up the catastrophic war in Southeast Asia.

The lawmakers lived to regret it, and the anguish over the war tore our country apart. To most Americans, the war was a monumental mistake.

I remember all too well Johnson's news conferences, held as he and we reporters walked briskly around the South Lawn of the White House.

He would pull a tattered paper out of his pocket and show us how all but two senators voted for the Gulf of Tonkin resolution five days after dubious reports of attacks on two American battleships by two North Vietnamese boats.

That resolution allowed Johnson as commander-in-chief "to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression."

In the current debate on the Iraq resolution, Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., said he would vote against giving Bush a "blank check," which he denounced as taking away from Congress its constitutional prerogative to declare war.

Except for Byrd, there are few other dissenting voices in Congress and around the country. One, however, has been that of the Right Rev. John Bryson Chane, the Episcopal bishop of Washington, D.C., who has written a statement to his diocese opposing the war.

Chane grants that Iraq must be condemned for its previous "immoral and inhuman" military campaigns. But Chane urged Congress and the president "to resolve the crisis with Iraq using all non-violent means."

Chane quotes Alexis de Tocqueville, the 19th century French historian known for his classic study of the United States, who eloquently said, "America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, it will cease to be great."

That is a prophecy worth pondering.

(Helen Thomas can be reached at 202-298-6920 or at the e-mail address helent@hearstdc.com)



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Try as he might at every forum, President George W. Bush still has not made a case for his claim that there is an urgent need for war against Iraq.

Every time he speaks of the tyrannical Saddam Hussein, he depicts the Iraqi leader as more diabolical, more monstrous. That makes it all the harder to take Bush seriously when we recall that Republican leaders themselves once willingly did business with the so-called Butcher of Baghdad.

Apparently she doesn't remember the child molestation propaganda campaign before the Waco barbeque. Once again I will submit that she isn't worth the paper that here SS check is printed on.

1 posted on 10/11/2002 10:54:59 AM PDT by Lance Romance
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: Lance Romance
Helen, go tell Hillary Clinton, who supported President Bush on his Iraq stance, that she, too, is Unamerican. LOL, that will be the day!
3 posted on 10/11/2002 11:03:57 AM PDT by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: Lance Romance

http://arctic.photoisland.com/sessions/30794629250/15467712lg.jpg
4 posted on 10/11/2002 11:07:04 AM PDT by dead
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To: 11th Earl of Mar; rosebud; Lance Romance
Poor old senile Helen. She almost froths at the mouth as she asks her asinine questions at the daily press conferences. Ari Fleischer must have the patience of a saint to put up with her outrageous insulting diatribes. Why does she have a press pass. She isn't a reporter, she's a fiction writer.
5 posted on 10/11/2002 11:10:00 AM PDT by holyscroller
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To: Lance Romance
Cannot express in writing what I think of this Methusala....Nothing but a Hound Dog who should be licking her wounds!!!!
6 posted on 10/11/2002 11:11:44 AM PDT by Princess G
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To: Lance Romance
If anyone sounds hysterical it is this troll and the rest of her ilk.
7 posted on 10/11/2002 11:17:08 AM PDT by ItisaReligionofPeace
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To: Lance Romance
You know what, Hussein is a threat to us. Whether it's now or later doesn't make a bit of difference to me and as far as us controling the Oil of the Middle East, I think it's a damn good idea. Let's Roll!
8 posted on 10/11/2002 11:18:51 AM PDT by HELLRAISER II
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To: Lance Romance
"...his determination to get revenge against "the guy who tried to kill my father"."

Um, actually it's a seldom-mentioned side bar - Hussein ordered the assasination of an American President - no matter whose father he is, he is an American Prisident for God's sakes!
I saw the "soggy diaper" alert, but I just had to look anyway, now it'll take me an hour to calm down...

9 posted on 10/11/2002 11:21:37 AM PDT by Psalm 73
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To: Lance Romance
Bush's motives aside, I wonder how much President Bush's little war will cost us?

Bush recently told the Iraqi people, something similar to: "...yes, we will destroy your country, but, then we will rebuild it..."

The Turks, told the US that they will not participate in this "war" unless we compensate them for the billions of dollars worth of lost trade with Iraq resulting from this action. They also notified Bush that they expect us to compensate them for all the direct expenses they incure in this action.

Now, the Russians are saying that perhaps they will support our UN position, BUT, for a price.

God only knows who else will be bought off to support our action against Iraq.

Add to this the cost of our military.

We are talking about hundreds of billions of dollars down the drain.

All the while our economy is getting worse; thousands of workers are being laid off; 401K plans are percipitously losing their values, and the disadvantaged in our society are becoming poorer.

That Saddam Hussein must really irritate President Bush for him to go to such expense and effort to rub him out. I hope the Republicans don't lose the White House and Senate as a result of this action.

10 posted on 10/11/2002 11:25:58 AM PDT by Dante3
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To: Lance Romance
Great thread title - you're so right, this witch's depends are full.
11 posted on 10/11/2002 11:36:18 AM PDT by Quilla
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To: Lance Romance
What a bile filled, hateful battle axe Helen continues to reveal herself to be. Intellectually dishonest, a traitor to the Fourth Estate. May she continue to wriggle with her panties in a bunch as W hands her and her heroes their Anti-American heads....

sidebar: The comments on these Helen Thomas threads are always so colorful. I wonder if anyone ever e-mails her the comments. I would if I could from this computer (work issues)....

12 posted on 10/11/2002 11:41:54 AM PDT by eureka!
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To: Dante3
How much would you have paid to avoid Sept. 11?? Hundreds of billions? Now imagine that involving chemical weapons or nuclear weapons. Think about it.
13 posted on 10/11/2002 11:45:22 AM PDT by Lance Romance
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To: Lance Romance
You got a link to the article?
14 posted on 10/11/2002 11:47:43 AM PDT by Prodigal Son
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doug from upland called the wench on the phone!!
15 posted on 10/11/2002 11:58:23 AM PDT by Conagher
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To: Lance Romance
Saddam and Iraq would be vaporized as soon he one of his so-called "weapond of mass destruction" hits the US. Saddam is a brutal dictator like Stalin. They both share the knack for survival. Saddan will not dare to attack US, any more than Stalin did.

Mexico is more likely to attack us one day to claim the Southwest, than Saddam ever is.

I suspect Saddam is quite content hopping between his 100 palaces and 378 concubines.

Don't lose any sleep worringing about Saddan attacking us - he is not that foolish.

16 posted on 10/11/2002 12:04:28 PM PDT by Dante3
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To: Lance Romance
Helen has apparently forgotten about "The Butcher of Belgrade" and how she needed an underwear change everytime Clinton called him "Hitler".

If wrinkles were brains someone might listen to Helen.

17 posted on 10/11/2002 12:09:56 PM PDT by Deb
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To: Dante3
I would look at the big picture here. He has made aggressive actions toward Israel. He knows we support them 100%.

He may not attack the US, but I wouldn't put it past the nut to pass these kind of weapons onto groups that would.

18 posted on 10/11/2002 12:21:12 PM PDT by Lance Romance
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To: Dante3
You do not understand why he is a threat.

Clinton is responsible for this mess. he would have rather had Monica humming his hummer than deal with our country's future.

19 posted on 10/11/2002 12:30:46 PM PDT by smoking camels
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To: Psalm 73
Exactly. The fact that he tried to assisinate an American president is enough to justify taking Saddam out, but there is so much more.
20 posted on 10/11/2002 12:36:01 PM PDT by alnick
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