Posted on 11/03/2003 4:42:36 AM PST by harpu
The natives in Iraq arent getting restless. But some residents of Washington, D.C., are.
A dozen senators, including presidential candidates John Edwards, D-N.C., and John Kerry, D-Mass., recently voted against President Bushs request for $87 billion to help rebuild Afghanistan and Iraq. Out on the campaign trail, another presidential hopeful, Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, says we should bring our troops homenow.
What a self-inflicted reversal of fortune that would be. From glorious victorySaddams statue crashing down back in Aprilto ignoble defeat in just six months.
As Vice President Cheney says, Iraq is the front line in the war against terrorism. Having liberated that country, it is crucial that we keep our word to the Iraqi people, helping them to build a secure country and a democratic government, he reminded us during an Oct. 10 speech at The Heritage Foundation. And we will do so.
There is bad news from Iraq, of course. All Americans grieve for the troops who have been killed since major combat ended. But we shouldnt focus on each individual tragedy to the point of ignoring the many successes.
Within two months a new Iraqi police force was conducting joint patrols with coalition forces, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld wrote in The Washington Post recently. Within three months, we had begun training a new Iraqi armyand today some 56,000 are participating in the defense of their country. By contrast, it took 14 months [after World War II ended] to establish a police force in Germany and 10 years to begin training a new German army.
Its all about building an Iraq for Iraqis. When weve finished that job, well come home. The United States has no desire to colonize or occupy Iraq, Afghanistan or any other country.
None of this means the Democratic presidential candidates are wrong to voice their opposition to the Bush administration. On the contrarywhen they disagree with the president, they should speak their minds. Freedom of speech is a critical component of our system of government, and its one of the major things were exporting to Iraq.
Remember that Iraqis lived in the clutches of a cruel dictator for decades. Saddam executed hundreds of thousands of peoplesome for speaking out, some for organizing politically, some just for being related to opposition activists. For the first time Iraqis can speak their minds, so its good were giving them an example of how to dissent politically, without resorting to violence.
Were also showing them the importance of listening to dissent. The Bush administration doesnt rule by fiat. Thats why it had to work with Congress to get the $87 billion supplemental aid bill passed.
Plus, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz recently went to speak toand hear fromstudents at the New School University in Manhattan. The New York Times calls that school a bastion of antiwar liberalism, and Wolfowitz was met with the expected boos and hisses.
Still, he managed to make his points. We went into Iraq for three reasons, he explained: to forestall Iraqs drive to obtain weapons of mass destruction, to break that nations connections to terrorism and to stop Saddams reign of terror.
The silent majority of Iraqis understand were there to help them. They support our mission, and they know they will benefit from it. Most Americans realize that, too.
Pulling out now, or allowing Iraq to collapse because we arent willing to spend the money needed to help it get back on its feet, would be a critical error. We cant allow a violent minority in Iraq, or a vocal minority here at home, to deter us from our mission.
Ah, do we have a sane Republican to run against Leach in Iowa. This man's judgment is so bad, as to be a threat to the national security.
Any more countries out there that want to get your young men killed in place of Americans, in a war started unilaterally by USA and Britain? Turkey maybe? That's the reality of it.
Don't misunderstand me. I was, and still am in favor of what we did in Iraq. We cannot rely on these other countries to pull our chestnuts out of the fire. We have to do it ourselves.
With that, goes the obligation to our great men and women in the service who have risked their lives in Iraq to make sure when we are successful that these other countrie like Germany and France are not allowed by future politicians to in anyway benefit from a USA success in Iraq. -Tom
BUMP to that!
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