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To: Shermy

Memo to Albrigh:

1) Clinton called for regime change when he signed the Iraqi Liberation Act. Last I knew, he wasn't a Republican.

2) Kerry went on ABC after Clinton signed that legislation and called for American boots on the ground. Last I knew, he wasn't a Republican either.

Oh, and Madeline, you might want to check these quotes out too. Last I knew, none of them were Republicans.

Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle (S.D.), Congressional Record, February 12, 1998:

"Iraq's actions pose a serious and continued threat to international peace and security. It is a threat we must address. Saddam is a proven aggressor who has time and again turned his wrath on his neighbors and on his own people. Iraq is not the only nation in the world to possess weapons of mass destruction, but it is the only nation with a leader who has used them against his own people. . . . The United States continues to exhaust all diplomatic efforts to reverse the Iraqi threat. But absent immediate Iraqi compliance with Resolution 687, the security threat doesn't simply persist - it worsens. Saddam Hussein must understand that the United States has the resolve to reverse that threat by force, if force is required. And, I must say, it has the will."

Sen. Kerry (Mass.), Congressional Record, March 13, 1998:
"Mr. President, we have every reason to believe that Saddam Hussein will continue to do everything in his power to further develop weapons of mass destruction and the ability to deliver those weapons, and that he will use those weapons without concern or pangs of conscience if ever and whenever his own calculations persuade him it is in his interests to do so. . . . I have spoken before this chamber on several occasions to state my belief that the United States must take every feasible step to lead the world to remove this unacceptable threat. He must be deprived of the ability to injure his own citizens without regard to internationally-recognized standards of behavior and law. He must be deprived of his ability to invade neighboring nations. He must be deprived of his ability to visit destruction on other nations in the Middle East region or beyond. If he does not live up fully to the new commitments that U.N. Secretary-General Annan recently obtained in order to end the weapons inspection standoff - and I will say clearly that I cannot conceive that he will not violate those commitments at some point - we must act decisively to end the threats that Saddam Hussein poses."

Sen. Joseph Biden (Del.), Congressional Record, February 12, 1998:
"An asymmetric capability of nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons gives an otherwise weak country the power to intimidate and blackmail. We risk sending a dangerous signal to other would-be proliferators if we do not respond decisively to Iraq's transgressions. Conversely, a firm response would enhance deterrence and go a long way toward protecting our citizens from the pernicious threat of proliferation. . . . Fateful decisions will be made in the days and weeks ahead. At issue is nothing less than the fundamental question of whether or not we can keep the most lethal weapons known to mankind out of the hands of an unreconstructed tyrant and aggressor who is in the same league as the most brutal dictators of this century."

Sen. Joseph Lieberman (Conn.), Congressional Record, February 12, 1998:
"Today, the threat may not be as clear to other nations of the world, but its consequences are even more devastating potentially than the real threat, than the realized pain of the invasion of Kuwait in 1990, because the damage that can be inflicted by Saddam Hussein and Iraq, under his leadership, with weapons of mass destruction is incalculable; it is enormous. . . . Mr. President, if this were a domestic situation, a political situation, and we were talking about criminal law in this country, we have something in our law called 'three strikes and you are out,' three crimes and you get locked up for good because we have given up on you. I think Saddam Hussein has had more than three strikes in the international, diplomatic, strategic and military community. So I have grave doubts that a diplomatic solution is possible here. . . . What I and some of the Members of the Senate hope for is a longer-term policy based on the probability that an acceptable diplomatic solution is not possible, which acknowledges as the central goal the changing of the regime in Iraq to bring to power a regime with which we and the rest of the world can have trustworthy relationships."

Sen. Levin (Mich.), Congressional Record, February 12, 1998:
"Mr. President, this crisis is due entirely to the actions of Saddam Hussein. He alone is responsible. We all wish that diplomacy will cause him to back down but history does not give me cause for optimism that Saddam Hussein will finally get it. . . . Mr. President, Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction programs and the means to deliver them are a menace to international peace and security. They pose a threat to Iraq's neighbors, to U.S. forces in the Gulf region, to the world's energy supplies, and to the integrity and credibility of the United Nations Security Council. . . . Mr. President, the use of military force is a measure of last resort. The best choice of avoiding it will be if Saddam Hussein understands he has no choice except to open up to UNSCOM inspections and destroy his weapons of mass destruction. The use of military force may not result in that desired result but it will serve to degrade Saddam Hussein's ability to develop weapons of mass destruction and to threaten international peace and security. Although not as useful as inspection and destruction, it is still a worthy goal."


4 posted on 03/28/2006 3:18:21 PM PST by Peach
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To: Peach
1998? Hey, that's the same year the Impeached Rapist attacked Iraq over its WMD programs! [beaming]

Huh?

...

Oh, sorry. I'll be quiet now.

13 posted on 03/28/2006 3:21:43 PM PST by Coop (Proud founding member of GCA - Gruntled Conservatives of America)
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To: Peach

Good job, Peach.


14 posted on 03/28/2006 3:22:24 PM PST by Christian4Bush (FreeRepublic and Rush Limbaugh: kevlar protection from the Drive-By Media.)
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To: Peach

These Dems sounded so tough because they knew Clinton and not-at-Albright would never order a ground invasion. They scored "strong on defense" points knowing they wouldn't have to back it up.


38 posted on 03/28/2006 3:30:55 PM PST by KingKenrod
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To: Peach
Those quotes you posted are all interesting and demonstrate the utter failure of Democrats to approach foreign policy as anything other than a partisan exercise.

But why didn't you post this one from Madame Albright, uttered in her "60 Minutes" interview in May 1996:

Lesley Stahl on U.S. sanctions against Iraq: We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?

Secretary of State Madeleine Albright: I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it.

Of course, we're continuing to pay an ever-increasing price as a result of an irrational Iraq policy that began with Bush I and continued unchanged under Clinton/Albright in spite of what some Republicans think.

67 posted on 03/28/2006 5:26:34 PM PST by logician2u
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