Posted on 03/01/2007 5:56:38 AM PST by rellimpank
Given all of this countrys past wars involving intelligence failures, tactical and strategic blunders, congressional fights and popular anger at the president, Iraq and the rising furor over it are hardly unusual.
Imagine if the House of Representatives had debated a resolution to authorize the presidents use of force in Iraq only after the bombs were already falling. And what if after the debate, in the middle of the war, with our troops already in combat, Congress had suddenly denied such approval?
That is precisely what happened to President Clinton during the Serbian war of 1999. Neither the Senate nor the House agreed to sanction the administrations ongoing preemptive bombing campaign against Serbia
(Excerpt) Read more at article.nationalreview.com ...
Again, VDH is spot on. Americans are impatient, especially when it is apparent that mistakes have been made. Of course, the MSM will always beat the "quagmire" drum when our military is involved, unless it is one of those humanitarian interventions that Clinton was so fond of.
No, it's not unusual, but it's frustrating.
Why does the US have the best military and the worst diplomats?
If we'd tried, we couldn't've picked a more treasonous and incompetent pair - respectively - than Powell and Rice.
Until someone with real skill takes over at State, we're not going anywhere.
Saudi delendum est.
Once upon a time, cities had (at least) two newspapers. One paper thought that the Democrats were destroying the country. The other thought that the Republicans were destroying the country. They didn't hide their bias. And people read both papers, and made up their own mind.
Today, the media is overwhelmingly anti-Administration, yet they insist that they are completely objective, and the people are receiving the message that "everyone now accepts the fact" that Bush lied to get us into the war, the casualties are stronomical, we are losing, and Muslims hate us because of the damage Bush has done to our reputation.
There is precious little to counteract this message. I think this is new.
--IMHO, the treason wing of the Demotraitors has largely dominated the mass media since Viet Nam--
I guess we could bring back that successful North Korean Peace negotiator> Madeline Not2Bright?.....LOL...
If the U.S. people had known in 2002-03 that Congress was considering authorization for a military campaign that would eventually see U.S. soldiers killed and maimed on a daily basis -- more than four years later -- in a civil conflict in support of an Islamic government in Iraq (and a socialist one at that), the Bush administration would have been luck to scrape together 25 votes between both Houses of Congress on that "war resolution."
. . . the MSM will always beat the "quagmire" drum when our military is involved, unless it is one of those humanitarian interventions that Clinton was so fond of.
True. It's also worth noting that the so-called "neo-conservative" elements in the U.S. Department of Defense who were the driving force behind the U.S. invasion of Iraq were among the only "Republicans" to support Clinton's disgraceful military intervention in the Balkans in 1999.
If you haven't figured this out yet from the tone of my post, I don't trust any of those f#%&ers.
You are one of the very few to have 20-20 foresight apparently.
Geez!
One of these days I'm going to put together a list of all my posts on this subject dating back to the fall of 2002.
Once you read it, you'll think I'm some kind of prophet.
When you get 'em together, ping me.
Differences between the wars...
A. Ten times as many Americans died in Korea in 30 months as died in Iraq in 30 months. (30,000 vs. less than 3,000)
B. Full wartime censorship was imposed on correspondents in Korea..
1.Correspondents were placed under jurisdiction of the army and were subject to courtmartial.
2. Correspondents could not criticize the Allied conduct of the War and could not send demoralizing dispatches
3.Correspondents could not quote officers or report casualties without authorization.
4.More regulations listed at the link above.
C. Thousands of young Americans were drafted to serve in Korea.
Let's hope the outcome in Iraq is the same as that in South Korea...
millions of people, freed from the control of a deadly dictator (Saddam in Iraq; Kim il-Sung in Korea)
Will do.
For more than a decade before September 11, 2001 - Americans appeared to have developed local expectations about their politics, environment and economy that they believed were universal. Some still seem to think that way. If Im right, I think we are watching throngs of Americans fighting the realization that they cannot transfer their local expectations to the rest of the world. The data clearly says, what works here doesnt always work out there. Thats the reason for the dissociation between American domestic policies and American foreign policy. The fact is, Americans can have a relationship with their neighbors that they could never have with a fascist ayatollah or insular tribal chieftain. I believe the Bush Administration is facing a temporary public backlash for correcting that rampant public misunderstanding about foreign affairs. Before GWB took responsibility for the threats that Americans face, domestic fantasies about the mechanics of foreign affairs were allowed to flourish. The time has come to confront those dangerous fantasies with cold fact. I think VDH does an outstanding job of developing the requisite context for an American awakening. I think his message counteracts most if not all of the emotional sound bites that target a disaffected and frustrated few among a relatively responsible electorate.
Hersh has reported recently of US and Saudi covert funding of Al-Qaeda- related Sunni extremist groups to counter Hezbollah and Iran in Lebanon.
If true, it dims the Bush vision of no more expedient compromises.
Of course Hersh may have it all wrong - perhaps the CIA has planted these stories to scare Iran.
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