Posted on 02/24/2006 7:12:07 PM PST by CometBaby
"I can tell you the main reason behind all our woes it is America." The New York Times reporter is quoting the complaint of a clothing merchant in a Sunni stronghold in Iraq. "Everything that is going on between Sunni and Shiites, the troublemaker in the middle is America."
One can't doubt that the American objective in Iraq has failed. The same edition of the paper quotes a fellow of the American Enterprise Institute. Mr. Reuel Marc Gerecht backed the American intervention. He now speaks of the bombing of the especially sacred Shiite mosque in Samara and what that has precipitated in the way of revenge. He concludes that The bombing has completely demolished what was being attempted to bring Sunnis into the defense and interior ministries.
Our mission has failed because Iraqi animosities have proved uncontainable by an invading army of 130,000 Americans. The great human reserves that call for civil life haven't proved strong enough. No doubt they are latently there, but they have not been able to contend against the ice men who move about in the shadows with bombs and grenades and pistols.
(Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...
How about the Iran-Iraq war?
Slain and pimple.
I can understand a certain seduction for a conservative who is uncomfortable with U.S. military adventurism overseas of the point of view that they're all too, well, foreign, for the dream of democracy. Unfortunately for Mr. Buckley they are not, and it is disappointing but not entirely unpredictable that he might draw the false conclusion here. These are sensational events and he has succumbed to sensation. They are also entirely superficial and he has, alas, succumbed to superficiality. Too much reading of the NY Times will do that to a fellow.
I do not think that he intends to fill Cronkite's shoes, but that is in fact what is transpiring. Again, a pity, but Buckley is an observer, not a doer, and when an observer loses his detachment all sorts of silly things are prone to come out of his mouth. This is one of the sillier. To declare defeat at a cusp such as this is the not the mark of a detached intellect, it is the mark of an old man swayed by emotion, and while forgivable in circumstances where it matters less than this, it isn't here, IMHO. He really should know better. His reading of history should tell him better. What has happened here is a failure of courage. His.
I am simply sorry that a monolithic media that he has fought all his adult life has at last won, at least with respect to Buckley himself. With his successors it won't be quite that easy. Not with me, in any case. What is happening in Iraq now is not defeat, it is incipient victory. The only people that can defeat us is ourselves.
You drilled it Bill! Good post!
"You mean I don't have to feel vaguely inadequate as I drift into a stupor waiting for him to finish his sentences, with all those big, obscure words, intoned ponderously?"It's just that erudition & a big vocabulary can be used to clarify difficult topics, or merely to impress the hoi polloi, and I always get this queasy feeling when either reading or listening to him that he's...Would you prefer hip-hop?
Pygmy? Bushmen 'click'?
But maybe it's just me. :-)
Ok. So Iraq's taking longer. And? Is there a point in there somewhere?
One difference between 2003 Iraq and the 1945 Japan we had found ourselves with, was that two of Japan's cities had been nuked, I believe. So, cutting to the chase, do I take you, in these few comments, to be essentially asking why we don't just nuke some Iraqi cities? Which ones?
[it's the inexplicable and needless impatience] Needless perhaps, but not at all inexplicable. The idea of a "return to normalcy" is a part of our national character.
But that's just it: who of us, and in particular who of the whiners, every really left normalcy? There are the military people doing the actual work, of course (but most of them wish to persist). But for the rest of us? I dare say that for 99% of the people who whine and gripe, the only difference between normalcy and now is that now, they repeatedly get on the internet and whine about how Iraq's not going fast enough and how tired they are of it and how they want to get back to normalcy.
That's why I find it inexplicable. Most of the impatient people I'm referring to may as well be complaining about being tired of a plotline on "Desperate Housewives", for all any of this has actually affected their lives.
They call themselves conservatives and they aren't intelligent enough to clean the head on his boat.
In the mid to late fifties Whitter Chambers(renounced communism and put Hiss away...hated forever by leftists) and he became friends and exchanged correspondence over the years. He once asked Chambers to join the staff of the then new National Review in one of his letters expressing exorbitant hopes for the role the publication might play in human affairs.
Chambers answer, which Mr. Buckley called "a paragraph unmatched in the literature of supine gloom, even though finally resisting despair" was thus...
It is idle [he rebuked me] to talk about preventing the wreck of Western Civilization. It is already a wreck from within. That is why we can hope to do little more now than snatch a fingernail of a saint from the rack or a handful of ashes from the faggots, and bury them secretly in a flowerpot against the day, ages hence, when a few men begin again to dare to believe that there was once something else, that something else is thinkable, and needs some evidence of what it was, and the fortifying knowledge that there were those who, at the great nightfall, took loving thought to preserve the tokens of hope and truth,
I read that with my morning coffee. I was a great pleasure.
LMAO...
Yeah, I agree. Just throwin' it out there rhetorically. A lot can happen during that time as well however and we're precariously walking a fine line between them becoming overly reliant on us and them becoming dependent on us for handling most things.
As well, people tend to have short memories. I don't think it's a real reach to consider that at some point, "anti-American" sentiments for one reason(s) or another could spark some sort of backlash against our own troops.
We also have to remember, it's still muslim too. Islam and muslims have their own set of inherent issues.
We can win by continuing to do what we are doing now, i.e., maintain the overall security while gradually turning over more and more responsibily to the Iraqis. We are training their military and police forces to assume the security responsibilities. The infrastructure is being repaired and upgraded, which should ensure future economic success. We should encourage the Iraqi political class to work together and share power. There are limits to what we can do, but time is on our side.
Hopefully, the status quo won't obtain, but rather, improve. If we have the proper resolve, the level of violence will decline and the insurgency will go out with a wimper, not a bang. I believe we will be in Iraq for some time, but our military profile will continue to decline. Success will be defined in terms of political stability, a reduced level of violence, economic prosperity, and an improved infrastructure. Our presence will be needed for strategic reasons. Syria and Iran represent a real threat to Iraq and to ourselves as part of the global war on terror. Success in Iraq is not an option. We must achieve our objectives.
I'm all for being over there until the job's done, but how long's that gonna be given [...]
No honest person can tell you the answer to your question. We will just have to find out. Ok?
As you know, we still have troop presences in Germany and Japan.
Yes, I know. I could probably list the bases, populations, and future plans for you too.
The questions are rhetorical since you're such a genius yourself. ; )
Your responses are somewhat predictable. It's funny how some people once they make up their minds, close their minds to any further discussion on the issue(s).
But it sounds as if in your mind success is guaranteed and that it's only a matter of time if I read you correctly.
Here's a clue: Germany and Japan weren't Islamic. That means that they weren't muslims. ; ) If you dont' see any difference between muslim and non-muslim in this world today, along with the host of accompanying "volatilities" associated witht the former, and more specifically between the two groups, well, then I can certainly understand your seemingly smug position.
Buckley must use his microwave oven to "roast" his Thanksgiving turkey.
Wish I could remember a certain poster who said it -- he awakened me to the reality that the "Greatest generation" was somewhat relative, and despite our nostalgia and genuine fondness for them, they had all of the same social problems, cultural issues, and loathsome individuals we face today.
If our systems collapse by their own malfunction and corrupt attitudes, then there is little we can do but keep flowery hope for that "time capsule" you described in Chambers' letter. But the human cost will be terrible, and it may be only a dream that we could ever repair ourselves to the levels you and I may envision.
Buckley is losing this argument!
The answer is yes. On 9/11 we lost more people than on December 7, 1941. We were attacked by a global terrorist organization, which had its headquarters in Afghanistan. We invaded Afghanistan, despite the fact that the Taliban was not involved in the 9/11 attack. Why? Because we could no longer tolerate state sponsors of terrorism with a global reach. It was called the Bush Doctrine.
No. Iraq didn't have WMDs, didn't have anything to do with 9-11, and with a 6th rate military, didn't pose a threat to the US.
Iraq did have WMDs. It used them against the Iranians and the Kurds. They failed to account for the destruction of their inventory of WMD, which is why there were UN inspectors in the country for almost a decade. The real question is what did Saddam do with his WMD.
Iraq was a state sponsor of terrorism and was listed as such on the State Department's list for over a decade prior to 9/11. Saddam harbored such terrorists as Abu Nidal and one of the culprits responsible for WTC I. Iraq paid the families of Palestinian suicide bombers. Saddam had terrorist training camps. Per the 9/11 Commission report Iraqi intelligence had contacts with AQ, but evidence of an operational relationship could not be found. The jury is still out as more and more information is discovered, e.g., the Saddam tapes. Iraq was behind an assassination plot against Bush 41.
Prior to 9/11, US and British aircraft were enforcing no-fly zones over Iraq. They were being fired upon on almost a daily basis. Our planes were also bombing Iraqi installations. Congress passed a resolution under Clinton that regime change was our objective in Iraq. The truce that followed the end of the Gulf War was not a peaceful one. The question after 9/11 was how could we fight the global war on terror and allow Saddam to remain in power using Iraq as a sanctuary for terrorists. Saddam's track record, i.e., previous use of WMD, invasion of two of his neighbors, terrorist connections, deceptions used against the UN inspectors, etc., ruled against the status quo.
Iraq is part of the WOT in much the same way that Afghanistan was. Iraq was not a military threat against the US, but its use of terrorist surrogates against us was. We are learning more and more about Saddam's ties to AQ. The Oil for Food scandal demonstrated that Saddam had ample funds to bankroll terrorist activities and to purchase WMD from North Korea and people like AQ Khan. We could contain Saddam's 6th rate military, but not the use of terrorist surrogates.
We are fighting AQ today in Iraq. Zarqawi was in Iraq before we invaded. We are at war with AQ and should fight them wherever they are, including Iraq and Afghanistan. Our national interests are at stake.
Just found a bunch of 60's era issues of the "National Review". Articles were incredibly prescient and many are still relevant.
National Review charges to access the online archives, probably just to force the underpriviledged to have to resort to the public library.
"underpriviledged" s/b "under-privileged". Mo' coffee.
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