१२ नोव्हेंबर, २००५

"And yes, he should question their patriotism. Because they're acting unpatriotically."

Glenn Reynolds has that to say about Bush's Iraq speech. That provokes quite an outcry, as I'm sure he expected. He reports "hatemail" and responds:
[T]he Democratic politicans who are pushing the "Bush Lied" meme are, I think, playing politics with the war in a way that is, in fact, unpatriotic. Having voted for the war, they now want to cozy up to the increasingly powerful MoveOn crowd, which is immensely antiwar. The "Bush Lied" meme is their way of getting cover. This move also suggests that their earlier support for the war may itself have been more opportunistic than sincere, which I suppose is another variety of unpatriotism....

[I]t's not "dissent" that's unpatriotic... It's putting one's own political positions first, even if doing so encourages our enemies, as this sort of talk is sure to do.
"Unpatriotic" is a very hot word. If you use it, you've got to know you're going to make the other side steaming mad. They get mad, in part, because it works as such a powerful criticism and hurts their cause.

Creating a fuss over the use of the word "unpatriotic" might be a good strategy for Bush opponents though. Speaking in generalities about the grand tradition of dissent might be a somewhat effective way to detract attention from the specific problems about the current dissent that President Bush raised in his great speech. And in fact, Bush treated his opponents fairly and respectfully in his speech:
Some observers look at the job ahead and adopt a self-defeating pessimism. It is not justified....

And our debate at home must also be fair-minded. One of the hallmarks of a free society and what makes our country strong is that our political leaders can discuss their differences openly, even in times of war. When I made the decision to remove Saddam Hussein from power, Congress approved it with strong bipartisan support. I also recognize that some of our fellow citizens and elected officials didn't support the liberation of Iraq. And that is their right, and I respect it. As President and Commander-in-Chief, I accept the responsibilities, and the criticisms, and the consequences that come with such a solemn decision.

While it's perfectly legitimate to criticize my decision or the conduct of the war, it is deeply irresponsible to rewrite the history of how that war began....

The stakes in the global war on terror are too high, and the national interest is too important, for politicians to throw out false charges. (Applause.) These baseless attacks send the wrong signal to our troops and to an enemy that is questioning America's will. As our troops fight a ruthless enemy determined to destroy our way of life, they deserve to know that their elected leaders who voted to send them to war continue to stand behind them. (Applause.) Our troops deserve to know that this support will remain firm when the going gets tough. (Applause.) And our troops deserve to know that whatever our differences in Washington, our will is strong, our nation is united, and we will settle for nothing less than victory. (Applause.).

UPDATE: You know, back in the days of the Vietnam War, protesters and other anti-war folk didn't give a damn if you called them unpatriotic! In fact, "patriotic" was used as a slur. They called themselves unpatriotic. That's how I remember it -- from where I was at the time (the University of Michigan, 1969-1973).

६८ टिप्पण्या:

Jeff with one 'f' म्हणाले...

Transnational progressivism is unpatriotic.

Defering to the UN, the EU, the IAEA is unpatriotic.

Hoping for a quagmire and a deafeat is unpatriotic.

Reveling in the outcome of the Vietnam War and hoping to repeat it is unpatriotic.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

maxkennerly -

I agree. I'm curious though: you are referring to my left friends' deferral to Michael Moore on all such questions, right?

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Anyway, we've had our fun. On a serious note, I've always been 100% totally confused by the idea that the administration has viciously "questioned the patriotism" of anyone who adres criticize the war.

I mean, there are probably some statements along those lines from some right-wing morons somewhere, the only practical effect of which would be to feed the illusions of the left.

But along with the strange general idea that there is a "war on dissent," I think the hardcore anti-war people use this notion to lend themselves a veneer of rare courage, and the consequent duty to say whatever the hell they feel like saying.

Dissent during wartime is fine, wonderful. Dishonest dissent - and by that I mean anything less then scrupulously honest dissent, dissent that bends over backwards to make sure it's right - is bullshit. Unpatriotic? Whatever. It's bullshit.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

That original maxkennerly comment, when I look at it, could not do a better job of encapsulating the political problems the left has. Simply stated: high-toned, condescending sheer stupidity.

It's like I said somewhere else, I think the long-term political impact of the last few years is complete. It's set in stone, regardless of what the next election brings and regardless of whether people are beginning to have doubts about W himself.

That impact is that some small but significant percentage - 10% net maybe - of the reading, thinking public has left the left. And it's because of comments like that, multiplied by 100,000,000 in editorials, web sites, and conversations.

PS: Already read the whole article, maxkennerly.

Roger Sweeny म्हणाले...

...back in the days of the Vietnam War, protesters and other anti-war folk didn't give a damn if you called them unpatriotic! In fact, "patriotic" was used as a slur. They called themselves unpatriotic. That's how I remember it -- from where I was at the time (the University of Michigan, 1969-1973).

That's how I remember it too (Dartmouth College, 1967-1969; U. of Chicago, 1969-1971).

Most war opponents today are more politically sophisticated. Some are less honest. Some are both. And some love America but think the government is in the wrong.

chuck b. म्हणाले...

Bush treated his opponents with far more respect than they will ever give him.

Hearing anyone on the left complain about being called unpatriotic always leaves me incredulous.

Before I too said "good bye to all of that" (a la Christopher Hitchens), I listened to and even participated in countless discussions about sick, racist, evil, exploitative, hypocritical, insert-your-pejorative-here America.

Those discussions never wrapped up with anything like, "But damn I love this country!"

Quite the contrary.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

As for specifics on intelligence use, it is arguably true that the administration should have been more careful in describing the caveats appearing. In fact it angers me (if it's fair) because not doing so opened the door for so much nonsense.

But I would guess - because it is their modus operandi - that the left has been exaggerating the extent of those caveats. And I know that most on the left have almost no idea why many of us believe that the presence or not of actual WMDs in Iraq is not the determining factor on whether the war was justified.

Paul Rinkes म्हणाले...

funny, how that link starts immediately after this paragraph:

The administration's overarching point is true: Intelligence agencies overwhelmingly believed that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, and very few members of Congress from either party were skeptical about this belief before the war began in 2003. Indeed, top lawmakers in both parties were emphatic and certain in their public statements.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Michigan 1969-1973? You're a precise contemporary of my sister and her husband there. Of course, it's a huge school and unless you were an Art major it's unlikely you would have run into them. Doubtful even then.

अनामित म्हणाले...

It is not possible to be more at odds with the American political tradition than to reflexively condemn one's own government for all past, present and future decisions arguably related to security.

P_J म्हणाले...

Your patriotism was questioned? Get real. Try being taken away by the secret police, fed into a paper shredder, or sold into sexual slavery. Can we get some perspective please? This kind of childish whining is offensive to the reality of people who suffer genuine persecution every day.

If you've got a charge to make, then start articles of impeachment. Otherwise, shut your trap. You're trying to score political points against a President you can't stand, but all you're doing is undermining support for an important mission. Do you want Iraq to end like Vietnam?

The Democrats have spent the last 2 1/2 years looking backwards. What's your plan?


If Bush had said: Saddam is a tyrant, he oppresses his people and we need to get rid of him, that would be fine.

Mark,

Please reread the '03 State of the Union address and Bush's pre-war speeches. This talking point (It was all about MWDs!) is baseless.

Joe Giles म्हणाले...

One man's paper shredder = another man's comfy chair.

Jeff with one 'f' म्हणाले...

What the Democrats are doing is trying to criminalize the political process.

It's a narrow legalism to relentlessly focus on WMD to the exclusion of all of the other, excellent reasons for deposing Saddam and the Ba'ath party.

If you're going to bitch about the war, then own up to the consequences that would have been the result of not fighting it. All of them. You can't have yor cake and eat it to. We hear every day about the cost of war from those that opposed it. What about the cost of not fighting it?

Let's hear from the WMD critics why it would have been such a good idea to abandon the Kurds and the Swamp Arabs, to tolerate the rape rooms and human shredders, to turn a blind eye to the massive system of oil-for-food bribery that left Iraq's children dying of malnutrition while politicians around the world were lining their pockets with oil money.

If that's alright with you, if you would rather Americans stay home and let those things continue, fine. Say so. Come out and say that American lives, treasure, and honor are too precious to spend solving those injustices. Come out and SAY IT!

Beth म्हणाले...

I believe it is the duty of good citizens to question policy when it is being debated and discussed. Once the President makes a decision however, it is also your duty to support that decision. We are the United States of America and we speak with one voice. Any less is disloyal.

I've heard that argument floated around in various places, and for the life of me, I cannot make sense of it. Once a decision is made, I have to support it? Based on what? What reasoning supports this dictate? How paternal, and how utterly, completely wrong.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

mark -

I wasn't clear enough. What I mean is, beyond those other justifications that were in fact part of the debate and part of the overall case for the war, most on the left don't make any attempt to understand why it's perfectly possible to believe that the lack of WMDs does does not destroy even the WMD-based, security-based reasons for the war.

It boils down to two things.

First, and most obviously, we simply never could have known with anything like certainty what we know now about the lack of weapons. It's very easy to forget or ignore that. It's why Clinton famously said that the only real inspections process would involve regime change.

So yes, W perhaps should have said: look, there are doubters, maybe we'll find nothing, but that is not the point. But that's a criticism of his competence as an explainer, not something that goes to heart of the situation. (And like I say, I'm far from convinced that the extent of the doubts pre-war means that clearly what he should have done. But if it was, I'm pissed. But for far different reasons than you, because I'm able and willing to separate the underlying situation from what W an crew said.)

Second, in evidently destroying the weapons some time ago (and not telling anyone, for various reasons, but that in itself was defiance of the UN, and not unimportant), Hussein was explicitly planning long-term and and strategically to start it all up again. The oil-for-food machinations fit in there, too, incidentally. The Duelfer Report (much loved by the left in other ways) lays it out in some detail.

That second reason is maybe a stand-in for saying: the problem was the regime. The regime had to go, no matter what. Many politicians here, of both parties, had been saying for years that it was imposible to envision a time when it would be wise to welcome Hussein back into "the community of nations."

It's also easy to forget, then, that had we backed off from the war, it wasn't like our efforts to overthrow the regime would have ended. It would have remained as a prime goal of our foreign policy. You can easily see politics evolving to a point where the Dems would criticize W for "dithering on this intolerable situation, all the more intolerable in the wake of 9-11." And of course that all would have been taking place within a context of sanctions and inspections and growing French-led cries to "let the Iraqis be."

That's maybe the basic thing that bothers me about the left base, and really bothers me about Democrats in Congress: their willful historical amnesia regarding (especially) the weeks after 9-11, when almost everyone in Congress was saying - we can't just focus on Afghanistan, it's obvious we need to resolve the Iraq situation once and for all.

The White House is resisting hearings because any White House always resists hearings. But if you read the right-leaning blogs and press at all, you'll start to see a growing chorus of fine, jerks, let's talk about it. You gotta understand, the anger on this side is growing, and based on a far deeper understanding of the situation than you typically find on the left.

Lack of rigor in pursuit of moral outrage, their grail, is what motivates the Kos/DU/Atrios/Moore world, near as I can figure.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

"jingoism" -- I haven't heard that word in a while. I heard it all the time in the weeks after 9/11 and the run-up to the war in Afghanistan. That was when those who wanted our country to respond to the attacks were being criticized by people who wanted to say there was too much patriotism going around. I think a lot of people got the memo to say "jingoism" because it wouldn't sit well to criticize "patriotism," in that flashback to Vietnam way. Later the memo was: say that you're patriotic too and dissent is patriotic.

Pastor Jeff: amen.

Mark: What good do you hope to achieve with such investigations? It looks like one party trying to score points against a President who is doing something they should be helping him with: winning a war. Why concentrate on the past, which can't be changed? We went to war. Now, we need to win. Are you on the side of people who are saying, we've already lost, we need to just give up and get out? They are encouraging our enemies! Why don't you care about that? That's about the future -- the things we can affect. I simply can't understand why you aren't desperately concerned about that. Call it a lack of patriotism, blind party politics, or sheer stupidity. I don't know your motivation, but I'm repelled by your argument.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

mark -

Your last comment tells me you;re captive to the left-based caricature version of the case W and crew made, which they insist is the only accurate version. So you're not going to change.

P_J म्हणाले...

Okay, Mark, let's put your patriotism to the test:

Bill Clinton bombed a pharmaceutical lab in Sudan on the day of Monica Lewinksy's grand jury testimony. It turns out the decision was based on bad intel - intel that wasn't shared with Congress. And administration officials who suggested waiting to confirm bin Laden's connection to the embassy bombings and the factory were overruled. Innocent civilians died with no warning and no provocation. And the factory that produced 50-60% of the antibiotics, pain relievers, malaria and tuberculosis drugs, and veterinary medicines for one of the world's poorest countries was needlessly destroyed.

Now - where were the Democrats calling for an investigation? Why didn't Clinton share his daily breifings with Congress? Where's the outrage? Clinton lied, people died.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark,
The intelligence in the Clinton administration was essentially the same as in the Bush administration and in foreign intelligence agencies. If the Dems didn't trust Bush, why didn't they ask for further intellingence, or hearings, or maybe not vote at all for the resolution to remove Saddam? We should surrender in Iraq now because the loyal opposition are too dumb to do their jobs or were scared by Condi's use of the word "mushroom cloud"?

And sanctions and inspections were not working. How many flights are we required to make to enforce the no-fly zone, how many billions in graft to UN cronies are we to wink at, how much deprivation of the Iraqi people should we tolerate, before we finish the war which started 12 years prior?

I was a Democrat until recently, and I never thought WMDs were the main reason. It was the totality of having a maniac with money in the ME. And please read history if you don't believe terrorists work together even if their philosophies differ.

Believe what you want and dissent! But when you question the patriotism of this government, they are free to question yours. (Thanks, Glenn.)

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Also would simply love to hear of the many ways to accomplish the same ends that obviously, obviously would have worked, and which would not have also meant a large measure of violence and suffering in Iraq.

I'd also point out that in that comment, you accept as a proper the goal of regime change.

P_J म्हणाले...

Mark,

No, it's not all black and white. But Bush believed that same thing that the UN, Bill Clinton, Al Gore and everyone else knew and believed at the time - that Saddam was a dangerous tyrant, intent on developing WMDs and thwarting 12 years of UN sanctions. No intelligence is perfect, and no President can make decisions by either sharing every piece of info with Congress or constantly debating "on the one hand ... on the other."

Assume the worst case - Bush intentionally lied becuase he's eeeeeeevil and wanted to go to war. Can't you see that the way the Democrats are pursuing this is undermining not the current war against terror and the efforts to rebuild Iraq?

Pretend that it was northern agitators who actually bombed Ft. Sumter to get the Civil War going. Two years in, anti-war Republicans in the north are waving documents and calling for investigations. What do you want to do - impeach Lincoln? Pull the army out of Virginia? Recall Grant from Vickburg? So you sack your hated political opponent. Meantime there's a war on and your accusations are sapping public support. Still feel patriotic?

Just tell me: What do you actually hope to accomplish? What is your preferred final outcome?

knox म्हणाले...

mark says:
"I wish this war were winnable. It would have transformed middle east if there were a democratic Iraq. But this is an incredibly overly optimistic view, the one that is challenged by the reality."

...do you watch the news? these little things called "elections" and "voting" have happened...

But I understand. You've got your eyes on the prize: Bush wrong at all costs.

Joe Giles म्हणाले...

I'm still trying to figure out how Bush forged all those docs/evidence that were available before he got into office. Probably those PNAC'ers.

Or maybe Sammy Berger has been shoving docs down his undies longer than we suspected.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Mark: "I wish this war were winnable." So your motivation then is: We can't win. We can't succeed in the future, except to the extent of preventing other wars. That is your justification for concentrating on the past. I didn't say I don't care about the past, just that it makes no sense to concentrate on it when there is something we are involved in now and must finish. You've explained yourself, Mark, and you're in exactly the position that is hurting the war effort: defeatism. Do you think it's okay to hurt the effort, because it is doomed? That is incredibly presumptuous and dangerous thing to believe. I am repelled by it.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

wildabout -

"Guess what? I can admit that maybe I'm wrong and the time WAS right for this war, that it WAS the right thing to do. Humility and a willingness to listen - what a concept."

You are vanishly rare. On the left, anyway.

The reason people like me keep making the arguments we do is because the substance of what we say basically doesn't get addressed. It gets ignored. And we see those on the other side usually propping up their arguments with nonsense.

I boils down to a diagreement on the meaning of the lack of WMDs: for what that says about the case W made (which the left is more than willing to talk about, though not usually honestly), and for what it says about the underlying situation and basis for the war (which they really shy way from, certainly in an honest way).

Mark -

Read my looong post above for why I believe the lack of WMDs does not in the final analysis do much to destroy the security- and WMD-rationale for the war.

I have said many times that if W intentionally misled, he's impeachable. I have no great love for the guy, though I feel a certain amount of empathy for this sad sack suddenly handed the worst set of problems any president has ever had. (And I'll stand by that, by the way; we've never faced an actual existential threat from a suicidal opponent.)

But it's intellectually dishonest for the left to refuse even to try to separate the case W made from the underlying situation, especially since all the detailed kind of stuff I and others refer to has been part of the ongoing debate since before the war started.

Iraq presented a total diplomatic and military dilemma. The left pretends it didn't. That's how they get away with their language and political approach.

JBlog म्हणाले...

I almost choked on my Froot Loops when I saw Ted Kennedy quoted in a Reuters story responding to the president's speech.

Shouldn't he be off nailing a bimbo or murdering a campaign worker or something?

The man is a pig and has no moral authority to criticize anyone about anything. Ever.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark,
You say we should assume he was lying for the sake of your argument. But many of us cannot assume that because we don't believe it. And he and the Republicans have been punished--look at the election returns from last week and the falling polls. Your side has almost won the argument, but the people stop at supporting your surrender agenda. But if it's impeachment you really want as punishment, count me out, as well. The successive Nixon, Clinton, and perhaps Bush impeachments have weakened the nation.

As for the emerging democracies, I give both of them our support in troops and money and rhetoric for the same amount of time we gave to Japan and Germany. If we abandon them too early, it will be because the opposition wins the argument. I've said before, the opposition seems to be unable to tolerate any war that lasts over two months and any democracy that takes longer than a year to build. Buck up!

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Mark -

You seem to be responding directly only to your version of the weakest arguments being made here. Especially, you seem fixated on those times when people sort of say there's no reason to go over the past now.

P_J म्हणाले...

Mark,

I don't believe I ever said "Don't investigate." Of course administrations shouldn't lie to take us to war. Nobody would make that argument and we don't need an investigation to reinforce the point.

I still want to know, "What do you want? What is your preferred outcome?"

What are you hoping to gain and is it worth the cost? I'm perfectly willing to believe that Bush misled us. I'm just less ready to do so than you are. And I'm willing to weigh the costs in political and military terms. I have trouble reconciling "I support the troops" with political grandstanding that undermines the mission the troops are trying to accomplish.

Go back to my Civil War fantasy - Lincoln ginned up evidence of Confederate aggression to start a war he thought we needed. So impeach Lincoln - fine. Does it matter if you also destroy public support for the war and encourage the rebels because your cause is "unwinnable"?

And are you as outraged at Clinton as you are at Bush? Will you call for a similar investigation into the deceit that led to unjustified aggression in Sudan, civilian suffering, and what appears to be the use of the military force to take attention away from an ongoing investigation of the President? Because if not, why should I believe your argument is anything but partisan hackery?

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

It also pays to remember that in W, we have - literally - perhaps the least-qualified person in the nation for explaining such a difficult situation. And sometimes it strikes me that another aspect of left cravenness is how they are taking advantage of that fact, rather than realizing it's a tragedy we all share.

I wonder if he would ever schedule an address to the nation and then step aside and let me take over. Feign sudden hoarseness, or soemthing. I've done a little public speaking, I think I could handle it.

wildabout -

There's no doubt WMDs were the primary reason given. Many on the left tend to say it was the "only" reason given, which for me seems like a stand-in for ignoring the complexity of the dilemma I refer to.

P_J म्हणाले...

wildaboutharrie,

I don't think anyone said WMDs weren't the primary cause. I freely admit that was the major theme of Bush's presentations.

But the current anti-war talking point is that WMDs were the ONLY justification for war. Now why do you suppose this has to be refuted every time the war is discussed?

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Do you mean where I said there's a growing chorus on the right saying fine, let's have hearings? Is that where I "essentially" said there's no reason for hearings?

That argument is not the "one being made here." It's the one you're choosing to respond to, because (I'd guess) it's the clear path for you to take the moral high ground.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark, do you want America to win the war in Iraq? If no, (I fully assume you believe yourself to be a loyal, patriotic American), please explain why America's loss in Iraq would be the best outcome for Americans, Iraqi's, and the world? Especially considering the chaos that would ensue with America's too-early exit, versus the continued slow but steady movement toward a form of democratic government we are seeing now?

Second, if you want America to win, what are you personally willing to do to help ensure that? Nothing? Everything? Only selected actions eschewing others for 'patriotic' reasons?

The issue with the right - myself included - is not the right to dissent per se. It is that we hold the reasonable expectation that during times of a war, (especially against an enemy that has claimed the right to kill four million more Americans, two million of them our children), honest, responsible, and productive dissent regardless whether the dissent is coming from Americans from the left or right.

The Bush lied line, for all the bluster behind it, simply is yet unproven. So why would truly patriotic and thoughtful Americans continue with that line? For instance, the WaPo article purporting to prove that Bush lied shows nothing of the sort. Does it *prove* that the PDB contains intel *not* available to Congress through other means? Does it *prove* that the information summed up in the NIE was *not* available elsewhere? No, it does not. It expects the reader to not be that nuanced and just take it that the President had his PDB, and the Congress does not get his PDB, so Bush lied. I'm sorry, that doesn't hack it in terms of intellectual honesty and reasoned dissent.

So, if you can prove that Bush deliberately lied, then provide substantiated evidence that unequivocally makes your case - or admit it is just what you believe and remains unproven. The burden of proof is on you, not anyone else. And, unless you can unequivocally prove that Bush lied, intellectual honesty and support for the America value of presumption of innocence, demand that the possibility that he did not lie remains as the working truth of the matter. That there is a strong probability that matters unfolded pretty much the way the available data and information indicate. That the decision to go to war in Iraq by the President, and the support provided by Congress for that decision, was based upon the best available intel, and - though we certainly can argue about the merits of the decision - it was well within the constitutional prerogative of the President to make, and was fully supported by an informed Congress.

Honest, patriotic, and loyal dissent during times of war must (or at least should) not be undertaken lightly and must be made upon firm and unquestionable data and information, not on misleading innuendo. I think we would all agree that during times of war, deliberately using misleading information to support one's dissent is unpatriotic and disloyal. Failing to adequately research information used to dissent in times of war may or may not render someone unpatriotic and/or disloyal, but it still harms the nation by the unwarranted dividing of public support and opinion, which clearly supports the enemy. Great care should and must be taken by dissenters to ensure there data is correct, complete, and clear.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

wildabout -

2003 State of the Union; and the 2002 war authorization passed by Congress, both mention quite a few reasons beyond WMDs.

For me, the essential undeniable justification for regime change was simply his 12-year defiance of many, many UN resolutions, which increasingly promised "the most serious consequences" for non-compliance.

The WMDs came into play as W's main argument for why we have to, in the wake of 9-11, start taking such pronouncements seriously.

And the decision we faced, at the time, semed to me to be: are we ever going to start doing that? Because if we didn't do it with Hussein's Iraq, in the face of 12 years of defiance, it would be hard for me to see where we ever would do it.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Mark -

You won't believe me, but it's been a particular study of mine; I've been in periodic contact with the researchers at the U of Maryland's Program on International Policy Attitudes, where the best polling has been done. In fact I'm working on a long piece about this for potential publication, if I can ever finish it AND make it lightly amusing.

But anyway: the idea that a majority of Americans ever believed that Hussein was behind 9-11 is a myth. It's based on really bad polling, and inaccurate interpretations of that bad polling.

It's a very important myth, because it functions exactly as you use it here, as proof of administration dishonesty. Al Gore uses it a lot.

But again, you won't believe me. For the benefit of other people here, mainly.

P_J म्हणाले...

If we can win the war (which i don't think we can), we'll win it even with investigation of the reasons why we went there.
Your Lincoln analogy is not fair. First, in the Civil War case, it was a war between Americans, a CIVIL war. In that case, of course, it would be imprudent to investigate Lincoln if it would damage the North's cause. This war, however, is a war against a nation which did not attack us, did not have WMDs. Nothing bad will come out of investigation, only good.


So an investigation that undermines the cause of a civil war would be bad, but an investigation that undermines a foreign war (esp. Bush's) will be good - because it's unwinnable anyway. Explain to me again how this isn't motivated by simple opposition to the war at all costs.

And I'm not sure why your outrage against Clinton doesn't rise to your level of outrage against Bush. Aside from Clinton's despicable use of the military to wag the dog, it seems that American war casualties are the only difference. That leads me to conlude that if we had simply killed brown people from afar with missiles, there would be no outrage. That seems a little cynical.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

wildabout -

You're right, on reading.

I was remembering this section:

Iraqi refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtained -- by torturing children while their parents are made to watch. International human rights groups have catalogued other methods used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape. If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning. (Applause.)

And tonight I have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq: Your enemy is not surrounding your country -- your enemy is ruling your country. (Applause.) And the day he and his regime are removed from power will be the day of your liberation. (Applause.)

But he does couch almost all of it in terms of WMDs.

I'd also point out that quite a bit of what he says was and is true; that is, the parts relating to Hussein's defiance of the UN.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Of course, another problem is I don't trust the Democrats in Congress to be totally honest in the pursuit, nor do I come close to trusting the press and the Democratic base to interpret the hearings fairly. That's just life and life only, I guess.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark - good response.

"If you think that people cannot criticize because Administration or Ann or you assert that it would harm our troops, then resounding NO."

I think you and I agree that in America we are, and should remain, free to criticize the administration. (Don't get me going about Bush's lack of control over our borders...)

What I don't support, and especially as a former military person, can't support is criticism of the administration, congress, or the military during times of war that clearly or even tacitly (perhaps unintentionally) supports our common enemy. Again, our enemy has clearly stated for the record that they intend to kill millions of Americans - half of them American children. I believe that they mean what they said, and in my opinion only a fool would not.

“Times of war”. That term makes a difference in how we on any side of the discussion comport ourselves. I personally believe it wrong to participate in activities that provide any kind of aid or comfort to the enemy. Does this mean that anti-war (not even, or necessarily, anti-Bush) dissenters have a special burden to comport themselves with special care so as to ensure that their activities are not supportive of the enemy?

Yes. I believe that. That is just one more thing about war that sucks. But it is necessary.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Mark -

I don't think Cheney ever said they were about to get nukes "fairly soon". Maybe I missed something, but his famous quote about "reconstituted nuclear weapons" I accept as an obvious misstatement. It doesn't make sense gramatically. So that seems like Clark being disingenuous.

wild --

Much like the case with the mythical moderate Islam, I wait patiently for moderate Democrats to assert their role as primary muscle and voice of their party.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark: "I think strategically, though, we can see now, four years after 9/11, that going into Iraq in a way to fight the war on terror was a strategic blunder. Al Qaeda is in Iraq right now because there is not strong control over Iraq."

Reading your sentence, in my mind as a former military officer, it directly contradicts itself. We are battling our enemy. On a field of battle that is not in our homeland. In a military sense (with the presumption that nothing is ever perfect) strategically, the situation is about as good as we could ask for given we are fighting an enemy that does not have an actual geographic fixed location.

(I’m speaking militarily here not politically) We are battling Al Qaeda right this moment in Iraq. Tactically, once we killed and captured as many as possible from Afghanistan, the rest were flushed into hiding in places we could not easily reach them. Had we left matters at that and not drawn them out into the relative open in a defined field of battle, they would be fighting us in a different manner right now. One they are most comfortable with, and we the least, and that is covert acts of terror.

Rest assured that Al Qaeda knows they can not win a war of attrition against the coalition, or even the US alone. They know that their only hope for victory on the current battlefield (which is even more critical for them than for us) is that we leave before their inevitable effective defeat in Iraq.

When this war started, I believed (and still believe) that we would be in Iraq for six to eight years prior to completion of the mission. I see nothing that indicates that we will be there any longer than that, and I think there are signs that we could possibly leave a bit earlier - but no much.

Can you explain in detail, why you consider the war a blunder in the ostensibly greater war on terrorism? Do you see Afghanistan the same way? And also explain what you would have done to go after Al Qaeda and affiliated, and similar groups given their lack of geography and their residency in many nations.

P_J म्हणाले...

Mark,

Please go back and put the decision to invade Iraq in the context of a post-9/11 world. Reasonable people believed that our survival was (and is) threatened by Islamic terrorism. Maybe Bush overstated the case against going into Iraq. Maybe he went to war on shaky ground. But again, everyone in the world knew and believed Hussein to be actively involved with WMDs and supporting terrorists - he paid money to the families of suicide bombers, remember? This is not something Bush made up. Put the decision in its historical context.

You're convinced the war is unjust and unwinnable. If that's your starting point, I understand why you argue the way you do, and why you think undermining support for the war and encouraging terrorists doesn't matter.

Assume you investigate and find out Bush lied. Fine - impeach him. You win. Now what do we do about the troops in Iraq and the Iraqi people? What do we do about terrorists who are determined to destroy us? Will impeaching Bush and bringing home the troops help our enemies or hurt them?

You're focused on Bush. I'd rather focus on winning the war you think isn't worth fighting.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

wild -

Again, you're right. Not sure what he means by fairly soon, of course. Or if he was lying or just mistaken.

It's also reasonable, by the way, given what we know about the Pakistani smuggling network and Saddam's right-up-to-the-last-minute negotiations with North Korea to buy missile parts, and so on, that had we let him out from under, it's likely true that Hussein could have had nukes by some reasonable definition of "fairly soon."

But no, you're right, there's the quote I'd missed.

Mark -

Perception of dishonesty in the administration by those dissenting is a given. It has nothing to do with the holy duty of dissenters, especially during a war, to be totally, scrupulously, bend-over-backwards honest and thorough in checking their own arguments and perceptions.

That seems to me a very obvious point that has been totally ignored by the modern left. That's why I get so pissed that so many of them/you literally have no idea why anyone intelligent might disagree with them. It's almost enough to make me dismiss them completely, because it's almost enough to convince me that they really don't give a damn about the truth.

Like I said above, is it unpatriotic? Whatever. It's bullshit.

There's nothing worse for a country than dishonest, bullying, braying dissent. Because there's no way to answer it.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Wildaboutharrie:
“He doesn't say it's a fact, just that he's convinced...”

Intelligence is not the same as judicial fact finding. Rarely, if ever, is a President going to be provided with unequivocal proof of anything. Given the nature of intelligence gathering and processing, if one requires the same standards of proof from military and diplomatic intelligence that we expect in a court of law, no President, military leader, or member of Congress, would ever make a single decision based upon intelligence. I wish it were different, but that is the reality.

The International Dictionary of Intelligence defines intelligence as "the product resulting from the collecting and processing of information concerning actual and potential situations and conditions relating to domestic and foreign activities and to domestic and foreign or US and enemy-held areas."

Anyone who has ever had to make a decision based upon data and information that is anything other than 100% complete and accurate went through the same essential process that Bush and the vast majority of Congress did. They considered the evidence, weighed the consequences, and made a decision.

I’d be disappointed and very skeptical if he wasn’t convinced… As it is, I understand that is the best that could be expected of him or anyone else who had the unenviable job of making such a decision.

अनामित म्हणाले...

"Yes, through impeachment if necessary."

So that's good for the Country and for Iraq?

Again, Mark, you're cherrypicking your arguments and responses. A judge would have tossed you out of court long ago. So, I'm done. No use trying to convince a true believer. And if any site has fewer right wingnuts, it's this one.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Wildabout -

As I think you know I believe, it seems to me that the structural problem with politics these days - and it goes beyond the war - is a massive lack of knowledge on the part of the left regarding the possibility of an honest or moral framework on the right.

There are asses on both sides, but I don't think the prevalance of lack of understanding is anywhere equal.

Part of the reason is because the basic left impulses - the inherent problems associated with greed and profit - have been part of our media and political atmosphere for over a century. Put another way, the right understands the possibility of its own moral problems. It's impossible not to get that. Everybody does.

And another aspect is because the left impulse is simply easier to get, and I don't mean that as an insult necessarily.

"Compassion" is easier to grab onto as a guiding principle than "it may be more moral in the long run to actually prod people to fend for themselves."

So too many on the left don't understand the deep moral problems that can result from that perspective: the poison of voctim-think. Al Qaeda is victim-think run wild. So was Nazism. And this isn't just hypothetical. In Europe, the left has been playing footsy with the worst kind of (largely) Arab-sourced anti-Semitism for some time now.

On the Iraq debate, I do mean "the left is easier to get" as an insult. Once you hear "Bush lied,people died," or "Who profits, who dies," you pretty much got the argument. No further resarch is required.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark, excellent response - thanks.

I disagree that Al Qaeda was allowed to turn Iraq into a battlefield. I think we turned Iraq into a battlefield with Al Qaeda (as well as with other Baathist insurgent elements). Bin Laden is hyper-sensitive about infidels (and even other non-Islamist Muslims) in his holy land. Philosophically, the worst thing that could happen on his watch as the leader of radical Islamists is for western infidels and non-radical (my term) Muslims to rule Iraq. I assume he did not like Saddam, but Saddam was worlds better than what is forming in Iraq. If America succeeds in Iraq to any degree it will be a crushing defeat for AQ, Bin Laden, and his supporters. Tactically and strategically they will be at a tremendous disadvantage especially as pressure mounts on Syria and Iran and to a different extent Saudi Arabia.

The Middle East had to be destabilized in order to begin its move toward a more democratic era of governance. Left to its own devices, it will degenerate into an Islamist cesspool. Admittedly, democratizing the ME is a Herculean task at best and near-impossible at worst. But, as democracies rarely - if ever - attack each other, it is one sure way to finally cure the problem in the long term sense. If it can be done, the world will be better for it, and if not, well it won’t be much worse off.

I do agree that collaterally, AQ has gained membership which would they would not have (at least as readily) due to the war in Iraq. But, the reality is that those who are fanatic enough about Al Qaeda’s mission against the US for any reason are our enemy as well regardless of where they live. And importantly those people from Iraq, Iran, Syria and elsewhere that are fighting Americans in Iraq at this moment would be unable - for the most part - to help or join Al Qaeda were it not for Iraq due to the global restrictions upon support of terrorism.

So in the global war on radical Islamism (I agree whole-heartedly with you on this term being the correct one) they would then take much longer to ‘smoke out’ if you will and would serve effectively as long term reserves for AQ to draw upon in any war of attrition. Militarily it is always better to draw a hidden and inferior enemy out into the open on a field of battle than to leave them hidden, allowing them time to regroup, adapt, and attack when and where they see fit. AQ is better a terrorism than at battlefield combat. We are better at battlefield combat and don’t do terrorism. So which is the best way to battle them?

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

"There are good smart moral people on both sides" - that distinguishes you from almost everyone on Kos, at DU, in Moveon, and so on.

Again: I just think the psychos are dominating the left these days. There are pscyhos on the right, but they don't dominate. For rational open debate, you increasingly have to go to the right.

अनामित म्हणाले...

"Personally, I don't think that Bush lied to get us in the war, at least, I am not sure of it; but he probably exagerrated (sic) the evidence and did all he could to create a false link between Al Qaeda/9-11 and Iraq."

I would agree that what Bush *may* have done is exaggerate the evidence by emphasizing that which supported his decision, and de-emphasizing that which may have tended to weaken his rationale for going to war. But the question is, by doing so, was he exhibiting scurrilous behavior, or leadership?

Again, all this information was/is in the form of intelligence which no one ever states is equivalent to fact. Certainly there are facts included in the makeup of intelligence, but intelligence is the *product* of fact and opinion, and therefore not to be construed as fact only. I wish it were different, but that is the nature of international relations. Always has been, and always will be.

Bush’s job was to assess the situation and make the best decisions he could based upon the information at hand in the form of intelligence, experience, and history. It most assuredly was not his job to create a public debate within the American public, and wait for that debate to make the decision(s) for him.

And, I just have to disagree with the assertion that the Bush admin. did all they could to create a link between AQ/9/11 and Iraq. I was paying a lot of attention to the matter from the Cole disaster right up to now. I did not see the Bush admin. establishing that link, rather it was others on the right and the left that were doing so. The fringe far-right no-nothing commentators were stating it outright with no proof out of simplistic hate of all things Arab emanating from 9/11, and the left were implying it so as not to be wrong about it should it ever be proven. That is how I saw it. I can’t tell you how many discussions I got in with friends an co-workers who couldn’t understand why Bush just didn’t come out and say that Saddam had something to do with 9/11 after all ‘everyone’ knew he was involved somehow.

To me the fact that Saddam enjoyed and applauded the death and destruction of 9/11 (which is undeniable) did not mean he was involved in the planning or execution. Not that I believe he would have done anything to stop it had he been given the chance, I just don’t believe he was behind. But to be clear, in my mind, anyone and everyone who applauded 9/11, or felt vindicated by 9/11, or danced as people of all nations died and the world changed for the worse that day, is an enemy of America and an enemy of mine.

Eugene म्हणाले...

Consider the last time we were really wrong about WMD. In the early days of WWII, compelling circumstantial evidence convinced the Allies that the Nazis had embarked on a parallel program to the Manhattan Project. Consequently, shipments of heavy water from Norsk Hydro in Norway were repeatedly targeted with bombing raids and sabotage, killing many innocent Norwegian civilians in the process.

After the war, it turned out that the team led by Werner Heisenberg never got their reactor to work and wouldn't have, with or without the heavy water shipments. And even if they had, the manufacturing infrastructure didn't exist in Germany to produce sufficient bomb materials before the war ended (compared, for example, to Wernher von Braun's V-2 factory, which was heavily supported by the Nazis).

Heisenberg himself later tried to rewrite history, saying that he had failed on purpose, a claim strongly refuted by Niels Bohr in letters found after his death (Bohr, a class act, didn't wish to publicly trash a longtime colleague). But the question remains: should we have done what we did? Well, knowing what we know now, Norsk Hydro could have been safely ignored and many lives spared.

However, lacking a time machine, "what we know now" is not the adult option. Prior both to 12/7 and 9/11, we assumed the best about the intent and capabilities of our enemies. But when it comes to madmen and WMD, the only responsible course is to assume the worst. So any assessment of the appropriateness of our actions should be based on what we thought we knew then, not on what we have figured out hence.

Ditto the tedious conspiracy theories that Roosevelt knew that the Japanese Navy was going to attack Pearl Harbor. The intel was incredibly shoddy in the case of Heisenberg (who was operating with almost no security) and Pearl Harbor. But "should have known" does not equal "did know," no matter how insistently the equation is repeated.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark - btw, thanks for maintaining a civilized tone to the discussion (not that I think you are predisposed to do otherwise). It just that it is good to have this kind of give and take. And to be clear, I do not hope, nor do I want, to change your mind about anything. I just want to be able to participate in a reasoned and reasonable discussion on subjects of importance that rarely today can be discussed in such a way.

It helps reaffirm my belief in my fellow Americans.

अनामित म्हणाले...

One glaring and obvious gap in the left's ongoing argument about Iraq is their almost complete ignoring of the most important player in the whole mess - Saddam Hussein. As though Saddam has no culpability, had no control of outcomes, was not even a factor in the events that unfolded. The truth is he was instigator and driver of much of what transpired prior to the war and was ground-zero for the reasons there is a war in Iraq today.

Though Saddam is a ruthless, murderous dictator, he is not stupid. On the contrary, he is a master at diplomatic manipulation. Had we not removed Saddam from power, the probability was that UN sanctions would have been removed within six months as he was furiously exerting oil-for-food and other petroleum based ‘diplomacy’ with some members of the UN Security Council.

Importantly, removal of sanctions would have been a major diplomatic coup for Saddam Hussein. As a matter of fact, it probably would have been ranked as one of the greatest diplomatic achievements by a tyrannical dictator since Hitler’s time. Why? He would be viewed in the ME as having stared down the US and the UN (ok, admittedly not much of an accomplishment) on the most important topic in the world - WMD. That was his goal. What he did not count on was Bush calling his bluff and actually doing something besides talk.

Saddam was losing face in the region and had been for years. He was not one to stand by and allow that to continue. Such is not his makeup. To me the evidence points toward Hussein manipulating intelligence to make it seem that he just might have WMD, while still being able to pass inspections, and using oil money to leverage the UNSC to remove sanctions. As such, once sanctions were lifted he would be perceived (and make no bones about it, perception is crucial in the ME) as the most powerful leader in the region. He would then not only be held in awe by most of the ME, he would have humiliated the US, and there would be nothing stopping him from then resuming his development of WMD for whatever purposes.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Starless -

Yeah, thanks. brando was engaging in the left trick of missing the point and reacting with rage to the missed point. Very charming. And of course insisting that W is somehow "my" leader, in a way that doesn't apply to him.

It goes beyond Iraq, of course, as I say; there are a lot of issues where too much of the left has no concept of a rational defense for policies they don't like, and simply pre-defines their view as moral. Environmental policy, welfare reform...Don't have time to get into it cuz I have to rake.

But a guy like brando pretty much proves my point every time he opens his mouth, I'd guess.

Mark -

My memory is not perfect, but I think Hussein did praise the 9-11 attacks. Just a memory of something I read. Not a huge point either way, of course.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark - again, great response. (Sorry for the delay, had to make and eat lunch. Even right-wing loonies need food too. Contrary to popular belief, we do live off sucking the blood of the poor. At least not on the weekends... :) )

First, I guess I was unclear, but I did not mean to say that "Saddam was worse for" Bin Laden. I agree with what you wrote and thought I was saying that Bin Laden, though he did not like Saddam, preferred him to a fledgling democracy. And I think your state the case well in your paragraph. Better than I did.

"I don't think that the way to democratize ME is to destabilize it. The war achieved destabilization all right but it failed to achieve democratization (with possible exception of Lebanon). The way to democratize ME, if there's one, is through painful, long, difficult process of..."

There is no pretty answer to this war against Islamic radicalism. In my heart I want to side with your perspective, but my mind based on my experience and research leads me toward more overt action begin required.

When I say destabilize, I'm referring to forcing a change to the status quo such that greater change has the opportunity to begin and occur.

I find myself wishing your "painful, long..." process would work. However, given the UN's ineffectiveness wrt Saddam (and others including Iran and Syria); Saddam's position of economic leverage with Russia, Germany, France, and others, I find it beyond difficult to believe that such a process no matter how painful would stand any chance of success.

Stable regimes are incredibly difficult to change. The ME was chock full of (relatively for the area) stable regimes. Those regimes - Saddam's being the poster child - were and are not good for their people or the world.

I just can not bring myself to believe that - especially in a post Iraq sanctions ME - that diplomacy would suffice to make needed changes in the region.

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark, in context I should have stated that Saddam 'publicly' denounced 9/11 at least in front of western media. To the ME and his own people he presented a vastly different position.

See the photos at this link:

http://www.spiritoftruth.org/911mural.htm

(NOTE: I do not endorse the above website, for my purpose it is just a quick source of pictures nothing more. It was the first returned in a google search. )

These murals and similar works of propagandic art were found all over Iraq. Though I can't find it right now, (will post when I do) the accounts are that these were part of Saddam's faux adoption of Islam (read up on the additions to government symbols to include Islamic symbology over the last few years of his regime) in an attempt to coopt Bin Laden's popularity to increase his own.

Mark Daniels म्हणाले...

Ann:
My memory of my days of opposition to the war in Vietnam (I went to Ohio State from 1971 to 1975) are different from yours. I was at pains then, to explain that my opposition was rooted in patriotic concern for the country.

This concern may have been relatively rare among college students, although not among my crowd, most of whom were already engaged in partisan politics.

But Glenn Reynolds addresses his charge of being unpatriotic not at today's student activists, rare though they are and who might ordinarily be expected to be less concerned about being labeled "unpatriotic." Rather, he's talking about professional Democratic Party politicians who voted to authorize the war and are now condemning it.

Back during the Vietnam War, there were members of Congress who voted for the Gulf of Tonkin resolution, which authorized the war, but who later became fierce critics. They too, were accused of being "unpatriotic" and they too, attempted to refute the charge.

Whether today's Democratic pols are being cynical, unpatriotic, or displaying a genuine change of heart based on new facts is not something about which I'll express an opinion. For one thing, it requires more armchair psychologizing than I feel I could responsibly do. But leveling the charge of being upatriotic against someone who voices dissent from the policies of our government is a very serious matter.

It's interesting to me that it's a charge always leveled by the "ins," be they Republican or Democrat, or by their defenders and rarely, if ever, used by those on the "outs." It's normal, especially in contentious times, for leaders to take the "l'etat c'est moi" attitude toward dissent. It's equally normal for those leaders' defenders to empathetically join them in the bunker. But, as I recall, the founding documents of the country hold that sovereignty is in the hands of the people, assigned to them by their Creator. Policy is to emerge from the often chaotic debates that happen in the society at large. Those debates aren't advanced when people start wielding the "unpatriotic charge."

Pols may decide to voice the concerns of dissenters out of cynical or unpatriotic motives, of course. But that doesn't make the people for whom they position themselves to speak unpatriotic. Nor does it render the cynical pols' critiques inherently invalid.

In the run-up to the war, I refused to take a public position on it. There were too many people on both sides of the question I respected. As a pastor, I felt it important to avoid the appearance of a "Thus saith the Lord" position. But I think it's out of bounds for Glenn to imply, however subtly, and even more than the President did, that opposing the war is unpatriotic.

Mark Daniels

अनामित म्हणाले...

Mark: "However, again, the war is conducted extremely unprofessionally, and the goals (removing Saddam) do not justify means (the way this war was started and conducted)."

I will not argue that the war is being prosecuted as well as it should be. It could be managed better, but as complex as matters are there - militarily and politically - it is too arm-chair-general of me to criticize too heavily. One thing I do know is that in a one on one with any of the commanding generals responsible for prosecuting this war, first, they would eat me alive in terms of my criticizing their strategies, and two, they would (off the record) have reams to say about how difficult their jobs have been made by the fact that they alone (not the enemy) are being held accountable for warring in such a way as to not offend the sensibilities of way too many groups, theologies, and special interests.

To be clear, in my opinion, the goal of removing Saddam is only one presaging many others and in and of itself, though highly visible, militarily is not the end game by a long shot. I believe there is a long term (10 year?) strategic scenario being enacted, and toppling Saddam was merely one necessary step.

अनामित म्हणाले...

wildaboutharrie: I think I know what you are talking about re Cheney and remarks. I will search too and we can discuss.

My point is not to deny that links may have been made, but that the Admin. was not 'doing everything it could' to establish those links in the minds of Americans.

Again, the question being begged is should Bush then have been actively working to completely dispel any notions that there were links between 9/11 and Saddam? I don't fault him for not doing that. Though, honestly, as I've stated, I sincerely tried to listen to as much of the information as available and did not come away thinking Iraq was behind 9/11. However, at the time, I honestly felt that *if* Saddam had anything to do with 9/11 it was not indicated by any evidence I'd seen or heard, nor did it fit with my understanding of AQ and their modus operandi which I had been following since the Cole incident.

अनामित म्हणाले...

wildaboutharrie, the Russert/Cheney thing is exactly the one I had in mind, but couldn't find. Thanks.

As I read through the conversation I don't honestly get that Cheney is making the connection. I also do not get that he is trying to dispel any notion of a connection.

I think he - in typical Cheney analytical fashion - stated what they did know and what they did not know.

And I think his point at the end that though the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi Arabian and Egyptian, intelligence showed AQ as an organization had more of a relationship with Iraq's government than either of those other governments.

Lonesome Payne म्हणाले...

Can't get into detail about the stuff yer bringing up, wildabout. I'd just say, in the long Cheney quote you provde, there's almost nothing there ins't at least defensible. He's simply correct about the one WTC bomber being given refuge in Iraq. The training stuff is in dispute, but not obviously false. The red flag in front of a guy like brando is the Atta thing, but again, Cheney's correct - the visit is much in dispute, not totally disproven; that's according to Andrew McCarthy, first WTC bombng prosecutor. (cell phone records are what people and one committee rely on for saying it didn't happen; he didn't need to be the one using his cell phone, is the main point. And there is no other evidence putting him in the US at the right time.) And what most people don't know - and I don't think there's any dispute about this - is that around the same time, Attamade a visit or two to the Prague airport and only the Prague airport, meeting someone out of range of security cameras. So, a bunch of "hm" stuff.

But the basic point: I don;t think it's kosher to take a ot of basically accurate statements and make the claim that of couse what he's doing is relying on people's stupidity to make a connection he doesn't actually make. And that basically is the form of "lie" that is always referred to on this topic.

My take on Cheney is: he's a guy who actually suspects Hussien was invovled, and sometimes can't quite keep himself fomr sort of hinting at it, like when he says tings like "we just don't know."

Gotta leave the typos and fly, monkeys, fly.

Oh brando: market-based solutions to enviro problmes, That's one.

Brent म्हणाले...

KUDOS to all who back-and-forthed with Mark! I was wondering where he went after our comments on Ann's earlier post of "These baseless attacks send the wrong signal. . . " yesterday at 6:49 pm about the President's speech.


Mark - where did you go?

Oh, to THIS POST.


I am pleased to see that Mark took several of my points about PROOF and LYING to heart:


Particularly, I like the fact that Mark now says above at 11:15 am:

"Now, it does not necessarily PROVE that Bush had lied when he took us to war."

WOW! That shows real growth from the things that Mark claimed as PROOF in yesterday's post's comments,


--------- AND ! ! ! ! ! ! ------


Mark DID say in yesterday's post's comments section (2:26 AM Nov 12, 2005):

"it is Bush who took the country to war through false pretenses and, most likely, lying"


But Mark TODAY (2:15 PM Nov 12, 2005)said: -

"Personally, I don't think that Bush lied to get us in the war, at least, I am not sure of it."


Mark - that shows GROWTH and the ability to reason well. Good job!


You're welcome.

अनामित म्हणाले...

wild... "I agree, he's not making the connection, but he does take advantage of ignorance, I think."

You know, one could say that his saying essentially, 'we don't know Saddam was behind 9/11', 'but we do know there are connections with AQ', he is attempting to imply guilt by association.

That is not a too unreasonable interpretation of the conversation I think. But when it comes down to it what it means is that there are two ways to interpret what he said. Either it is exactly as he stated with no other implied meanings, or he was engaging in a verbal attempt to make us pull the wool over our own eyes.

I don't know for sure which it is, but the information he provides at face value seems accurate in the context of the time, is not presented in a manner that over dramatizes the situation, and he does not resort to any obvious innuendo.

The interpretation of this one seems to me to reside in the mind of the reader and what they want to make out of it. Which in and of itself is not wrong.

Mark Daniels म्हणाले...

Starless:
I think you're right that the "unpatriotic" charge is routinely used...and I think, usually most unfairly.

Mark Daniels

Sloanasaurus म्हणाले...

I agree with Mark that the war in Iraq was all about WMD. However, Mark and others on the left and the liberal media have distorted the original argument to mean only WMD that may have existed in Iraq at the time. This is not the case. The number one fear for policy makers is WHAT TO DO ABOUT WMD PROLIFERATION, particularly nuclear weapons in the age of terrorism. Both GWB and Kerry said proliferation was their number one concern during the debates.

The invasion of Iraq was done primarily to take out Saddam's regime - to take him out of the WMD game. There is no doubt that Saddam wanted to get into nukes. Iraq was the most dangerous regime in the world. Saddam had more concentrated power and wealth in a single individual than anyone else in the world. He had a proven track record of aggression and ruthlessness. Others on this board have cited North Korea, but who has North Korea invaded in the last 50 years? How much money does Kim Il take in on an annual basis? How much conventrated power does Kim Il really have? North Korea is a danger but it is nothing compared to Saddam's regime.

People pooh pooh Bush's other arguments. However, Bush's other arguments are all about WMD also. Consider the argument to bring freedom to Iraq. Bush decided that the "freedom" argument is the only permanent viable way to combat proliferation. The nuclear genie is out of the bottle. It is only a matter of time before they become common place everywhere in the world. The theory is that free socities, which are ruled by law, are more predictable and more moderate than tyrannical socities... simply, free socities will see little reason to proliferate or to be aggressive.

Bush's ideology is brilliant because it merges spreading democracy (a la Woodrow Wilson) with defense of the nation.

Creating a democracy out of Iraq is the long term goal. We could have left after Saddam was captured and his regime disbanded because no single individual would again control Iraq. The short term goal of taking Iraq out of the WMD game would have been achieved. However, the long term goal of creating free socities would have remained unresolved.

I disagree with those on the baord who state that a war in Afghanistan was winnable. Afghanistan is a terrible place for a modern army. It is the graveyard of armies. Bin Ladin chose Afghanistan as a battlefield. We have gleamed from intelligence that Bin Ladin's number one goal for 9/11 was to lure us to attack him in Afghanistan. He wanted to repeatr the Jihad all over again (as he did against the Soviets).

Afghanistan is only successful today because of the invasion of Iraq.

We screwed Bin Ladins dream of caliaphate when we invaded Iraq. We chose the battlefield in Iraq because it is much easier to win there than in Afghanistan.

Sloanasaurus म्हणाले...

Eugene, its interesting that you bring up the Nazi nuclear project. You are right that it was determined after the war the the Germans never even got close to a Nuke. Nevertheless, we lost many men trying to bomb supposed heavy water plants and other potential facilities. FDR should have been impeached.

Sloanasaurus म्हणाले...

If I would have been a military planner, Afghanistan would have been the worst place to fight Al Qaeda. The country is quite rugged and full of mountains and valleys, perfect for defense. Second, there is no port to supply a large army in Afghanistan. We would have to rely on the souurounding countries, none of whom are really that friendly to us. It would be strategically dumb to have 100,000 troops in Afghanistan.

Second, there are no local Afghan allies, that we have a long term relationship with, unlike Iraq where GWB is the most popular person in Kurdistan.

Third, we could not ever leave Afghanistan. The local population is too impoversihed to ever put up a fight against Al Qaeda's foreign fighters on their own. It would take generations to get the local population to the same level as the people Iraq. Iraq is much more able to become an ally in fighting Al Qaeda (which is proving to be true).

Bin Ladin made a mistake in fighting in Iraq. Now, the thousands of arab fanatic fighters who would be fighting in afghanistan are fighting in Iraq where they are much easier to kill.

You could argue that the only way to win in Afghanistan is through Iraq. If we were to fight the terrorists on their own turf, Iraq is the best place (from our perspective) for the fight.

Roger Sweeny म्हणाले...

Mark,

I think we have actually made progress here. Most everyone now agrees that

1. Prior to the war, Bush and his people gave a lot of different reasons to go to war, but

2. The major reason proposed for going to war was that Saddam had a functioning WMD program that could have a usable weapon within a fairly short period of time.

3. Saddam did NOT have a functioning WMD program.

4. However, Saddam had tried to get WMDs in the past, and with the potential collapse of the sanctions regime, might well have tried (and succeeded) in the future.

Okay, 4. is still in play, but we're a lot further along than we were.

To go back over a century, during the American Civil War, the North was far from united. There were many, many people who thought the War was not worth it--or even that secession was okay. In the election year of 1864, a number of Republican notables tried to get Linclon to stop the war and try diplomacy.

The Democrats nominated Geroge McClellan, a general Lincoln had fired, and adopted a resolution stating, "After four years of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war ... justice, humanity, libery, and the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of histilities .. to the end that, at the earliest practicable moment, peace may be restored on the basis of the federal Union of the States."

Had Jefferson Davis said, "Yes, let's have a cease fire and talk peace" and had the union army and navy done as poorly as they had prior to Gettysberg, Lincoln probably would have lost and the war would have ended with the South either out of the Union, or with a great deal of autonomy to "preserve its way of life."

pst314 म्हणाले...

"In fact, "patriotic" was used as a slur.

And, just like today, the left liked to smear its opponents as "fascists" and "racists."

"Later the memo was: say that you're patriotic too and dissent is patriotic."

And the latest memo: say that you're more patriotic because it's always more patriotic to criticize our government.

"I believe he was a lead pusher of the "They're not anti-war; they're on the other side" meme back in the day."

Er, perhaps because they were demonstrating their treasonous tendencies by rooting for our enemies? By marching under various communist and anarchist banners? By interpreting American actions in the worst possible light while excusing and justifying anything our enemies do?

"If you don't know that the main argument used to get us in the war was the WMD, "

Well, I guess we've made progress if a liberal is willing to talk about "main argument" instead of "only argument." Which reminds me: What happened to the public demands back then that Bush give a simple justification for the war? Didn't that have something to do with emphasizing WMD's over every other reason?