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Bush Policy in a Nutshell?

Speaking as a door-knob...I re-reject your conclusion. ;)
Man, that is sooooooo cool. A talking doorknob! This is my lucky day! :)

In truth, that doorknob jab was not goodness, so mea culpa. Thanks for the gentle nudge in the ribs, the riposte could have been more cutting.

Beer? It is Friday, after all . . .

DR
 
So you admit you're a coward. Pretty typical for your type of scum.
As they say in the great state of Texas, Sonny you don't know sheeee-it.

Heh, you're also a nazi.
I'd deport illegal aliens. Would you still be here? Or your mamma?

Ah Hah! Another Rangel supporter emerges from the woodwork!

We'll smoke all of you out, one way or another! :D

DR
We could discuss how I think Rangel should be 'supported'. :)
 
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You got that a little bit backwards.
GWB screwed up with the mis-defined goals and justification at nearly every step, fuzzy goals, and invalid justifications. Especially the invalid justifications. Not taking the enemy seriously is just a small piece of the general screwing up that he has done so far.

I heard a radio commentator this morning compare Bush with the boy who cried wolf - and it seemed to fit. No matter how resolved he is, he has no credibility. That is gone, and it is gone for good.

Not just yet. He still has a pretty decent stack of political chips to work with and he's basically just gone "all in". Will the dems vote to defund the effort? Do they have the guts to push their own political aspirations in '08 into the pot?

The dems have argued for a new direction in Iraq. Faced with "go big, go long, or go home" Bush has opted for "go big". What did the dems expect? A POTUS that had staked everything on the Iraq effort to tuck his tail and order an ignoble helicopter evac from Baghdad? Of course he was going to do this. This is his "new direction". It forces the dems to do what everyone can just as transparently see they have wanted; the cut and run. After all their idea of a new direction always has been retreat. Running away is clearly a "direction" as well isn't it?

So now the pot beckons...how many players will push their political capital into the middle of the table to call Mr. Bush's bet? Interesting times ahead my friends....

-z
 
OTOH even an insurgency twice as strong could be overcome if we defined our victory as containment of the majority of the jihadist enemy.
But surely a "victory" so defined (and hasn't that much at least been achieved?) would vanish the moment you withdrew the troops? Still, it would give Bush one more brief chance to use that "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" banner.

The enemy has taught us that he never will lose. Similarly we have taught him that we never will win.
My glass is half full.

So when, in fact, can we withdraw the troops?

If we can never win, then will this withdrawal not always constitute cutting and running? (Answer: No, it'll become the wise and prudent act of a statesman the moment most Republicans are in favor of it. Perhaps they could refer to it as "completing the mission".)
 
But surely a "victory" so defined (and hasn't that much at least been achieved?) would vanish the moment you withdrew the troops? Still, it would give Bush one more brief chance to use that "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" banner.
Just so.

We have to find a way to that enchanted land where the muslim world publicly questions it's own sacrifices in the jihad. A place where our goal for a stable, democratic, and prosperous ME supplants the zeal for blood in the name of religion...and becomes their goal as well.

Simply put, if we can't win them over to peace by way of mammon...then we had better get inured to killing them in ever increasing numbers...or surrendering...there's always dhimmitude I guess.
My glass is half full.

So when, in fact, can we withdraw the troops?

Well go back and read that little daydream into never-never land I just finished typing. See how naive it sounds?? All that our goals becoming their goals stuff? That's when we can withdraw the troops safely. In effect...it's most likely never.
If we can never win, then will this withdrawal not always constitute cutting and running? (Answer: No, it'll become the wise and prudent act of a statesman the moment most Republicans are in favor of it. Perhaps they could refer to it as "completing the mission".)

Well the problem is that a society of peace-loving mammon worshipers like us are fickle. War is not fashion. It's not cool. It costs big money. We as a free and rich and self indulgent society have better things to do with our bucks.

They OTOH have a society inured to war. They prize sacrifice. Their religion idolizes martyrdom. They will fight on until the last of them die simply because defeat is not possible and death is sublime.

It's kinda hard to fight that. But we had better find a way. If we retreat from Iraq the problem will persist. If we stay we can at least force a Israel-Palestine like stalemate with the jihadis. Not good...but still it might be far better than what lurks in the future if we abandon Iraq to its fate.

-z
 
We have to find a way to that enchanted land where the muslim world publicly questions it's own sacrifices in the jihad.
And if a flight of angels descends on the Middle East from heaven ... oh, wait, that's a bad sign, isn't it?

A place where our goal for a stable, democratic, and prosperous ME supplants the zeal for blood in the name of religion...and becomes their goal as well.
Perhaps you could go and preach atheism to them. Or, wait, I know, I bet more soldiers will do the trick!

Simply put, if we can't win them over to peace by way of mammon...then we had better get inured to killing them in ever increasing numbers...or surrendering...there's always dhimmitude I guess.
Do you really consider all of those options better than withdrawal?

Well go back and read that little daydream into never-never land I just finished typing. See how naive it sounds?? All that our goals becoming their goals stuff? That's when we can withdraw the troops safely. In effect...it's most likely never.
Who's going to break that to the soldiers?

It's kinda hard to fight that. But we had better find a way.
Well, that is good if vague advice, but should we really hang around applying a method that isn't working until the Magic Idea Fairy tells us what to do?

If we retreat from Iraq the problem will persist. If we stay we can at least force a Israel-Palestine like stalemate with the jihadis.
If we withdrew now, we could at least call it a draw. We got Saddam, we got the weapons of mass destruction ... every last one of them. The Iraqis held elections.

Not good...but still it might be far better than what lurks in the future if we abandon Iraq to its fate.
Or worse. Dang these faulty crystal balls!

---

What do the Iraqis want, did anyone ask?
 
<snip>
We must learn to defend our way of life...or change our way of life so that we can justify its defense....or surrender to the new dark ages. Therefore I find myself supporting the "surge" in Iraq and hoping in spite of all evidence that it will work. If you like your way of life; there really isn't much choice. Change is constant...if we're not out there driving that change it will eventually end up driving us somewhere we'd all rather not be.
It is the true mark of good writing that you can disagree completely, yet still recognize the skill of creation. Sort of what I was just telling Ziggy about columnists versus reporters.

I may (or may not) get into critiquing individual parts of your sermon later, Rik, but until then...

Nominated. Well done, you asshat.
 
Hardly.

The fact of the matter is that if we have a problem with organized terrorists targeting innocent civilians (and we do) having said terrorists sharing real estate with the US Army, Marines, etc is precisely the best place for them to be.

Um no. Because you see the US Army, Marines, etc attack the terrorists and somtimes hit the wrong people. The best place for terroists is attacking people we don't like.

Now, being as the "brass" wants no more hand-wringing over "body counts" like in Vietnam...we no longer "do" body counts.

False. Body counts surface from time to time.

Right...all we end up doing is counting our own. So now we hear stories (heard one on the radio yesterday) about how Iraq is a "terrorist training ground"...as if we're graduating these guys out of a boot camp. The reality is that our military is not training terrorists...they're killing them in very large and gratifying numbers.

Not really. Oh some canon foder gets killed but that just acelerates the evolution of skills. IRaq has 5,870,640 men of fighting age. How many does the US kill per week?

As far as Iraq being a disaster? A quagmire? Longer than our involvement in WWII...etc...etc...ad nauseum?? The only thing this proves is that Bush et al have allowed their detractors...the enemy included...to define success/failure. If one allows their enemy to define terms, one will never win no matter what the battlefield reality may be.


So, is Iraq a success or a failure?

As a purely military contest between coalition forces and Iraqi national forces it was an historic success.

Israel, the british empire and the Wehrmacht called. What exactly was history about the victory? Heck the british empire camptured Iraq twice and with less troops.

GWB declared an end to major conflict and did his silly carrier landing. Simply put he planted the goalposts and declared victory. From his perspective he was right. What he didn't get was that these enemy forces hadn't really given up...they'd only gone underground. When we finally do our cut and run they will come out of the woodwork declaring victory. There will be no voices of dissent.

Not true Saddam's supports largely have gone away. However Saddam was keeping rather a lot of other groups down. Something the US has been unable to do.

Bush's declaration has a place in history; usually such declarations were met by parades, kissing in Times Square...etc..etc..., convoys full of Johnnys marching home.

I belive a statement in the house was more common. The troops would just be moved onto the next bit of empire building.

But the true reality of war is that it's never really that clean.

That isn't quite true. War can be that clean but you have to know what you are doing.

Pockets of resistance, infrastructure damage, shortages, disease, conflicts between erstwhile allies....all these things and more still exist after the parade is over. Had the media back then focused on these aspects they could have made a popular case that the war effort had been badly bungled.

Would have been right too. WW2 to a large extent reads like a list of how not to do it. Fortunetly the germans were hoplessly outnumbered and managed to come up with more spectacular mistakes.

Another possible perspective that is just as valid is that we have never really been at peace since just prior to WWII. All that really matters is where you plant your goalposts and how well and how hard you work to make your definition stick. Basically it makes no difference whether the insurgency is twice as bad, or twice as weak, even one IED attack can signal disaster, defeat, quagmire, etc if you have created the expectation that we would be greeted as liberators. OTOH even an insurgency twice as strong could be overcome if we defined our victory as containment of the majority of the jihadist enemy. The enemy has taught us that he never will lose.

Not so he lost in Algeria.

Similarly we have taught him that we never will win.

Well yes the US has tended to rather suck an imperial wars.

This is where GWB screwed himself. He didn't take the enemy seriously enough.

He did in afganistian at least intialy.

He remembered Gulf War I when the iconic images were of the ruins on the "Highway of Death" and "elite" Iraqi troops waving white hankies. Dad had done a great job of limiting coalition involvement, setting clear goals, then bailing once the bare minimum goal was met. It was a grand success of imagery. In reality the problem (Saddam's regime) still existed and festered. Saddam held several "victory" parades! He promoted the legend of victory until it became fact...then he printed that "fact" in Iraqi history books. Had a more complete job been done back then...we simply wouldn't have to be doing it now. Similarly if we bail now on Iraq the consensus among military experts is that we will have a far larger problem later.

Going into Iraq back then would have caused a lot of problems. H. W. Bush was smart enough to stay out. And to get the saudis to pay for the war.

But IMHO (of course) a job badly done in this case is still far better than a job put off till a truly major world conflict becomes inevitable. Iraq is a "Hobson's choice" scenario...whatever ending to the current situation is written you can be sure there will be no kissing in Time's Square to greet it.
Major world conflict? Please that would requre Saddam to have some supporters. He didn't. His idiology was already dissapearing.

Truly our world has been putting off "armageddon" for the last 60 years by proactively using diplomacy, sanctions, rewards, and military action to keep our enemies (communist or Islamic) from becoming strong enough to force the next world war.

USSR could have forced a world war at any point. They just ultimately didn't want to do so.

Iraq is merely the latest price we continue to pay for a relative "peace" over here in the developed west. What our debate here really is about, at the core of it all is: Is our way of life worth it?

Iraq was a stupid imperal adventure when we had more serious problems to worry about.

Do we dislike corporate culture, unbridled capitalism, globalism, (insert your favorite hated "ism" about America or "the west"), enough that we would risk losing the few freedoms we do usually take for granted? Do we hate the wastes and losses of limited wars so much that we would risk allowing our manifold enemies to gain power and capabilities as we attempt to withdraw from the fray?

Are we already so cynical, jaded, and disillusioned as a people that we will accept no definition of victory?

Not at all there are plently of defintions of Victory I would accept. One of them is even posible.

This is the real danger. We are fighting an enemy that has already shown its determination to accept no definition of defeat. If we similarly will accept (and show through our actions) that no victory over these dangerous enemies is possible then we are truly doomed. No amount of smart bombs, planes, or professional military can ever save us.

Trying to claim no existant victories wont help either.

The political, social, and religious world is balkanized and choosing up sides. The dedication of human individuals to their respective causes is truly the most powerful and pervasive weapon available. If a people will not be defeated...ever...then that people will eventually prevail (or face extermination). But if a people will not accept that any definition of victory is valid, then they cannot fail to fail.

Haveing fun with your strawman?

We JREFers/skeptics/rationalists want a rational and enlightened world...sadly though it appears that a irrational fanatical, tribal loyalty to mythological mumbo-jumbo may be the trait that survives our worldwide human experiment in societal evolution. We are in real danger of becoming extinct.

Not really.

We must learn to defend our way of life

Easy. It would be trivial if people stopped wasteing rescources on imperial adventurism but we can get by.

...or change our way of life so that we can justify its defense....or surrender to the new dark ages.

Defence? Oh our defences are fine. For the time being.

Therefore I find myself supporting the "surge" in Iraq and hoping in spite of all evidence that it will work. If you like your way of life; there really isn't much choice.

There is always a choice. But since you have failed to fight smart and don't appear to do ruthless yeah human wave tactic would appear to be about your only option.

Change is constant...if we're not out there driving that change it will eventually end up driving us somewhere we'd all rather not be.


Out there? no it is quite posible to drive change without ever leaveing youe home country.
 
Just so.

We have to find a way to that enchanted land where the muslim world publicly questions it's own sacrifices in the jihad. A place where our goal for a stable, democratic, and prosperous ME supplants the zeal for blood in the name of religion...and becomes their goal as well.

Simply put, if we can't win them over to peace by way of mammon...then we had better get inured to killing them in ever increasing numbers...or surrendering...there's always dhimmitude I guess.

And you want to do this by attacking secular dictatorships?

Well the problem is that a society of peace-loving mammon worshipers like us are fickle. War is not fashion. It's not cool. It costs big money. We as a free and rich and self indulgent society have better things to do with our bucks.

Neo-imperialism had it's day.

They OTOH have a society inured to war. They prize sacrifice. Their religion idolizes martyrdom. They will fight on until the last of them die simply because defeat is not possible and death is sublime.

It isn't that simple and in any case doesn't appear to be true. See Algeria.


It's kinda hard to fight that.

Only if you contine thinking about war in terms of WW2

But we had better find a way. If we retreat from Iraq the problem will persist. If we stay we can at least force a Israel-Palestine like stalemate with the jihadis.

You are assuming that you end up dealing with a PLO rather than a hezbollah.
 
If they are a "special case" as suggested by Rik, then we must destroy them or their mushroom seeds. Is he correct though? How will we ever know unless or until they send a few over one day?
 
rik, I thought you did a good job of presenting your perspecitve without the usual ad hominen attacks. I thought your post deserved a reasoned response and I have tried to provide that here.
The fact of the matter is that if we have a problem with organized terrorists targeting innocent civilians (and we do) having said terrorists sharing real estate with the US Army, Marines, etc is precisely the best place for them to be.
No doubt, but how exactly do we distinguish between the "innocent civilians" and the "terrorists"?
Is a Sunni a terrorist or a victim? How 'bout a Shia? Is he with Sadr or against him? Worse, how do we even tell a Sunni from a Shia from an innocent civilian who just wants to be left alone? Or, up north, which side is a Kurd on?

BTW, for those who deny analogies with Vietnam (and I don't know if you fall into this category, rik), I would ask how this is different from trying to separate the VC from the ordinary "gooks"?
So ordinary grunts don't speak the language, can't tell the good guys from the bad and any mistake they might make can lead to, at the very best, a renewed hatred for the US or, at worst, at court martial for our troops. And you think this is the "best place" they should be? I don't.
The reality is that our military is not training terrorists...they're killing them in very large and gratifying numbers.
rik, this is just not true based on data from our own military. Again, our own military statistics indicate that about 7% (the last number I saw) of the people we had taken into custody were non-Iraqis. Everyone else is an Iraqi fighting another Iraqi. These combatants are NOT terrorists. Well, to be more accurate, they are not terrorists who focus their hatred on the US. They hate the US, it's true...but they hate each other just as much, if not more.
As a purely military contest between coalition forces and Iraqi national forces it was an historic success.
rik, this is just pure hyperbole. Really? A "historic" success. Can you identify anybody with any military expertise whatsoever who did not think we would blow the Iraqi army out of the water (out of the desert?)
When we finally do our cut and run they will come out of the woodwork declaring victory.
rik, why the "cut and run" hyperbole? When we leave/"cut and run"/redeploy/withdraw/whatever, you know the Islamicists will declare victory. Your use of such loaded language does not advance your position.
Bush's declaration has a place in history
Sure, as a minor footnote to his failed policies. But what did you mean by this statement?
Basically it makes no difference whether the insurgency is twice as bad, or twice as weak, even one IED attack can signal disaster, defeat, quagmire, etc if you have created the expectation that we would be greeted as liberators.
It was the Bush Administration (specifically Cheney and Rummy) who explicitly created this expectation.
This is where GWB screwed himself. He didn't take the enemy seriously enough.
I disagree. I think GWB did not know who the enemy was. You might see this as a minor linguistic quibble, but I think it is central to our failure. Who, rik, is the enemy? The Shia? The Sunni? Please don't tell me it is AQ in Iraq because they weren't there in any significant numbers before we invaded.
Dad had done a great job of limiting coalition involvement, setting clear goals, then bailing once the bare minimum goal was met. It was a grand success of imagery.
No, it was a grand success of diplomacy and geopolitics. Bush, Sr. created a REAL coalition by defining the mission as enforcing the UN resolutions that saw the Iraq invasion of Kuwait as unacceptable. He did NOT have a mandate to invade Iraq and depose Saddam. He stuck to the defined mission...good on him.
Geopolitically, he recognizd that taking over Iraq was a tar-baby. Too bad Jr. did not have the same perspective.
Saddam held several "victory" parades! He promoted the legend of victory until it became fact...then he printed that "fact" in Iraqi history books.
Yeah, so what? Everyone knew it was baloney.
Had a more complete job been done back then...we simply wouldn't have to be doing it now.
You're right. We would have been bogged down in that hell hole for 15 years, not 5.
Similarly if we bail now on Iraq the consensus among military experts is that we will have a far larger problem later.
This raises two questions. First, can you provide evidence of that "consensus"?
But far more importantly is your definition of "problem". What is, exactly, the problem you refer to? Sunni rebellion? Shia ethnic cleansing? Oil prices? Mideast stability? Iran influence in Iraq? Saudi influence in Iraq? What is the issue?
He has allowed a determined enemy (both foreign and domestic) to drive the debate.
Who is the domestic "enemy"? If someone dissents from Bush's policy, does that make them an "enemy"? Harsh words, rik.
Truly our world has been putting off "armageddon" for the last 60 years by proactively using diplomacy, sanctions, rewards, and military action to keep our enemies (communist or Islamic) from becoming strong enough to force the next world war.
You seem to think this is bad. First, the notion of "armageddon" is a silly one upon which to base foreign policy. Second, if such proactive policies have been successful, why not embrace and endorse them instead of suggesting they are wrong?

After this point in your post, rik, I got lost. It seemed to turn into a wider screed about "corporate culture", "globaism" and other such NWO nonsense. I'll try to read it again without the baggage of the previous parts of your post.
 
But far more importantly is your definition of "problem". What is, exactly, the problem you refer to? Sunni rebellion? Shia ethnic cleansing? Oil prices? Mideast stability? Iran influence in Iraq? Saudi influence in Iraq? What is the issue?
I took him to mean that, if we let them get strong enough, they might send us a few mushrooms one day. Better to destroy the mushroom seeds now.
 
Hardly.


The only thing this proves is that Bush et al have allowed their detractors...the enemy included...to define success/failure. victory.

I applaud GWB's resolve

Are we already so cynical, jaded, and disillusioned as a people that we will accept no definition of victory?


We must learn to defend our way of life...or change our way of life so that we can justify its defense....or surrender to the new dark ages.

-z

Yeah, that's it! We're defining victory wrong!!!! It's our fault that we have lost 3000 young men and women for no particular reason and flushed hundreds of billions of dollars down the toilet because we are so jaded. "Our way of life", by which you mean I'm not sure what, may be under threat, but it certainly wasn't from Saddam. I think Bush has been the one of the biggest threats to our way of life we have seen in a long time.

This is what I believe - no matter what happens, no matter what kind of nightmare Bush drags us into - you are going to find some way to try and spin it to suite your position. I rank Bush's "resolve" right up there with yours not to honestly deal with reality.
 
Yeah, that's it! We're defining victory wrong!!!! It's our fault that we have lost 3000 young men and women for no particular reason
Head out, billy, there were plenty of reasons, and even a few coherent ones. You may not agree with them, and they may have been screwy reasons, and some may have been more delusional than others, but reasons nonetheless.

1. Remove Saddam
2. Implement Enlightenment, republican style governance at the point of a bayonet
3. Change the mid East security situation (Oh, yeah, it has changed, though not necessarily for the better. :p )
4. Reduce the threat to Israel as aprt of the regional strategy
5. Follow up on the 12 year sanctions regime, which had failed at the political level (in a lot of ways, and for a lot of reasons, thanks to UNSC failures (that means some US failures, due to being a perm member)
6. Influence (for the better, allegedly) the stability of the industrial world's gas pump, the Persian Gulf.

Those were some of the reasons, all tied to US regional security interests, all tied to US interests, and thus missions assigned to the US armed forces.

"No particular reason?"

That's an idiot's sound byte. Find a better one.

I rank Bush's "resolve" right up there with yours not to honestly deal with reality.
Pres Bush has been frequently wrong, but never in doubt. In that, he's been consistent from day one, when the first set of tax cuts arrived as a payoff for being elected.

DR
 
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Not just yet. He still has a pretty decent stack of political chips to work with and he's basically just gone "all in". Will the dems vote to defund the effort? Do they have the guts to push their own political aspirations in '08 into the pot?

The dems have argued for a new direction in Iraq. Faced with "go big, go long, or go home" Bush has opted for "go big". What did the dems expect? A POTUS that had staked everything on the Iraq effort to tuck his tail and order an ignoble helicopter evac from Baghdad? Of course he was going to do this. This is his "new direction". It forces the dems to do what everyone can just as transparently see they have wanted; the cut and run. After all their idea of a new direction always has been retreat. Running away is clearly a "direction" as well isn't it?

So now the pot beckons...how many players will push their political capital into the middle of the table to call Mr. Bush's bet? Interesting times ahead my friends....

-z
Betting against Bush, even losing in the short run, will probably be politically profitable in the long term.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/01/14/MNG1TNIE221.DTL&type=politics
The bipartisan opposition to President Bush's troop-increase plan has proved more intense than his advisers had expected and has left them scrambling to find support, but the White House is banking on the assumption that it can execute its "new way forward" in Iraq before Congress can derail it.
 
Betting against Bush, even losing in the short run, will probably be politically profitable in the long term.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2007/01/14/MNG1TNIE221.DTL&type=politics

That is a good point: it isn't a bad estimation to see this latest move as seizing the window of opportunity to use more troops to do something, before Congress cuts off the money, which is being signalled already. I give the Democrat leadership credit for being wary of leaping in with both feet, and they are instead slowly building bi partisan support, or letting loud, but usually ignored, Repulican contrarians like Ron Paul or Chuck Hegel carry the banner, or at least one of the banners, of opposition.

So, while politically this is probably good tactics on the Hill, it doesn't change the cost, in blood and treasure, to the folks on the ground in Iraq while they maneuver for position.

And don't dodge mortar rounds.

DR
 
Head out, billy, there were plenty of reasons, and even a few coherent ones. You may not agree with them, and they may have been screwy reasons, and some may have been more delusional than others, but reasons nonetheless.

1. Remove Saddam
2. Implement Enlightenment, republican style governance at the point of a bayonet
3. Change the mid East security situation (Oh, yeah, it has changed, though not necessarily for the better. :p )
4. Reduce the threat to Israel as aprt of the regional strategy
5. Follow up on the 12 year sanctions regime, which had failed at the political level (in a lot of ways, and for a lot of reasons, thanks to UNSC failures (that means some US failures, due to being a perm member)
6. Influence (for the better, allegedly) the stability of the industrial world's gas pump, the Persian Gulf.

Those were some of the reasons, all tied to US regional security interests, all tied to US interests, and thus missions assigned to the US armed forces.

"No particular reason?"

That's an idiot's sound byte. Find a better one.


Pres Bush has been frequently wrong, but never in doubt. In that, he's been consistent from day one, when the first set of tax cuts arrived as a payoff for being elected.

DR

They would be reasons if we had succeeded in them. I'll admit, we deposed Saddam. Yeah, that was worth 3000 American lives and hundreds of billions of dollars and all the other costs. Maybe I should put it like this, we threw away 3000 American lives for nothing. We have gained nothing and it has cost a large fortune in every respect. That is what I mean by "for no reason".
 
He also forgot to mention WMDs, I can't think why.
For years, we'll hear, in the next breath after Democrats are blamed for losing Iraq, that anyone who said before the war that there were no WMDs had no way of knowing anyway, so their opinion doesn't count. Indeed, this illogic will be used to keep WMDs on the list justifications along with the retroactively supplemental justifications.

Just another case where those who were exactly right have no credibility and those were exactly wrong march on in rightiousness.
 

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