davefoc
Philosopher
Thank you for the response Wangler,
I think your first quote goes better to the issue of substantive things that Palin said than the issue of where she differentiated McCain/Palin policy from Bush. That was nicely said (even if it's an often stated claim) and it went to attacking Obama for his alleged willingness to talk to Ahmadinejad without preconditions.
The second quote didn't seem like much of distinction between Bush and McCain. I suspect Bush would like to take what worked in Iraq and transfer it to Afghanistan. Calling it "surge principals" was a good debate strategy, but in my mind it's misleading. The term surge describes an increase in troop strength and now because the Republicans think they have traction with that word other kinds of strategies not involving troop increases are going to be called "surge" strategies? It does go to the reality of what happened in Iraq to reduce the level of violence:
1. Before the surge millions of people in Iraq had moved. The ethnic cleansing that some of the violence was about was less of an issue.
2. The Americans started funding and arming the Sunnis. So the Sunnis started killing less Americans.
3. The Sunni leaders decided that siding with the Americans was in their interest and acted against Al Qaida factions that had been killing Americans.
4. The Americans stopped the failed policy of massive American public works projects that employed non-Iraqi workers and replaced them with smaller Iraqi driven projects.
I think your first quote goes better to the issue of substantive things that Palin said than the issue of where she differentiated McCain/Palin policy from Bush. That was nicely said (even if it's an often stated claim) and it went to attacking Obama for his alleged willingness to talk to Ahmadinejad without preconditions.
The second quote didn't seem like much of distinction between Bush and McCain. I suspect Bush would like to take what worked in Iraq and transfer it to Afghanistan. Calling it "surge principals" was a good debate strategy, but in my mind it's misleading. The term surge describes an increase in troop strength and now because the Republicans think they have traction with that word other kinds of strategies not involving troop increases are going to be called "surge" strategies? It does go to the reality of what happened in Iraq to reduce the level of violence:
1. Before the surge millions of people in Iraq had moved. The ethnic cleansing that some of the violence was about was less of an issue.
2. The Americans started funding and arming the Sunnis. So the Sunnis started killing less Americans.
3. The Sunni leaders decided that siding with the Americans was in their interest and acted against Al Qaida factions that had been killing Americans.
4. The Americans stopped the failed policy of massive American public works projects that employed non-Iraqi workers and replaced them with smaller Iraqi driven projects.