Topic: washington insider talks..... | |
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If You Think Bush Is Evil Now
Wait Until He Nukes Iran By Paul Craig Roberts 6-7-7 The war in Iraq is lost. This fact is widely recognized by American military officers and has been recently expressed forcefully by Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the commander of US forces in Iraq during the first year of the attempted occupation. Winning is no longer an option. Our best hope, Gen. Sanchez says, is "to stave off defeat," and that requires more intelligence and leadership than Gen. Sanchez sees in the entirety of our national political leadership: "I am absolutely convinced that America has a crisis in leadership at this time." More evidence that the war is lost arrived June 4 with headlines reporting: "U.S.-led soldiers control only about a third of Baghdad, the military said on Monday." After five years of war the US controls one-third of one city and nothing else. A host of US commanding generals have said that the Iraq war is destroying the US military. A year ago Colin Powell said that the US Army is "about broken." Lt. Gen. Clyde Vaughn says Bush has "piecemealed our force to death." Gen. Barry McCafrey testified to the US Senate that "the Army will unravel." Col. Andy Bacevich, America's foremost writer on military affairs, documents in the current issue of The American Conservative that Bush's insane war has depleted and exhausted the US Army and Marine Corps: "Only a third of the regular Army's brigades qualify as combat-ready. In the reserve components, none meet that standard. When the last of the units reaches Baghdad as part of the president's strategy of escalation, the US will be left without a ready-to-deploy land force reserve." "The stress of repeated combat tours is sapping the Army's lifeblood. Especially worrying is the accelerating exodus of experienced leaders. The service is currently short 3,000 commissioned officers. By next year, the number is projected to grow to 3,500. The Guard and reserves are in even worse shape. There the shortage amounts to 7,500 officers. Young West Pointers are bailing out of the Army at a rate not seen in three decades. In an effort to staunch the losses, that service has begun offering a $20,000 bonus to newly promoted captains who agree to stay on for an additional three years. Meanwhile, as more and more officers want out, fewer and fewer want in: ROTC scholarships go unfilled for a lack of qualified applicants." Bush has taken every desperate measure. Enlistment ages have been pushed up from 35 to 42. The percentage of high school dropouts and the number of recruits scoring at the bottom end of tests have spiked. The US military is forced to recruit among drug users and convicted criminals. Bacevich reports that wavers "issued to convicted felons jumped by 30 percent." Combat tours have been extended from 12 to 15 months, and the same troops are being deployed again and again. There is no equipment for training. Bacevich reports that "some $212 billion worth has been destroyed, damaged, or just plain worn out." What remains is in Iraq and Afghanistan. Under these circumstances, "staying the course" means total defeat. Even the neoconservative warmongers, who deceived Americans with the promise of a "cakewalk war" that would be over in six weeks, believe that the war is lost. But they have not given up. They have a last desperate plan: Bomb Iran. Vice President **** Cheney is spear- heading the neocon plan, and Norman Podhoretz is the plan's leading propagandist with his numerous pleas published in the Wall Street Journal and Commentary to bomb Iran. Podhoretz, like every neoconservative, is a total Islamophobe. Podhoretz has written that Islam must be deracinated and the religion destroyed, a genocide for the Muslim people. The neocons think that by bombing Iran the US will provoke Iran to arm the Shiite militias in Iraq with armor-piercing rocket propelled grenades and with surface to air missiles and unleash the militias against US troops. These weapons would neutralize US tanks and helicopter gunships and destroy the US military edge, leaving divided and isolated US forces subject to being cut off from supplies and retreat routes. With America on the verge of losing most of its troops in Iraq, the cry would go up to "save the troops" by nuking Iran. Five years of unsuccessful war in Iraq and Afghanistan and Israel's recent military defeat in Lebanon have convinced the neocons that America and Israel cannot establish hegemony over the Middle East with conventional forces alone. The neocons have changed US war doctrine, which now permits the US to preemptively strike with nuclear weapons a non-nuclear power. Neocons are forever heard saying, "what's the use of having nuclear weapons if you can't use them." Neocons have convinced themselves that nuking Iran will show the Muslim world that Muslims have no alternative to submitting to the will of the US government. Insurgency and terrorism cannot prevail against nuclear weapons. Many US military officers are horrified at what they think would be the worst ever orchestrated war crime. There are reports of threatened resignations. But **** Cheney is resolute. He tells Bush that the plan will save him from the ignominy of losing the war and restore his popularity as the president who saved Americans from Iranian nuclear weapons. With the captive American media providing propaganda cover, the neoconservatives believe that their plan can pull their chestnuts out of the fire and rescue them from the failure that their delusion has wrought. The American electorate decided last November that they must do something about the failed war and gave the Democrats control of both houses of Congress. However, the Democrats have decided that it is easier to be complicit in war crimes than to represent the wishes of the electorate and hold a rogue president accountable. If Cheney again prevails, America will supplant the Third Reich as the most reviled country in recorded history. Paul Craig Roberts wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was assistant secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was associate editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and contributing editor of National Review. He is author or co-author of eight books, including The Supply-Side Revolution (Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon chair in political economy, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, and senior research fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He has contributed to numerous scholarly journals and testified before Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was a reviewer for the Journal of Political Economy under editor Robert Mundell ___________ These are the words of someone who has been close to the power structure in washington...so really I post this as a FYI.... personally I agree with Roberts...shouldnt surprize anyone on JSH...how do the rest of you feel?...is he out to lunch? ![]() ![]() |
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davinci, just got on...read the whole piece slowly and I am in your camp
on this. Obviously, you shouldn't be surprised. I think, from my posts, everyone knows how I feel about the current administration. I think Roberts article should be an eye opener as to its truths and the danger these idiots may put the entire world in...just to ATTEMPT to save face! And, the fact that the Democrats were elected to try and force this bunch into doing the RIGHT thing and then backing down...is just another slap in the public's face! The result is the American people are left with no voice....people continue to die on both sides...and Bush & Co. do whatever they please, whenever they please!!! |
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You are so right Doc...
we are backed into a corner..no leadership from the dems or the repubs...appears we have been sold out...I've been pretty active politically my adult life..as a democrat but mostly independent...my gut is telling me to get behind Ron Paul ...if we are even allowed to have an election in 08?...dont know about you..but I dont think things have been right since kennedy, MLK, and kennedy...does seem criminals have the advantage... ![]() |
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Nope, I see it differently. In the post the following comment was
included "The American electorate decided last November that they must do something about the failed war and gave the Democrats control of both houses of Congress." The reality was more subtle than that. What actually occurred was that a small percentage of swing voters moved from one side of the fence to the other. This shift caused a larger swing in the component makeup of the congress and senate. With our political system, once the balance shifts from 51-49 to 49-51, that changes whether one person or another is elected. So your clear message is a few people changing their position and a few more too bored or undecided to participate. Moreover there is a lot more to what is going on in Iraq than either a liberal or conservative mindset can define by its own individual political slant. Same holds true for Iran. As for Colin Powell, that guy never was much of a whiz kid. He was bumped up again and again because it was politically expedient for one reason or another until he suddenly had some modicum of respect. He has been unsatisfied with the restrictions placed on him and the fact that the leadership was strongly conservative for some time. I would consider anything he said at this point to be entirely motivated by his dislike of the current administration and his own basic discontent in general. Let's not miss the point that a military is not a police force. Using the military as a police force is a bad idea in my opinion. It would be better to line them up in preparation for an assault on Iran and Syria in my opinion. If you undermine the funding for the insurgency, then you will undermine the insurgency itself. Right now Iran and others help fund and weaponize the insurgents. You may have another way to stop that process than taking away Iran's power, but I doubt it willbe effective. I'll remind you of another thing. There is a large amount of revenue being generated in the Iraqi oil industry from sales of petroleum products. Where this revenue goes is very important to stability in the region. Throughout history when people were unemployed and unable to support themselves they have rebelled, witness the French revolution. In Rome 2000 years ago the leaders were wise enough to see to the social issues of starvation and such. You are going to have to get the people in Iraq employed and paid if you want them to accept their lifestyle. Managing oil revenues is part of the solution. Managing Iran's oil revenue should, in my opinion, be accomplished by destroying it. Then let them rebuild over a few decades. In the meantime they would not have the revenue to build, purchase and export weapons to terrorist groups around the middle east and other places. As for the term 'neocons', people love to toss that around, but I can tell you that after watching the debates recently, democrat and republican, nobody in the batch looked like a 'neocon' to me. I would say that the democrats mostly looked goofy. Hillary was the leader in opinion and intelligence as far as I could tell. She presented a good front compared to everyone else in the field. Hillary was the best of the batch in the democrats by far, in my opinion. As for the Republicans, the only one who looked goofy was Ron Paul. Surprisingly. I would have thought he learned his lesson from the last debate when he came out as a democrat in republican clothing. I'm not moved by any of the Republicans in the debate in particular, though I thought most of them were better than Hillary. I think even liberal democrats are going to have a hard time voting for anyone in the democrat field. When a clear front runner comes forward in the republican primary you are going to see the differences between the right and left shrink slightly and move towards the right on the democrat side. If you get a leading democrat front runner who wants fo fold up the game and hand Iraq to Iran I sincerely doubt you will see a democrat elected president. |
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Nope, I see it differently. In the post the following comment was
included "The American electorate decided last November that they must do something about the failed war and gave the Democrats control of both houses of Congress." The reality was more subtle than that. What actually occurred was that a small percentage of swing voters moved from one side of the fence to the other. This shift caused a larger swing in the component makeup of the congress and senate. With our political system, once the balance shifts from 51-49 to 49-51, that changes whether one person or another is elected. So your clear message is a few people changing their position and a few more too bored or undecided to participate. Moreover there is a lot more to what is going on in Iraq than either a liberal or conservative mindset can define by its own individual political slant. Same holds true for Iran. As for Colin Powell, that guy never was much of a whiz kid. He was bumped up again and again because it was politically expedient for one reason or another until he suddenly had some modicum of respect. He has been unsatisfied with the restrictions placed on him and the fact that the leadership was strongly conservative for some time. I would consider anything he said at this point to be entirely motivated by his dislike of the current administration and his own basic discontent in general. Let's not miss the point that a military is not a police force. Using the military as a police force is a bad idea in my opinion. It would be better to line them up in preparation for an assault on Iran and Syria in my opinion. If you undermine the funding for the insurgency, then you will undermine the insurgency itself. Right now Iran and others help fund and weaponize the insurgents. You may have another way to stop that process than taking away Iran's power, but I doubt it will be effective. I'll remind you of another thing. There is a large amount of revenue being generated in the Iraqi oil industry from sales of petroleum products. Where this revenue goes is very important to stability in the region. Throughout history when people were unemployed and unable to support themselves they have rebelled, witness the French revolution. In Rome 2000 years ago the leaders were wise enough to see to the social issues of starvation and such. You are going to have to get the people in Iraq employed and paid if you want them to accept their lifestyle. Managing oil revenues is part of the solution. Managing Iran's oil revenue should, in my opinion, be accomplished by destroying it. Then let them rebuild over a few decades. In the meantime they would not have the revenue to build, purchase and export weapons to terrorist groups around the middle east and other places. if you think that can be done without a war with Iran, I would not be too surprised. Place your troops well. As for the term 'neocons', people love to toss that around, but I can tell you that after watching the debates recently, democrat and republican, nobody in the batch looked like a 'neocon' to me. I would say that the democrats mostly looked goofy. Hillary was the leader in opinion and intelligence as far as I could tell. She presented a good front compared to everyone else in the field. Hillary was the best of the batch in the democrats by far, in my opinion. As for the Republicans, the only one who looked goofy was Ron Paul. Surprisingly. I would have thought he learned his lesson from the last debate when he came out as a democrat in republican clothing. I'm not moved by any of the Republicans in the debate in particular, though I thought most of them were better than Hillary. I think even liberal democrats are going to have a hard time voting for anyone in the democrat field. When a clear front runner comes forward in the republican primary you are going to see the differences between the right and left shrink slightly and move towards the right on the democrat side. If you get a leading democrat front runner who wants fo fold up the game and hand Iraq to Iran I sincerely doubt you will see a democrat elected president. Back to the point of losing the war in Iraq. Follow Napolean's example and march the Iraqi's to the borders of Syria and Iran, arm them and send them in with some semblance of national pride in saving their own necks and that of their country. After they kick Iran's ass they will have some reason to appreciate their own country and less foreigners meddling in their lives. Iraqis in the border of Iran preparing for a battle will not be in Baghdad blowing up innocent people Wondering, do I appear to be a neocon? I certainly am not. As for Paul Craig Roberts, clearly he has an agenda. You can find agendas all over the place. Choose the one you like the best and promote it if you want. It remains an agenda though. In this case I would say that the position he takes starts with a mistaken assumption, that Bush is about to nuke Iran. When you start with a wrong premise, clearly unjustified, anything you say after that point should be suspect. Bush has plenty alternatives to nuclear weapons to use against Iran. I doubt seriously he would want to cross the line of using nukes. The political fallout around the world would be too intense. He knows better than to go down that road. Besides that they are not necessarily. I will say that if Iran starts using any radiological devices or other WMD all bets are off. How many of those sorts of devices would you suggest Iran be allowed to use before retaliation. What surprises me most in this article, is that he never raises the other side by asking the question, "What will be done to stop Iran sending weapons to Iraq for use by the insurgency?" Did anyone else notice the obvious absence of a balanced analysis? If so why not speak about that as well. The war is lost? The media is lost and confused too. |
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Oops, not sure how I managed to post in the middle of my comments,
probably some control character got me there. Sorry |
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And if they rush things a bit?
Will the next elections even happen? If they do not then it matters not who is running. |
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Philosopher...
We all own our perspective on things...and I disagree with you on a couple points...I do think the election past was a referendum on the war..and clearly the dems have missed their opportunity to show they have the "nads" to do what the american people want..tke a stand and end the mess of the war... I agree our military are not police...but that is all they will ever be in that area of the world..we do not have the resources or the will for an all out war of ideologies...reagan sid it best long ago.."we will never understand the politics in that place".. which is why he pulled out of Lebanon.. I was a little unclear about what a neocon was until I saw a very good BBC documentary about the roots of the neocon movement...just google bbc documentary neocon..you may like it..it definitely cleared some things in my mind after seeing it. Doubt if I would consider destroying the oil industry as a good policy..unless we are prepared to pay $8 a gal for gas...sure we dont get our oil from them but the effects of such an act would surely put the price of oil thru the roof IMO... As far as candidates are concerned...all polls show that Ron Pauls message is well received...he began in the libertarian party..and moved to the GOP...his record is clearly cut along constitutional lines..if it is in violation of the constitution he votes no..in my mind he is more conservative than any of the GOP ...adittedly a throw back to the Goldwater era..but closer to Reagan philosophy than anyone else...definitely has not flip flopped on issues like all the others...to my mind it has nothing to do with party affiliation but rather conviction ... To say that Roberts has an agenda..and should be dismissed...well then who doesnt have an agenda?...do we dismiss everyone?...Are you sure Bush wouldnt use nukes?...I'm not so sure...pre-emptive strikes should not be a policy ..under an condition... AB...Moves by Bush recently to place all power in his hands in case of national emergency makes me wonder...thats why I mention the possibility of no election...martial law?...it has a historical precedence...and we shouldnt rule it out for this country either..and yeah..if that happened it doesnt matter who runs for election.. It all makes me feel creepy... |
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Good Post Divinci,
At first glance this appeared to be a politically slanted, biased piece of journalism but after looking into PCR's background a little further, I can see he has a history of being pretty fair across the political spectrum. Some of the things he mentions about recruitment and retention are spot on but they've been that way (Drug users, Criminal backgorunds) for at least the last 12 years. Let's hope he's wrong about the "last desperate plan". We need to attack or NUC another country like we need a hole in the head. |
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Here in Washington, even our remaining neocons (or at least those who
will now openly admit they are neocons) are privately admitting the war in Iraq is lost. They blame the Bush administration for poor implementation of the war, in order to save face and not have to admit that it is their original conception of attacking Iraq that was at fault from the beginning. The problem is one of face-saving, in their view. Who will come out looking bad? Who will be blamed? When the dust settles and the American people realize that a combination of bad thinking and bad leadership has left the US in a terrible position in the world, who will be able to wring what advantage from the situation. The fact that we are losing soldiers and money while these people worry about saving face for themselves is not on their minds. I know this all because some of these neocons are among my friends and a few have been from days back in college. I am not telling tales here behind their backs: we have had many debates and discussions about this over the last years. Please understand, lots of them are 'nice, decent guys'. They are just dead wrong, and have lost both their moral and practical compasses. It is a saddening, angering situation. People are counting down to the end of the Bush administration...but it will be a long time before we get the pieces glued back together again. ![]() Oceans |
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If in fact that the last election was a referendum on Iraq then I would
say that there has been a shifting opinion regarding the war. Lots of people want out, there are large differences about how to actually do so. Shifting opinion is not a landslide though and if Democrats do not act reasonably people will reject them in turn. There remain strong conservative movements. Unfortunately conservative means different things to different people. I think that there has to be movement out of Iraq, The people there need to set up some form of government and see to their own security. We would have effective means of managing foreign insurgents than patrolling the streets in Iraq looking for them. I will repeat a comment that I made here "Moreover there is a lot more to what is going on in Iraq than either aliberal or conservative mindset can define by its own individual political slant." I should say that I did not mean that you should discount the article by Roberts. I meant that when you read such articles it is important to keep in mind that they have a political slant. So get the information, digest it and make your own opinions. My opinion about the statement that the war is lost is that the statement in itself is a charged comment, and that it is made as a part of an agenda, and the agenda is not necessarily correct or reasonable. Consider for example the war recently fought against Hezbollah by Israel. Israel is largely considered the loser in the encounter, and reality is different. So reality is in the words of the media? Is popular reality more correct than unpopular reality? It seems so. People love to complain anyway. Eight dollar oil does not concern me as much as radical islam. Maybe a little cooling of the oil supply might generate some new technological development and conservation. But don't give me 8 dollar oil and radical islam. That is where we are headed now. Iran is a rat's nest, and creating trouble for the rest of the middle east. I think you need to sort out the rats. If you think you can negotiate with them to reach a meaningful solution you are wrong. That is my opinion of course and I am not promoting it as fact. There are a lot of decent people there subjected to the current regime. Tolerate the leadership of Iran at your peril. Ron Paul as a Libertarian needs a different scrutiny than Ron Paul as a Republican. I'm not going to be in his camp, whichever party he is in. I do not think he looks at things rationally. That's my opinion again. So conviction may be fine, Bush certainly has plenty of that, yet he is criticized every day. I'm thinking a little rationality needs to be mixed with conviction. A lot of people in Washington could use a dose of rationality. I do not think there is any reason to use Nukes in Iran. Bush will be unlikely to use them. In spite of the perception otherwise, I am certain that he is concerned with international opinion of the US. I do not have a strong opinion about the centralizing of the gov't in times of crisis. I do not think there are enough police to watch everybody and micromanage them. Even if there were to do so would just make the world more restrictive and less productive. It is somewhat intuitive that such a manner of governmental tyranny would be a bad idea for everyone, the leaders as well as the subjects. Small places in the world like to go against the grain in this regard, Iran, N.Korea, Venezuela, Iraq a couple decades ago, China a few decades back, Russia 50 to 100 years back. It seldom manifests itself into a pleasant society and it is unlikely to be attempted here anytime so. |
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Does anyone here realize how many hardened targets in Iran would have to
be nuked in order to nuetrulize Irans nuclear threat? 37, everyone is near a major pop. center. ![]() |
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Thats not saying they still wont do it, but man the loss of life will be
incredible. Even if you tone the number of nuclear facilities to the low number of 20: taking out Iran's nascent weapons factories will take a lot more than a single bombing raid or a few missiles. Drawing the obvious lesson from the attack on Osirak, Iran's leaders have spread their country's nuclear facilities between at least 20 known sites and buried many of them deep underground. Inflicting serious damage would require multiple surgical air strikes. "We are speaking about a large program dispersed over a very large area," says Yiftah Shapir, a military analyst at the University of Tel Aviv's Jaffee Center and a retired air force officer. They estimate between 450 and 1000 possible air defence and conventional missle sites dispersed throught Iran as well. Also Iran has satellites, launched in Russia with Russian rockets. American troop loss is believed will equal the casulty fiqures from Iraq, in just 3 months time. Bad thing is I think it will happen, and undisclosed British sources say the end of March is the date!!! |
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Does anybody here realize how few targets would have to be hit in Iran
to neutralize the current regime? Open the door for some of the more rational people in the country to move forward. |
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No, Do you?????
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My 'overall' feeling of reading the topic starter, left me feeling as
though I was reading yet another sensationalized version of one persons own opinions, whose only purpose was to sell propaganda to a portion of the public who hold the same views. Then, of course, one must read between the lines to find the truth that created the sensationally enhanced argument. While I have not verified for myself the actual numbers of those dropping out of West Point, or those not choosing to re-up, or those choosing to stay out of ROTC or Reserve commitments, from other sources I have seen agreement in this information. Here is were I question the why of this particular situation? Since we can not be present or even have the time, were it available, to review every word spoken by every person within house and congressional meetings, we must rely on the reports we are given. As far as sources go, this source seems to have a distinguished and knowledgeable background. Does that mean, he will not slant statements in favor of his personal beliefs? While his statements have a basis in truth, I feel a bit like philosopher on this one. I don't like the manner in which he offers the statements. Although I hate to admit this, because I rather think I would side with this authors views, were it not for the overall aura of propaganda this writing takes. Too much rope there left dangling to get a good grip on. |
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Philospher you posted...
Does anybody here realize how few targets would have to be hit in Iran to neutralize the current regime? Open the door for some of the more rational people in the country to move forward. ---------------------------------------------------------------- No offense intended but... Are you absolutly mad. Do you realize that a nuclear strike on just one 'leader' would insure that NO ONE IN THAT COUNTRY WOULD EVER BE RATIONAL WHERE THE US WAS CONCERNED FOR THE REST OF THE FORSEABLE FUTURE And more than likley neither would the rest of the world. If you are talking about conventional weapons that also would have the effect of lighting the fuse to a conflageration the likes of which this world has never seen. It should be obvious to even the most die hard warmonger that WAR is not the answer to this situation. |
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Well,
I do not think striking Iran with nukes is a reasonable idea, nor practical, nor likely, for much the same reason you have mentioned. I have stated this in other posts. Without looking back specifically I have probably stated this in this topic somewhere. However. You have a situation where a hundred American soldiers have been killed in the month of May, largely promoted or facilitated by intervention and meddling of Iran. Proof is becoming more and more obvious. Iran is an enemy and striking against and killing our soldiers. So long as they are allowed to do so with impunity they will continue. It should be obvious to even the most determined peace activist that when your enemy is killing your soldiers you must strike back. I would suggest your solution is certainly at least as mad as my own. Furthermore, looking down the road to thousands more Americans killed by the support of the Iranian efforts, yous solution looks much madder. Let me remind you that the American soldiers who dies in Iraq almost all died after the cessation of formal military action, once they were involved in the process of maintaining "peace". A limited military action against Iran would have no more or slightly more of an effect upon American forces than the initial action against Iraq. I would propose limiting the size of the assault against Iran to something under 400,000 forces. Where would you propose setting the limit? Zero? If so I would respectfully suggest your assault would be considerably less successful. |
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Hello, everyone!
As the neocons take their last swing under the Bush administration at Muslim/Arab countries -- all in the delusion that it will protect Israel -- we can expect the Bush administration to continue its 'run-up' against Iran. 'Run-up' is the neocon term for it: a campaign of disinformation coming out of the neocon media outlets and with statements from Cheney and Bush as the big artillery. (There was some earlier confusion in one or two of the postings in this thread about the term 'neocon.' It stands for neo-conservative, and is a term that the neocons use for themselves. Most prominently the neocons are: Paul Wolfowitz, Scooter Libbey, David Wurmser, Meyrav Wurmser, Doug Feith, John Bolton, James Woolsey, Michael Ledeen, Norman Podhorets, Bill Kristol, Charles Krauthammer, Elliott Abrams, Steven Handley, Laurie Mylroie, Dennis Ross, Martin Indyk, Bernard Lewis, Samual Hintington, Francis Fukuyama (though he has now denounced his fellow neocons), etc. They were long active before Bush became president, and they are all first and foremost loyal to Israel.) I do not see Bush as a neocon, but as a mouthpiece for them. Rice seems to waffle between being one and not. Powell was not, which is why they isolated him from Bush. Cheney, to me , is an enigma when it comes to being a neocon or not. He espouses neocon views, but I think he may be following an agenda of his own that has nothing to do with Israel. I wish I knew more about him and his views and motives. At least we know that he has served as one of the largest liars about the invasion of Iraq and is now doing it again in the anti-Iranian run-up. But WHY he is doing this is unclear to me. But with the removal of the senior military commanders who were most to blame for being yes-men to the neocons regarding Iraq, with the debacle in Iraq now fully evident, with the looming debacle in Afghanistan just starting to show up on the American public's radar screen, and with the growing realization that Iran poses no threat with its nuclear power activities, the neocons are left with little ammunition with which to fuel the run-up. The thing they are pushing now is that Iran is supporting the Iraqi fight for liberation against US occupation. But the reality is that this aid is tenuous at best, and minor in any case. Iraq is a beehive of explosives and personal weapons thanks to the dispersal of the Iraqi military depots as the US invaded. The US has found and seized only a trivial portion of these supplies. Since the US invasion, the Iraqis have improved the weapons and tactics for deploying them. The only real indication we have that ran has helped the Iraqi resistence is that some of the designs of the latest versions of IEDs seem to have come from Iran. But it is unclear whether this is an Iranian governmental effort, or that of individual Iranians who sympathize with the Iraqi resistence. In any case, it does not add up to anything near a cause for war with Iran. The neocons have shown, of course, that they are willing to say just about anything to get the US government to go to war, and there is no reason to think that they are acting in better faith now. But we know enough from their bahavior on the 'run-up' against Iraq to look with great suspicion on anything they say or Bush say about Iran. Let's not be taken in a second (or is it 3rd?) time by the neocons. ![]() Oceans |
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Today, quick note: this morning, some US senior military in a private
hallway discussion used the term 'Iraq is lost.' No equivocation. Reality sets in.... |
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