I thought it already was.Noon, January 3, 2007, the Democrats will take control of Congress. When will the blame for the failure of Iraq be laid at their feet?
The only Dems one can blame were the Senators and Reps who voted for the "authorization of force" without the rigorous examination of the Executive's case in the Intelligence and Armed Services sub committees. Beyond that, the past 3.5 years have been very much led by the Republican side, even with the various arguments and disagreements that folks like Ron Paul, or John McCain have raised regarding the actions of the Executive Branch.Noon, January 3, 2007, the Democrats will take control of Congress. When will the blame for the failure of Iraq be laid at their feet?
Iraq is a failed state created by the United States. Our senior leadership did this to Iraq, to ourselves and to our allies. America is losing a battalion's worth of dead and wounded Americans (as many as 800 men and women) every month and spending up to $2 billion a week on a failed strategy. We are hemorrhaging our national treasure in blood and dollars without anything of relevance to show for it.
The Bush administration continues to get the strategy wrong and to understate the magnitude of the task in Iraq. Most congressional Democrats do not recognize the gravity of the threat, and their Republican counterparts long ago abrogated their constitutional responsibility to oversee the executive branch. Congress has allowed the administration to fight what has essentially been a secret war and to deceive all of us about its supposed causes, progress and cost.
Noon, January 3, 2007, the Democrats will take control of Congress. When will the blame for the failure of Iraq be laid at their feet?
And who says Iraq is a failure? Are you calling it, hgc?
Maybe that's the problem. Calling the game before its over.
No wonder "cut and run" sounds so appealing to some people. They already think we have failed.
Hey! That was not the intent of the thread title! I hadn't anticipated such a sneaky attack.Looks like you're the first.
Well, that is a my working assumption -- that it's a failure. If you don't agree on that, then we'll have something else to talk about first (and for which I don't have time right now). To that end, I was listening to John McCain on Meet the Press yesterday with amazement at the insanity the American public is willing to swallow (which will be the subject of another thread when I can get around to writing a long post). In short, he said a) this is a critical time to make or break and b) we need to increase troop strength in Iraq to be successful.And who says Iraq is a failure? Are you calling it, hgc?
Maybe that's the problem. Calling the game before its over.
No wonder "cut and run" sounds so appealing to some people. They already think we have failed.
Well, that is a my working assumption -- that it's a failure. If you don't agree on that, then we'll have something else to talk about first (and for which I don't have time right now). To that end, I was listening to John McCain on Meet the Press yesterday with amazement at the insanity the American public is willing to swallow (which will be the subject of another thread when I can get around to writing a long post). In short, he said a) this is a critical time to make or break and b) we need to increase troop strength in Iraq to be successful.
a) We've heard this is a critical time so often in regards to Iraq over the last few years, that it's starting to sound like the ramblings heard in a padded cell.
b) Yes, increase troop strength. With what troops? The same national guard and reserve troops who've been rotated back into Iraq over and over again? Where are they coming from? Korea?
. . . If you check the link, one of the things he suggests is reinstituting the draft. I violently disagree with that. . . .
DR
That situation is not conducive to good order and discipline, nor to healthy morale, nor to efficiency. How much time did you spend in uniform, fishbob? How much did the wag who wrote that idea?A long time ago, I can't recall where, I heard a very elaborate argument that the interests of the US are best served by having soldiers that absolutely hate being in the Army - thus a draft is a good idea. Can't recall the details either.
The U.S. Army has a third fewer soldiers than it did at the time it fought the 1991 Gulf War.
In January 2004, the Department of Defense acknowledged a problem by temporarily adding 30,000 troops to the authorized active duty end strength of the Army. Congress addressed the issue by raising statutory end strength in the FY2005 authorization bill (P.L. 108-375).
Should End Strength Be Increased, and by How Much? Many voices in Congress and the military community publicly support an increase, and few argue against it unconditionally.14 Proposals now range in magnitude from 10,000 permanent Army positions to the Administration’s 30,000 temporary positions to 83,700 for five years (introduced and supported by Democratic Members).15
15 H.R. 3696 would have increaseed the Army from 482,400 to 522,400; the Air Force from 359,300 to 388,000; the Marine Corps from 175,000 to 190,000; and, left the Navy at 373,800.
"To fight to win" is just as ambiguous as "new direction". What constitutes a "win"?To fight to win, we clearly need to increase troop strength and quit pussyfooting around.
"To fight to win" is just as ambiguous as "new direction". What constitutes a "win"?
By my very limited understanding of it, the main obstacle to a stable Iraqi government at this point is not so much external terrorists as it is competing internal forces. I don't understand how increased US troop strength in the area is going to convince people to set aside their ethnic conflict and work with one another.
So, what do you propose we do? Tie every last citizen down to their chair so they are forced to talk rather than kill one another?As long as insurgents have a free hand to resort to violence, there will not be any talks.
As long as the sun rises, it'll rise in the east. Who's gonna take away that free hand?As long as insurgents have a free hand to resort to violence, there will not be any talks.
I agree this is a problem."To fight to win" is just as ambiguous as "new direction". What constitutes a "win"?
An internal threat is nothing new to insurgencies. The number of competing forces complicates matters, but it doesn't make it a "new type of war."Upchurch said:By my very limited understanding of it, the main obstacle to a stable Iraqi government at this point is not so much external terrorists as it is competing internal forces.
Maybe it won't, but it's one of many steps if we're going to try. Regardless the number of internal competing groups, the majority of people simply want stability and security. Provide them the latter and the former follows.Upchurch said:I don't understand how increased US troop strength in the area is going to convince people to set aside their ethnic conflict and work with one another.
Those who oppose them.As long as the sun rises, it'll rise in the east. Who's gonna take away that free hand?