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Bro. Curtis said:"Cato, do not attack me, Cato, this is your employer speaking, Cato....."
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By the time Gen. David Petraeus arrived at the Capitol to report on the state of American operations in Iraq, most pundits and politicians had chosen their historical analogies.
That may be the biggest statement in the article, unfair, on both sides.
It's better written and thought out than most libertarian articles, and the points about Iran are good ones, but I don't think Bush will leave office with a nuclear Iran, one way or another.
Taking Iran out of the equation without more countries behind us will be disasterous. Leaving them in makes the war unwinnable.
Like most columnists, they criticize, but offer no other way.
What do we do about Iran ? (And please don't say U.N. sanctions, anyone.)
Ivon Denosovich said:The foreign policy gap between lbtns and pubs is narrowing considerably. Wallstreet Journal editorialist and former Reagan speechwriter, Peggy Noonan wrote last Friday:
"An unspoken part of the larger story is that Gen. Petraeus backed up the argument that our troops have been stretched painfully thin, and the postsurge presence cannot, practically, be maintained. Thus a seeming illogic in the general's presentation: For the first time in years we're making progress, therefore we should reduce troop levels to the same point at which we made no progress. "
(The entire text found here http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/?id=110010599)
While Noonan, like the Journal, doesn't support a full blown withdrawal, it seems she is joining an ever broader group of war skeptics pondering the realism of a Muslim Democracy.
Ivon Denosovich said:I suspect that being a conservative, 2 Timothy 2:1-4, that you and I agree that the Iraqi's have to start helping themselves at some point. And that point is likely to be now or never. Our military doesn't exist to perform humanitarian missions for needy peoples. Nor can it do so forever regardless of any temporary success stories.