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Joseph A. Palermo

Joseph A. Palermo

Posted: August 31, 2010 09:13 PM

Neo-conservatives within the Bush Administration -- Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Assistant Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith, Defense Policy Board member Richard Perle, and others, repeatedly told us on TV that individuals who opposed President George W. Bush's attack, invasion, and occupation of Iraq value democracy and human rights less than they do.

But the people and organizations who tried to prevent this "preventive" war included the United Nations; people of faith (Muslims, Christians, and Jews); the governments of France, Germany, Russia, China; the Islamic Conference (including Indonesia, the most populated Muslim nation); the Organization of American States; the Arab League; the Organization of African Unity; former President Jimmy Carter; Pope John Paul; 133 members of the U.S. Congress; 10 to 15 million people who took to the streets for peace all over the world on February 15, 2003; Senator Robert Byrd (who articulated a critique of Bush's war aims on Constitutional grounds); a half dozen intelligence analysts and career civil servants from the State Department and CIA who either resigned or spoke out against this course; and many others.

To assuage these voices of dissent and to win over the American people to this endeavor, the neo-cons who dominated the foreign policy of the Bush Administration and their allies among the pundit and chattering classes at Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, NPR, and all the rest, capitalized on the fear created by September 11, to win the support of Congress and the American people for a pre-emptive attack on Iraq.

The neo-conservatives said that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass Destruction. He didn't.

They said he was in league with Osama Bin Laden. He wasn't.

They predicted that no major post-war insurgency in Iraq would occur. It did.

They said there would be a wave of pro-Americanism in the Middle East and the world if the United States acted boldly and unilaterally. Instead, there was a regional and even global wave of anti-Americanism.

Saddam's human rights record was not an adequate justification to go to war and the Bush Administration did not seriously try to make it one, until long after the war began and all the other plausible justifications had been proven false.

Bush's grand strategy for the Middle East was hashed out in the 1990s by these same neo-cons who are few in number and have worked together in and out of government for years. The Project for a New American Century became the mouthpiece for this group disseminating the ideas of Administration insiders such as Wolfowitz, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Perle, and others. In January 1998, the PNAC wrote an open letter to President Bill Clinton, forcefully calling for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. "The policy of 'containment' of Saddam Hussein has been steadily eroding," they argued, and "we can no longer depend on our partners in the Gulf War coalition to continue to uphold sanctions." These developments endanger "our friends and allies like Israel and the moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world's oil supply." The letter never mentioned "terrorism" but raised the issue of WMD and concluded: "the only acceptable strategy" was "removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from power. That now needs to become the aim of American foreign policy."

The January 1998 letter to Clinton was signed by Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Dov Zakheim, William Schneider, Jr., and Peter Rodman -- all top officials in the Defense Department; Richard Armitage, Paula Dobriansky, and John Bolton; Zalmay Khalilzad and Elliot Abrams; and Robert Zoelick. So potent was their call to remove Saddam, that in October 1998, amidst the heated debate of the midterm elections, Congress passed the "Iraq Liberation Act" that made it official U.S. policy to overthrow Saddam.

In December 1998, President Bill Clinton launched "Operation Desert Fox." In the following eight months, the U.S. and Britain fired over 1,100 missiles in eight months at 359 targets inside Iraq killing at least 300 Iraqi civilians.

The PNAC churned out other policy papers in the 1990s with the same general thrust: Now that the Soviet Union no longer existed, the U.S. must use its military power to secure dominance over the Earth, especially the oil producing regions thereby controlling the energy supplies of any future rival.

This Pax Americana would require an aggressive, unilateral foreign policy free from the hindrances of multilateral organizations or treaties, as well as new military bases, and the will and ability to project American power anywhere. An influential PNAC paper from September 2000 states: "At present the United States faces no global rival. America's grand strategy should aim to preserve and extend this advantageous position as far into the future as possible." It called for a major military build up and singled out Iran, Iraq, and North Korea as immediate targets.

In the run up to the war, these neo-cons in the Pentagon set up the "Office of Special Plans." According to Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski who worked with the group, "Instead of developing defense policy alternatives and advice, OSP was used to manufacture propaganda for internal and external use, and pseudo war planning." She watched Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, and Douglas Feith cook the intelligence from May 2002 to February 2003, often relying on dubious Iraqi exiles for information, to support the already made decision to go to war with Iraq.


Said Lt. Col. Kwiatkowski: "I witnessed neoconservative agenda bearers within OSP usurp measured and carefully considered assessments, and through suppression and distortion of intelligence analysis promulgate what were in fact falsehoods to both Congress and the executive office of the president."

Based on this spun and concocted intelligence, Secretary of State Colin Powell told the United Nations General Assembly on February 5, 2003: "Our conservative estimate is that Iraq today has a stockpile of between 100 and 500 tons of chemical weapons agent. That's enough to fill 16,000 battlefield rockets."

On March 30, 2003, ten days after the war began, Rumsfeld said: "We know where [Iraq's WMD] are -- they're in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad and east, west, south, and north somewhat."

Repeated like a mantra by Administration officials was the claim that Saddam Hussein possessed "26,000 liters of anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulin, one and a half tons of nerve agent VX, and 6,500 aerial chemical bombs."

In Cincinnati, on October 7, 2002, President Bush said: "The evidence indicates that Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program. . . . Iraq has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes and other equipment needed for gas centrifuges, which are used to enrich uranium for nuclear weapons." [This aluminum tube charge was later proven bogus by both the International Atomic Energy Agency and David Kay's Iraq Survey Group.]

An ABC News poll published on December 17, 2002 found that 89 percent of Americans believed Iraq "does possess chemical, biological, or nuclear weapons." In a similar poll, about 70 percent said they believed Saddam had something to do with 9-11 (which he did not).

President Bush said during his State of the Union on January 28, 2003: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." Yet former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, who had been charged by the National Security Council to follow up on the uranium from Niger story, went public in July 2003 saying that the White House knew this information was false well before the President's speech. In any case, it was a highly unusual step for a president to announce to the world sensitive intelligence information which is never done casually. The Niger uranium story was based on documents that were shown conclusively to be rather amateurish forgeries. [I probably should add here that lying to Congress is an impeachable offense.]

Cheney said on Meet the Press on March 16, 2003: "We believe [Saddam] has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons."

Bush and his National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice both on occasion used the image of a mushroom cloud in sounding the alarm of the Iraqi threat.

In a Vanity Fair interview after the occupation of Iraq was a fait accompli, Wolfowitz said: "The truth is that for reasons that have a lot to do with the U.S. government bureaucracy, we settled on the one issue that everyone could agree on, which was weapons of mass destruction, as the core reason" for going to war.

In April 2003, the United Nations requested that its weapons inspectors be allowed back in to Iraq, they, after all, possessed the knowledge and experience to find the WMD; but the Bush Administration firmly rebuffed this idea. Instead, David Kay's Iraq Survey Group of 1,400 inspectors spent 30,000 hours scouring Iraq for WMD. They found none.

Buried deep inside Dr. Kay's report to Congress is the following statement: "Information found to date suggests that Iraq's large scale capability to develop, produce, and fill CW munitions was reduced -- if not entirely destroyed -- during Operation Desert Storm and Desert Fox, 13 years of UN sanctions, and UN inspections." Kay chose not to include this telling admission in either his introductory remarks or his conclusion.

Buried even deeper inside Kay's report was this: "To date we have not uncovered evidence that Iraq undertook significant post-1998 steps to actually build nuclear weapons or produce fissile material."

The imminent threat posed by Iraqi chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons turned out to be not so imminent.

When the statue of Saddam came down on April 9, 2003, there was great rejoicing in America -- Administration mouthpieces proclaimed a victory for liberty on par with the fall of the Berlin Wall -- but when two American soldiers were killed in Firdos Square by suicide bombers about 36 hours later, the incident wasn't even reported, let alone the irony pointed out.

When Bush landed in a Navy plane on the USS Abraham Lincoln on May 1, 2003 looking martial and gallant in a fighter pilot uniform, helmet tucked under his arm, declaring "Mission Accomplished," his approval ratings were soaring at around 75 percent.

By August 26, 2003, 139 Americans had died in Iraq since Bush's triumphant carrier landing; by September 24, it had climbed to 341 killed, and so on and on and on for the next seven years. Today it stands, (as President Obama pointed out in his speech), at 4,426, with at least 30,000 wounded.

Although the Pentagon says that it is not interested in enemy "body counts," conservative estimates range between 100,000 and 150,000 Iraqi civilians killed.

American soldiers in Iraq still find themselves in a confusing combat environment (even though the "combat" is over), forced to fight in a foreign land where winning the "hearts and minds" of a people they know little about is crucial to the success of their mission.

Hand crafted bombs began claiming the lives of more Americans in Iraq than any other weapon. At first, they were usually made from discarded artillery shells with a detonator wired to a garage door opener or doorbell. They could be set off just about anywhere, buried along roadways or dropped out of vehicles. Fake bombs were set to waste the time of explosive disposal squads or to draw soldiers into ambushes with small arms. New bombs showed up in Iraq wiring together multiple explosives in a "daisy chain" to explode in several places, several yards apart, killing or maiming for life American service men and women. Lately, assassins using silencers are murdering Iraqi police officers in broad daylight.

Then there are the suicide bombers and the enormous car and truck bombs. Missiles attached to donkey carts or fake electricity generators have been used to deadly effect -- often with booby traps of explosives hidden in the wheel wells of vehicles.

American soldiers are still risking their lives every day in Iraq, "combat" or no "combat," and many more will die for this policy our neo-con leaders handed down to us.

The debacle in Iraq is not merely a result of errors in planning or poor decision-making. In devising their plans for Iraq, the neo-cons in the Bush Administration repeatedly and insistently dismissed the vast array of research assembled by think tanks and warnings of its own officials in the State Department and the CIA and the military.

For a small group of men with little understanding of Iraq, warfare, or "nation-building," or "counterinsurgency," is just the arrogant belief that they, and they alone, knew better than anyone else about what was in the United States interests. Their view required not just monumental arrogance but also a cavalier disregard for the life and death consequences of being wrong.

The "threat" Saddam Hussein posed was not "imminent." The war made Americans more hated in the world, especially in the Islamic world; and has made our people more vulnerable to attack both at home and overseas.

The neo-cons and President Bush claimed to know what was in America's interest, but they refused to debate it honestly.

If the Congress and the American people knew the truth about Iraq in 2002 and 2003, they would never have gone to war.

To be silenced by a complacent media and the attack dogs of the jingoistic Right -- to remain silent when we have been systematically lied to would be to betray the fundamental ideals for which our troops have sacrificed their lives on that "battle field" half a world away.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
03:46 PM on 09/03/2010
And don't forget "Freedom Fries" and right-wing talk radio jocks organizing sessions where future Tea Partiers poured out French wine into the gutter
08:21 AM on 09/03/2010
Something very important is always missing on this topic and it is again in Mr. Palermo's fine piece. The UN successful inspections from December 2002 through March 2003 are the crux Bush's lies. And Saddam Hussein's prooactive cooperation priot to the March Invasion is the most neglected topic in the media and propaganda network dedicated to keeping the Iraq invasion moral and legal in the minds of Americans

Those of us vehemently opposed to the Iraq invasion on moral grounds must be willing to drop the 'Bush-lied about the WMD' lingo in favor of 'Bush lied about wanting UN inspectors to settle the matter." which is undeniable by the invasion's defenders.

IT IS OK to have thought, suspected, or believed, that Saddam Hussein had WMD in October 2002.

It was not OK to believe such nonsense by March 17, 2003.

Saddam Hussein's representative/liason to the UN Security Council in December of 2002 was Amir al-Saadi. His offer to allow US military, FBI, and CIA to come into Iraq to verify Iraq's disarmament directly with UN inspectors.

US invasion was absolutely avoidable and legally so, from that point on.

This was rebuffed by the Bush Whitehouse.

Want to stir the public up to the truth about the run up to the war.

Find out what happened to Amir al Saadi and his family.

Google them. Find them. Saadi has been dissappeared.

Bring him back to life. Bring the truth about the Iraq invasion to the American people.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
12:25 PM on 09/03/2010
Yes, thank you notfooool, whenever anyone raises the canard about "every intelligence agency" also got it wrong to justify Bush's lies -- they need to look at the UN very closely and Blix and the inspectors for the truth -- the reason why there was no use of force resolution passed and Bush illegally pointed to 1441 as if it authorized force (which it did not) is precisely because the intelligence was ambiguous at best
06:13 PM on 09/02/2010
.Chevron, Conoco, Bush Brother's Company May Get Caspian Exploration Rights
By Stephen Bierman - Aug 13, 2010 8:41 AM PT



Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov told the government to make a choice on bids from those companies for blocks 9 and 20 in the Caspian, according to the government’s website.

Turkmenistan allows international investors the ability to gain equity in offshore exploration while limiting onshore access to its state oil and gas companies. The bulk of Turkmenistan’s known resources, including the world’s fourth- largest reserves of natural gas according to BP Plc data, are in onshore fields in the country’s east.

“Majors are more interested in bigger gas plays onshore, but may believe that a presence offshore would help them achieve this ultimate objective,” Ed Chow, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic International Studies, said by e-mail today.



TX Oil was formed this year to develop opportunities in Turkmenistan. Neil Bush visited the country in February with a letter to his father, President George H.W. Bush, to the Turkmen president, according to the website Turkmenistan.ru. Bush again visited the Turkmen president in June, according to the website.

E-mails to Chevron asking for confirmation of the bid weren’t immediately returned. TX Oil didn’t immediately return calls. ConocoPhillips didn’t respond to a request for comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Bierman in Moscow sbierman1@bloomberg.net.
01:44 AM on 09/03/2010
A breath of fresh air,the truth that is.

Why can't people wake up? what's it going to take? another war,another act of treason like 911?

This is our fault and our responsibility,nothing about this insidious system is going to change until we do.

Obama is no different,he doesn't work for the American people,he works for the money and power gods.

Teach your children well.
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BluestateGuyInTX
A Connecticut yankee in Emperor Bush's Town.
04:34 PM on 09/02/2010
Thank you so much for writing this. It really needs to be said. I only wish someone in the mainstream media would make these same points. Unfortunately not enough people read HP. By the way, I've fanned you through one of your comments. Thanks again.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
08:40 PM on 09/02/2010
thanks, it seemed like the only decent thing to do was to reiterate the historical record that cannot be spun out of existence
02:41 AM on 09/02/2010
For neocons and their relations, this is a good place to start :
http://www.rightweb.irc-online.org/profiles/category/organizations
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
08:41 PM on 09/02/2010
a very useful list, thanks
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
01:31 PM on 09/01/2010
Joe, every intelligence agency in the world that fed us information all agreed about Iraq, the media presented it to us everynight for 9 months. You may like to call it fear, I prefer retribution, right or wrong, it happened. What no one bargained on was Iraq being in the exact middle of it all, Al Qaeda, and jihadist came from every country surrounding Iraq to defeat the great satan and they lost. They lost so much they had to regroup in Pakistan to recruit more people and still today there hiding under a rock, waiting to come out and try again.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:11 PM on 09/01/2010
yeah, we won
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Estreet1964
Gimmie the beat boys and free my soul....
05:15 PM on 09/01/2010
Quote: "You may like to call it fear, I prefer retribution, right or wrong, it happened."

Typical callous neo-conservative reaction. "It happened"

Never any acceptance of responsibility for the death and mayhem or of the blow back over the next twenty or so years that is sure to result from this fiasco.
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Cea80
κόπρος γίγνεται.
09:30 AM on 09/01/2010
I have no doubts that the GOP - after committing these and other crimes - will try to impeach Obama on trumped up charges if they ever get control of Congress.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
09:49 AM on 09/01/2010
Charged with being a Socialist Muslim born in Kenya.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jmpurser
See My micro-bio
10:03 AM on 09/01/2010
Agreed.
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Cea80
κόπρος γίγνεται.
09:25 AM on 09/01/2010
"For a small group of men with little understanding of Iraq, warfare, or 'nation-building,' or 'counterinsurgency,' is just the arrogant belief that they, and they alone, knew better than anyone else about what was in the United States interests. Their view required not just monumental arrogance but also a cavalier disregard for the life and death consequences of being wrong."

Everyone should read the latest NY Times column by David Brooks. His arrogance is simply remarkable. We can't let people like this anywhere near power ever again.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/31/opinion/31brooks.html?_r=1&ref=davidbrooks
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:12 PM on 09/01/2010
yep, and Wolfowitz had an op-ed yesterday in the NYTimes comparing Iraq to Korea, I can't even begin to list the reasons why this is an absurd historical analogy
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tonebender
09:17 AM on 09/01/2010
The right time for this was 2004. Here is a more complete list that was very easy to find.http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Bush_administration:_Project_for_the_New_American_Century
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09:17 AM on 09/01/2010
Wars of choice are always about competing ideologies. They have nothing to do with human rights nor freedom. Sovereign countries cannot be dictated to by the use of force. That was the founding principle of the UN - when it replaced The League of Nations - that warfare could be avoided by discussion and persuasive argument. No one country should have the right to decide who is 'good' and who is 'bad'. I doubt very much the world will have the ability to avoid another such debacle - it only remains to be seen where it happens and when.

Itchy.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:13 PM on 09/01/2010
yes, and people always resist occupation whoever is doing the occupying no matter how pure their motives
01:47 AM on 09/03/2010
It's not about ideology,it's about money,don't kid yourself.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
jmpurser
See My micro-bio
09:02 AM on 09/01/2010
Excellent journalism Mr. Palermo. I wish there was more of this caliber of work seen in America.
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Rastageneral
Babylon can't fool I - Rastafari rule I
11:58 AM on 09/01/2010
I will second that.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:14 PM on 09/01/2010
thank you, in all honesty this piece was based mostly on a talk I gave 6 years ago on the first anniversary of the Iraq invasion
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Buckeye54
...the One your mom warned you about!
09:01 AM on 09/01/2010
One of my biggest regrets of this administration is that we did not hold hearings and bring to trial those responsible for leading us to war in Iraq.

The fact that we did not hold them legally responsible means that they will forever be able to spout their version of the truth and get away with it.

The American people deserve to know the plain unvarnished truth.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
09:40 AM on 09/01/2010
It's being polished, and continued.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:16 PM on 09/01/2010
yes, the closest thing we got was what the British managed to cobble together as a truth commission where their former head of their intelligence service concluded that the invasion of Iraq was the single biggest recruitment event for terrorists all over the world, and that Britain and Europe and the US will have to deal with the consequences of this catastrophe for decades -- and, oh yeah, we "won"
08:51 AM on 09/01/2010
The neo-conservative movement was initiated by Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, and was put into political effect through the efforts of such as Wolfowitz, Pearle, Feith, Abrams, and others holding high positions in both our State Department and "The Project for a New American Century." They are all Zionists. Bush, mesmerized by the Christian Zionists and the boys of the Project, fell for their lies. The illegal wars began. Today, the "Project" for the "New American Century" continues, and our "unwavering support" of our "good friend" Israel will endure -- whatever the costs in blood or money, or the hatred of others. As Netanyahu wisely said, "America can be lead".
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elbzee
Fear is the mind-killer
09:15 AM on 09/01/2010
And they've certainly gotten off to a hell of a start... "New American Century" yeah, right.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joseph Palermo
Huffington Post Blogger/Author/Professor
04:18 PM on 09/01/2010
I named names because they shouldn't be able to get away with changing the narrative about how the US got into this thing in the first place -- they told us "noble lies" a la Leo Strauss
DUSAA-1775
never moon a werewolf
08:46 AM on 09/01/2010
...; The neo-conservatives said that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass Destruction. ...' actually many spy agencies through out the world said he had WMD's....

Perhaps the author could list some of the top ' neo-conservatives' he is referring to?? It certainly can not be VP Cheney...he is not a 'neo'...he has been a conservative for quite some time. So who are these ' neo's '??
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09:11 AM on 09/01/2010
Perhaps you could define the 'many spy agencies throughout the world' you refer to. MI6 here in Britain said he didn't but Blair changed the language in their report making uncertainties into certainties in his headlong rush to support Bush. You can't accuse the author of being imprecise then proceed to do exactly the same thing. It's called hypocrisy.

Itchy.
DUSAA-1775
never moon a werewolf
11:43 AM on 09/01/2010
Brittan said Saddam had WMD's ( you may have access to top secret reports but all i have is what is published; CIA , Israel,Russia...all said he had wmd's....saddam said he had mwd's.

... ' You can't accuse the author of being imprecise then proceed to do exactly the same thing. It's called hypocrisy....'
that has to be one of the worst definitions Ii have ever heard, not with standing the fact I never accused the author of being imprecise.
08:41 AM on 09/01/2010
When will Obama hold someone/anyone accountable for this?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Enroh Mot
Veritas Lux Mea
09:52 AM on 09/01/2010
When all the wars, occupations, have ended and the troops brought home.
09:54 AM on 09/01/2010
One thing we learnt since Obama has won is that he does not have the guts to face strong opposition even if they are minite in number.

Many of his progressive promises before the election has fallen off the wayside since he won... I think only becausehe is the one who likes to govern with consensus. Consensus even if the other party is weak.

Imagine him calling Bush before giving the end of war in Iraq speech ... and in the speech mention that Bush actually did it in good faith...!!! Imagine the extend he is willing to go for consensus.... Unbelievable.

Question is Why? Why because he is weak of resolve..... So no one will ever be held accountable even if there remains 10 from the neocons/GOP in congress or senate. Thats Obama. A lily-livered shaking-in-your-pants president (thats how the English woud say it).

I am really disappointed (to say the least) with this man!!!
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10:29 AM on 09/02/2010
I'd disagree that it's because of weakness that Obama won't stand up to them, I believe it's because he has every intention of continuing these things.

Just look at this phony end to combat missions in Iraq (50k troops, doubling the mercenaries, people still shooting!)

Just look at the expansion of the Afghanistan war into Pakistan, perhaps Yemen. These places are crawling with Blackwater mercenaries, CIA and drones.

Iran will likely be next. Almost all the positioning is in place, we're surrounding them.