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Republicans are brazenly calling for indefinite deployments of huge troop forces in Iraq -- if only the press would come out and report it that way.

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Beltway Media Pleased to Distort GOP Position on Iraq

By David Sirota, WorkingForChange.com. Posted August 28, 2006.


Republicans are brazenly calling for indefinite deployments of huge troop forces in Iraq -- if only the press would come out and report it that way.

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In the Washington Post's front page story this Sunday about the Democratic Party's position on the Iraq War, the newspaper makes a highly misleading statement about the Republican Party's position. After a comment by Montana Democratic Senate nominee Jon Tester demanding a "plan to move the troops out of Iraq," the Post claims flatly that "no Republican is advocating that the United States maintain high troop levels indefinitely."

One could stretch to make the argument that such a statement is technically true -- no Republican has gone on record saying word-for-word "I want to keep large amounts of U.S. troops in Iraq forever." However, top Republican leaders have repeatedly gone on record making statements or taking concrete steps that support actually keeping large amounts of U.S. troops in Iraq indefinitely.

For example, less than three months ago, Reuters reported that "congressional Republicans killed a provision in an Iraq war funding bill that would have put the United States on record against the permanent basing of U.S. military facilities in that country." In other words, despite the Post's claim, Republicans just a few months ago actually went on record as supporting the concept of a permanent, indefinite military presence in Iraq (you can see the video of the congressional debate here). Congressional Democrats' efforts to prevent U.S. troops from being in Iraq indefinitely came after the BBC reported that the administration made massive emergency spending request for base construction that the House Appropriations Committee noted was "of a magnitude normally associated with permanent bases."

A week after that request, "top US General John Abizaid refused to rule out a long-term presence" in Iraq. In fact, this hasn't just been going on this year. The Chicago Tribune reported in 2004 that Bush administration military planners were moving forward with plans for "constructing 14 enduring bases, long-term encampments for the thousands of American troops."

Then there is President Bush, who stated just last week that we will not be reducing troops "while I'm the president."

That was just the latest statement from the administration and the Pentagon about indefinite troop deployments. For example, in May of 2004, international news service AFP reported that the administration quietly announced that it will "keep high force levels in Iraq indefinitely."

Even if you just look at Tester's opponent, Republican Sen. Conrad Burns (R), it's clear that Republicans are quite brazenly advocating for indefinite deployments of large amounts of U.S. troops in Iraq -- regardless of what the public thinks about the war. As the Associated Press reported last week, "Burns said the U.S. must show 'great patience and resolve' and stay in Iraq even if public support for the war continues to erode."

Here's the thing -- politicians either support a plan to draw down troops at some point in the future, or they support leaving U.S. troops in Iraq indefinitely. There is no "middle ground" and there is no "third way." Being for one of those positions automatically means you are against the other position, and vice versa -- it's a zero sum question, no matter how much the Washington Post, the Beltway neoconservatives or D.C. Republican Party operatives try to fudge the issue with warmed over double talk. In other words, this is the one of the times where Bush's black-or-white world view is actually applicable: you are either for ultimately bringing troops home, or you are against ultimately bringing troops home - and thus for leaving them as targets in the Iraqi shooting gallery indefinitely.

Democratic incumbents and candidates have largely united in support of pushing the White House to begin crafting a plan to get troops out of Iraq. That is a position polls show the majority of Americans support -- and a position the stay-in-Iraq-indefinitely Republican Party opposes. While the Post may want to try to create false Democratic rifts in order to fabricate grist for its front page, and may want to push dishonest storylines about the GOP supposedly not being for indefinite troop deployments, the facts speak for themselves.

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David Sirota is the author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government--and How We Take It Back (Crown, 2006).

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bases
Posted by: rsaxto on Aug 28, 2006 2:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as the Congress continues to appropriate more money for bases it is clear the Bushies have no intention for troups to ever leave Iraq. All Bushie or other Republican or media statements that say troops will be withdrawn are false without Congress cutting off the base money. Follow the base money and see that propaganda is still being employed to cover up the plan to never withdraw troops from Iraq. Never withdraw = never peace.

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» RE: bases Posted by: symcokid
If only press wasn't owned by 7 corporations...
Posted by: owlbear1 on Aug 28, 2006 4:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please stop acting surprised the editors and reporters and producers are going to do anything more than make their owners look good?

Just report what they didn't and stop whining?

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It takes guts but we can stand up to both parties.
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Aug 28, 2006 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Doesn't it seem strange that Repiblican congressmen who're up for reelection aren't jumping ship to get on the anti-war side? And that theRepublican Party leadership still supports a long war when the electorate is against it? Then again why hasn't the Democratic leadership come up with a plan for early withdrawal or even set a commitment to a target date for withdrawal?

It could be conjectured that neither party represents the voters; that they both represent the corporate establishment. Considering that the campaigns of both are financed by the corporatocracy that idea isn't too far-fetched.

The voters can try to force a commitment to our issues by demanding that our issues be included in the platform of at least one party. Why vote for a party that doesn't represent you? The lesser evil strategy doesn't work for us.

I believe that the voters can take control of both parties before the next election. How? By letting both parties know what we want and letting them compete for our votes. It is a strategy using the often successful tactics of the labor unions and the only one that can work in the short time left before November.

Look into The Lincoln Initiative. It is a strategy to make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people", a reality.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.

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New SS for the US of A
Posted by: rkewen on Aug 28, 2006 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you intend to control the world and all its peeeples, you need lots of cops and lots of cop shops, conveiniently located anywhere there are both peeeples needing control and resources coveted by the Bu$hco Cabal.

i.e.

Iraq -> oil -->lotsa pissed peeeples = lotsa shiney new copshops.

Somalia -->no oil ---> lotsa pissed off peeeples = no copshops

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Yes Indeed permanent "Cop Shops"
Posted by: R.I.P. on Aug 28, 2006 8:33 AM   
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This has the added advantage of keeping the corrupt contractors very, very, busy... for ever and ever - amen.

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Obviously, the corporate media is rooting for a Republican victory
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Aug 28, 2006 2:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But what they won't go into is the reasons for their support, which are ultimately financial in nature.

Corporate head honchos, both CEOs and Board Members, have done obscenely well under Bush - record profits in oil and energy in particular - and they want to keep the gravy train coming.

What Bush has done is created a huge corporate welfare program which is based on giving middle-class tax dollars to his politically connected cronies across the board - Halliburton, Bechtel, etc. Just look at the specific case of "Iraqi Reconstruction Contracts": (from 2003)

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/rebuilding_iraq/index.asp

If you want those contracts, be sure to bring cigars, jewelry, prostitutes, envelopes stuffed with $100 bills and similar treats to the officer in charge:
Sydney Herald, Iraq contracts corruption revealed August 26, 2006 - 7:29AM

That's just one small example - the complete list of fat government giveaways to the pharma sector (billions in grants), the oil gas and coal crowd - it goes on and on - and then the President has the nerve to get up and claim that he "supports renewable energy" while porviding zero funding in that area. How many official lies from official sources will the media broadcast without question?

The fact is, the same people who control corporate media outlets are those who benefit the most from Bush's creeping fascism, or as he calls it, "government-business partnerships that benefit the nation". IG Farben had similar 'arrangements' with the German government back in the 40's. To the German industrialists, Hitler was a reasonable fellow who was dedicated to German business interests... maybe it's time to reconsider supporting this lunatic?

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One Simple Reason Why The World Hates America
Posted by: braxxian on Aug 28, 2006 6:46 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was watching FOX news the other day (Yes I know they are pro Bush but I try and keep an open mind). During one of the programs the presenter was talking to an ex-military General about Iran and the overall situation there. The conversation went something like this.

FOX Presenter. “So General what is the best way for the US to deal with Iran”?

Ex Military General. “What we need to be doing is to support all the opposition groups in Iran, if we support them with cash, information and backing I think they will have a good chance to topple the government etc, etc, etc”

I just sat there and shook my head. Here in a nutshell is a classic example of why the world hates America so much. Here out in the open on one of their major news channels that beams all around the world they are openly discussing the best way to topple another nations government and install someone more manageable to run the country. Until the US starts acting like a responsible world leader instead of the local school yard bully its stocks will continue to plummet and in time Iraq will be the least of their problems.

You have been warned.

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George W. Nixon's Secret Plan to "End" The War
Posted by: pelle_in_goal on Aug 29, 2006 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's deja vu all over again.

Can you believe that some people still think that Richard Nixon somehow saved America's ass in Vietnam? Go figure. But when the Pentagon goes to fight a war using Nixon's strategy -- and that got them nowhere in Vietnam -- there must be some.

Maybe we haven't completely gotten over all the jubilant homecoming parades after the first Gulf War. The subtext idea -- that the US had somehow avenged its defeat in Vietnam -- was irresistible. I mean...under what other rationale would the Pentagon manage to use the same Vietnam war strategy that it's been using in Iraq since the start of the current war.

In Indochina, our South Vietnamese ally never really got beyond massive corruption, petty bickering, and major turf wars between RVN generals over drug and gun sales -- then known as the "coup d'etat of the week." As long as we were in Vietnam, the Saigon regime was a laughing stock to its own people. That is -- when it wasn't slaughtering them in reprisals or moving them to concentration camps. And ultimately, the South could never really instill in the population the will to fight the NVA and Viet Cong -- as long as their government remained a US puppet.

Richard Nixon's 1968 campaign promise that he had a "secret plan" to end the Vietnam War turned out to be nothing more than an empty shell of rhetoric. It turned out it was "secret" because it was pure bullshit; nothing more. In 1969, Nixon moved US military planning into the "Peace With Honor" phase, then to the "Vietnamization" (downsizing) of the war. American troops would eventually be withdrawn from Indochina no matter what. Smart commies soon realized -- that by merely waiting for US troops to take the bus back to the States -- they'd win the war outright.

The good news is that there's no reason why this formula for success can't not work again! America fighting the communists for "democracy" in Vietnam was always a joke. America freeing Iraq has been always a joke. In Vietnam, we mostly wanted to maintain the bases we'd built at the start of the build-up in 1965 -- particularly Cam Ranh Bay Naval Base and Tan Son Nhut AFB. Ultimately, America's was simply continuing the policy of communist containment Truman started back in 1946. We were in 'Nam to keep Red China out of the Gulf of Tonkin and contain China's southern flank with air and sea power.

Even though we realize we needed a bigger, better autocrat to run the Iraq mess, military "Darwinism" isn't providing the answers. It never did in Vietnam, either. So in the end losing that war truly was our fault. The US military had never really developed an effective counter-insurgency capability -- unless you count that horseshit move John Wayne made with the guy who played "The Fugitive."

However, the Pentagon can still at least maintain military bases in Iraq. 'Course, if the whole country goes "viet cong", we go, too. The US military still hasn't developed an effective counter-insurgency force even though Iraq and Afghanistan have been great opportunities to finally develop just that. One capable enough to hold more than the Baghdad Green Zone and some firebase perimeters out in "Indian country." Or effective enough to move the oil infrastructure underground and hope the Iraqis can't find it. On the bright side, Rumsfeld and Cheney will probably have better luck with the dictators we install than we had in Vietnam -- once the rebels run out of IEDs.

No wonder politicians are dumbfounded by it all. Not even a subservient MSM -- run from the office of Roger Ailes and exacted out to every corporate news outlet daily -- sometimes hourly -- can keep the lid on the truth much longer. Then again, they only need to do it for the next 10 weeks.

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