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Papers Reach Iraq Boiling Point
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While still refusing to use the "W" word in offering advice to Dubya -- that is, "withdrawal" -- some at least are finally using the "L" word, for lies.
Memorial Day seemed to bring out the anger in some editorial writers, who at that time are normally afraid to say anything about a current conflict that might seem to slight the brave sacrifices of men and women, past and present. Maybe it was the steadily growing Iraqi and American death count, or the increasing examples of White House "disassembling" (to quote the president this week), or the horror stories emerging from Gitmo.
Or perhaps it's a hidden trend that might have even more impact than the rest: the writing on the wall spelled out by plunging military recruitment rates. That only adds to the sense that, overall, the Iraq adventure has made America far less safe in this world.
For whatever reason, it's possible that more than a few editorial pages may finally be on the verge of saying "enough is enough." Perhaps they might even catch up with their readers, as the latest Gallup polls find that 57% feel the war is "not worth it," and nearly as many want us to start pulling out troops, not sending more of them.
There were numerous signs of editorial unrest in the past week, too many to cite. The Sun of Baltimore, in its Memorial Day editorial, declared: "If the president truly wished to honor their memory, he would demonstrate to the nation that the government that has botched so much of the war at least has some inkling as to how to draw it to a successful conclusion -- so that the dead will not have died in vain." The Minneapolis Star-Tribune called Iraq "an unnecessary war based on contrived concerns. ... President Bush and those around him lied, and the rest of us let them. Harsh? Yes. True? Also yes."
Steve Chapman, syndicated columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune (and generally considered a conservative), on Thursday declared: "The dilemma the U.S. faces in fighting the insurgents is that military methods are not enough to solve the problem and may make it worse. If the movement is a reaction to the U.S. military presence, keeping American troops in Iraq amounts to fighting a fire with kerosene.
"That explains why the longer we stay, the more suicide attacks we face. And it suggests that the only feasible strategy is to withdraw from Iraq and turn the fight over to the Iraqi government. The alternative is to stay and keep doing what we've been doing for the last two years. But that approach has shown no signs of fostering success. It only promises to raise the cost of failure."
But perhaps the most powerful denunciation came from an unlikely source, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. An editorial in that Hearst paper this past Wednesday, just after Memorial Day, really thundered, and deserves reprinting here:
President Bush was among the 260,000 graves at Arlington National Cemetery when he said it. But it was clear Monday that the president was referring to the more than 1,650 Americans killed to date in Iraq when he said, 'We must honor them by completing the mission for which they gave their lives; by defeating the terrorists.'
Bush insists on clinging to the thoroughly discredited notion that there was any connection between the old Iraqi regime -- no matter how lawless and brutal -- and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
U.S. military action against an Afghan regime that harbored al-Qaida was a legitimate response to the 9/11 attacks. The invasion of Iraq was not.
As of Memorial Day 2003, Bush had declared major combat operations at an end, predicted that weapons of mass destruction would be found and that U.S. forces were in the process of stabilizing Iraq. One hundred sixty U.S. troops had died.
The U.S. death toll has grown more than tenfold. No weapons of mass destruction were found. More than 700 Iraqis have been killed since Iraq's new government was formed April 28.
Bush said of the insurgents at a news conference yesterday, 'I believe the Iraqi government is plenty capable of dealing with them.'
Of course, this is the same president that assured the world that military intervention in Iraq was a last resort and that the United States would make every effort to avoid war through diplomacy. Giving lie to that as well is the so-called Downing Street War Memo, which shows that as early as July 2002, 'Bush wanted to remove Saddam, through military action, justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD ... the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy.'
Perhaps all presidents' remarks in military graveyards are by nature self-serving. But few have been so callow as the president's using the deaths of U.S. troops in his unjustified war as justification for its continuance.At the close of the editorial online, the paper polled readers, asking if they thought it was "time to begin the careful but quick withdrawal of American forces from Iraq?" These highly unscientific surveys usually should be ignored. But the result in this case, from over 2,600 votes, was so one-sided it deserves mention: Nearly 92% called for the beginning of a pullout.
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Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 8, 2005 11:52 AM
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We would do him a favor by impeachment. At least that way, he would likely be allowed to have a life after his presidency.
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» Napa State
Posted by: Iamnotafruittree
» RE: It's about time we heard from responsible conservatives
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» RE: It's about time we heard from responsible conservatives
Posted by: Nick
» RE: It's about time we heard from responsible conservatives
Posted by: royrogers
» RE: It's about time we heard from responsible conservatives
Posted by: ragmachine
» How Come I Don't Feel Better Yet?
Posted by: BriMan
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Posted by: rubymydear on Jun 8, 2005 2:50 PM
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Posted by: bansidh@citlink.net on Jun 8, 2005 3:52 PM
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Posted by: willymack on Jun 8, 2005 5:15 PM
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Posted by: VAGreen on Jun 8, 2005 7:09 PM
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Posted by: monkeywrench on Jun 8, 2005 10:03 PM
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Oh, be still my beating heart, miracles may still be possible!
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» RE: "No Guts, No (Old) Glory"
Posted by: Scott
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Posted by: newshound on Jun 8, 2005 11:18 PM
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My opinion is that Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice are the
absurd ones. The string of lies and denials despite the facts seem to be endless. When will people look at what they are doing instead of what they are saying.
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Posted by: zorro
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Posted by: jcutler9 on Jun 9, 2005 4:05 AM
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» RE: windy, and bloody
Posted by: Scott
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Posted by: churchofone on Jun 9, 2005 5:00 AM
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Posted by: verite on Jun 9, 2005 5:11 AM
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It is a time when P2OG type diversions may be allowed to progress to completion in a desperate attempt to re-instill new mass fear in the general population, and extreme rightist groups, freelance mercenary/contractor types, etc. take unpredicatable action.
Then remember Kurt Vonnegut's query before the USUK attack..
"How many Tim McVeagh's will come home this time?"
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Posted by: The_Liberal_Advocate on Jun 9, 2005 6:13 AM
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The Downing Street memo just proves that the President and his cronies were planning this war around made up "intelligence" and that they had the whole thing planned way before they even brought it to light in the Senate. This deception should be more than enough to impeach this President. He lied to the American people and 1,650 of our soldiers have died for that lie so far! Not to mention all of the innocent Iraqis who have died in vain as well. how can we justify killing all of these people? How many more will it take before we pull out? No matter how long we stay there there WILL be a civil war when we leave! So why stay any longer??? We've set up a governmental system, they have an army, the rebuilding is under way...... What more do we need to do there???
President Clinton lied under oath about sex he had with Monica Lewinski, another ADULT.....and he was skewered as if he was Satan in the media.....yet Bush has told lies that have led us into what looks like to many another Vietnam, and he's been given a pass up until now. Why is that? I can't answer that, but I hope this trend toward a harder stance in the media on the President continues.
Now if we could only get this Downing Street memo some more play in the major media here at home, that would be great! The American people hate to be lied to, and they will deny that they have been lied to for quite some time when it comes from a man they voted for, most especially the President. However, once they finally come to the realization that they have been deceived, LOOK OUT! There will be hell to pay, but it won't happen without the help of the news media! Do your jobs, press people, MAKE Bush answer the hard questions!
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» RE: The_Liberal_Advocate
Posted by: Ely Whitney
» RE: The_Liberal_Advocate
Posted by: Scott
» RE: The_Liberal_Advocate
Posted by: JimActivist
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Posted by: ggmurray on Jun 9, 2005 6:25 AM
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It was an enormous, totally diverse crowd - black, white, Asian, Hispanic, young, old, veterans - solid, determined to prevent this war. Helicopters flew menacingly overhead at times, drowning out the speakers. But nothing could dampen the resolve we felt.
This event was barely reported in the papers. Now at last I hope the media is awaking from the 9/11 mesmerism and taking its rightful place at the table of American democracy.
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Posted by: lucretiam on Jun 9, 2005 6:35 AM
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The one problem is that we have a congress that will do nothing except hold another inquiry that will probably go nowhere when it comes to getting at the truth. We have no opposition ready and willing to hold Mr. Bush and his cronies accountable. The only 2004 presidential candidate using the "I" word is Ralph Nader who publically in the Boston Globe brought it up two weeks ago.
If the news media can spend every single minute dissecting the Monicagate story and our congress can bring articles of impeachment against Mr. Clinton, it can do the same with the
Bush administration. Because after all it depends on what "is" is. As citizens we need to sign on to the request of our state representatives lead by John Conyers and investigate the Downing street memo further.
THANK YOU nancy
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Posted by: morseofcourse on Jun 9, 2005 7:08 AM
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Unfortunately it's MONEY that talks!
RMorse
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» RE: Mainstream Media
Posted by: Ely Whitney
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Posted by: paschn@comcast.net on Jun 9, 2005 7:17 AM
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Posted by: Gale on Jun 9, 2005 8:15 AM
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Long before the "Downing Street Memo" former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill stated in his book "The Price of Loyalty" that , ten days after Bush took office, talks of invading Iraq took place. According to Mr. O'Neill, "getting Hussein" was clearly Bush's main focus and that "documents were being prepared by the DIA mapping out Iraqi's oil fields and exploration areas and listing companies that might be interested in leveraging the precious asset." In February 2001, logistics were being planned. Although O'Neill's book was given some media coverage, Karl Rove and his propaganda machine set out to discredit O'Neill and took attention away from another Bush lie, and the media allowed it to happen. Instead of asking the "hard questions" the media just shot blanks. and the contents of O'Neill's book made its way to the back pages of the nation's newspapers soon to be forgotten.
As of this date, 1,650 brave men and women have lost their lives in this war along with thousands of innocent Iraqi citizens. Now the media shows anger? Now they come out from the back of their desks and denounce the war? Better late than never, some will say. I say, a little too late! But the media can try to redeem themselves by going back and asking the hard questions and reporting the "whole truth" and instead of shooting blanks, they can go back hunting with "live ammunition."
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» Bush spoke of Iraq much eariler......
Posted by: Diecash1
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Posted by: soundbyte on Jun 9, 2005 8:56 AM
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There have been numerous stories about the lies and errors. They get reported, they get denied, they die. The media can't keep repeating the same exact stories, day after day. People just stop paying attention. Some official investigative arm needs to advance the story by providing new elements .. which the media will gladly report. Without an aggresive Democratic Congress providing the fuel, all the Watergate stories in the world wouldn't have led to outrage or impeachment.
Today, the American people have chosen a monolithic, all-Republican government. The fault, America, lies not in our media stars but in ourselves.
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Posted by: royal oak on Jun 9, 2005 9:30 AM
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Posted by: pjrsullivan on Jun 9, 2005 11:51 AM
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War, the one sure route to wealth, is the defilers certain method to diminish what they are.
America win, Iraq win? Whats the difference, both nations are diminished while the defilers are the only true winners. Vietnam, as other wars, the defilers win always, the rest of us are diminished in one way or another.
History is the story of the asswholes robbing and murdering and plundering, yet always after the asswholes are gone, the people would still remain. The asswholes then hired the scientific community to create nuclear weapons, so that the people would finally be put away, and then the earth would be only peopled by the asswholes.
Just when they thought that they had finally gotten away with it, the Extraterrestrials have stepped in to prevent the people from being destroyed with nuclear weapons by the asswholes.
Now we will have history repeat itself again. The Asswholes come, and these Asswholes are going. After these Asswholes go, they are going to stay gone,and the people shall remain. Thanks ET
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Posted by: Ely Whitney on Jun 9, 2005 2:56 PM
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Fast forward to the present.... the american society has grown up in the nap of a have it all and still want more mentality. Look around at the excess that has been created by a society that seems to have forgotten that there should be a real value for a buck. It is not about enjoying that which you have, instead you are judged by that which you have. The car you drive, the size of the house you live in (and now the number of houses you have), the neighbiorhood where you live, the school you attend, the position in the company you work for and the list goes on and on....are you getting the picture??
Americans have soo much and yet want more, where will it end? Now we see a group of Americans that are taking the wanting more to a new high. It is no longer about material things it is about destroying and creating in our likness new ideologies. Thye do not think like us so lets make them... lets convert the savages to our brand of reality.
In the end the reward will be the riches we gain by destroying their world in the name of liberty, afterall we deserve to be compensated for our efforts... we will be compensated!
If you think your American government had not a hand in 911 give your head a shake. If you believe that they lied about WMD, Iraqi ties to 911 an Iraqi threat to world peace then why would you believe so patriotically that your government could not have lied about 911???
Your Government is all about lies...lies and more lies... and the american public licks it up like ice cream...So whatcha gonna do about it?
NOTHING cause it is just easier that way!
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Posted by: cwest on Jun 10, 2005 6:51 PM
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Posted by: chronic on Jun 11, 2005 7:03 AM
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It started from the very beginning with the voting scandal in Florida, (Isn't it strange how Kathryn Harris's name keeps coming up these days?) to lying to Congress about the cost of the Medicare Bill, tax cuts that favor so very few people, and of the course the war in Iraq. Thousands dead, Billions spent, no WMD's, Prisoner abuse and the Downing St. Memo. When and where will it end. Surely the USA cannot afford to ride out the next 3 years on the road we are on.
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Posted by: Scott on Jun 13, 2005 5:24 PM
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