'Hope' is politics, not real Iran, Iraq policy February 29, 2008 STEVE HUNTLEY shuntley@suntimes.com The political salvos over Iraq between Barack Obama and John McCain the other day made for good political theater. More important, the exchange offered a revealing contrast between the politics of realism and the politics of ...
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| America Fuck Yea Election Moderator Republican In Name Only ![]()
| 'Hope' is politics, not real Iran, Iraq policy
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Originally Posted by kinggovernor Iraq is only a TACTICAL battle on the war on terror. Leaving it, whether in "victory" - whatever that means these days - or "defeat", does not mean we won or loss the war on terror. Afghanistan is still strategically more important as is Pakistan, not to mention getting rid of any terror cells that are in our country or our in our allies right now.
Getting out of Iraq so that we can concentrate our resources on more strategically important things can be argued as the right policy in the objective to make America safer. A strategy Obama has been arguing all along. There is a strategy - of course not perfect - the reporter is not looking at the big picture.
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| Policy Wonk Pragmatist NEIA ![]()
| If we leave Iraq will Al Quida stay? | ||||
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| America Fuck Yea Election Moderator Republican In Name Only ![]()
| Originally Posted by David Octavius What do you mean by only tactical?
Afghanistan and Iraq are of equal importance, we cannot allow Al Qaeda to set up shop in either country. He is arguing that he wants to leave but return if Al Qaeda is there. Well they are now, and he just answers back "well that is Bush's fault". That isn't a real policy. | ||||
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| America Fuck Yea Election Moderator Republican In Name Only ![]()
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Our Objective - To Make America Safe from "Extremists" and prevent another 9/11 Strategy - Take out Osama Destroy AQ Tactics - Invade Afghanistan Invade Iraq (How this matches the strategy and objectives I have no idea) Monitor Overseas calls etc etc Looking at the big picture - One can easily make the argument that Iraq was a tactical blunder in the whole "war on terror" because neither strategies were fulfilled, which means we didn't achieve our overall objectives. By being in Iraq we didn't take out Osama and AQ got stronger, it is a failure in those regards. However in the big picture, we can still fulfill our objectives by concentrating our resources on the other tactics like Afghanistan. But in order to do that we need more resources - short of a draft and higher taxes - the only logical thing we can do it pull out of the tactical front that yields no results (Iraq) and put it where we can maximize it. | ||||
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| America Fuck Yea Election Moderator Republican In Name Only ![]()
| Originally Posted by David Octavius so Obama agrees that there is Al Qaeda in Iraq right now, but wants to leave but wants to come back if there is Al Qaeda in Iraq.
Do you see a problem with that policy? | ||||
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Yes I do, but I see a bigger issue with letting Osama and his cohorts escape in the hills of Afghanistan or Pakistan. It sucks but the latter are bigger threats to our security than AQ in Iraq. | ||||
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| Political Genius Republican Yorba Linda Ca. ![]()
| Originally Posted by kinggovernor
I want to know how Obama will pay for it and how many American lives it will cost to retake control of what we already have?
__________________ Sock It To Me! ![]() "Bureaucracy is a Parasite that Preys on Free Thought and Suffocates Free Spirit!" - Douglas Adams | ||||
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| America Fuck Yea Election Moderator Republican In Name Only ![]()
| Originally Posted by David Octavius Ok so the article is correct, he is full of rhetoric and does not have a solid policy.
I agree that Afghanistan/Pakistan is equally important but what would you do about terrorists running into Pakistan? Would you invade it? | ||||
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Originally Posted by kinggovernor No the article is not correct when you look at the big picture war on terror and our objective to make America safer. Its a perspective thing, you can argue both sides (to be in or leave) persuasively but in the end, both sides are not 100% correct and both have consequences.
That being said, you don't just invade a sovereign nation, rather, with a nation like Pakistan, you work with them and assist (not just take their word for it but actually participate) in tactical operations of known terrorist locations and take them out. We become the silent partner, the domestic and foreign news will report on Pakistan taking out the terror camps, not America going into another land and bombing. Look at it like this, if Canada needed to protect some interest it had by taking out a hostile cell in our country, would it look better if they sent a plane and bombed one our towns or would it look better if they worked and assisted the FBI and all we learned is that the FBI took it out themselves? No matter how noble the intention is, it is the perception of it that creates judgement and actions | ||||
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| ipsa Scientia Potestas est Pragmatist Greensboro, NC ![]() ![]() ![]()
| Once we leave Iraq, Al Qaeda wont be there.. the Shia majority in Iraq will target them and get rid of them.. they have a vast ideological difference and don't like each other, and when they aren't busy killing Americans, they fight and kill each other. It's nice to see people taking a more in depth look at Obama's real lack of depth on the issues though, that's my biggest problem with him.. every time he has to talk about something substantively, he's usually agreeing with Hillary or one of the other people who were running, and then expands on what they said with generic rhetoric that speaks very broadly and vaguely. Looks like he's going to wrap up the nomination though, so hopefully he can get a crash course by the time he's debating McCain. | ||||
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| Political Genius Republican Yorba Linda Ca. ![]()
| The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows John McCain with a slight lead over both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. McCain now leads Obama 48% to 43% and Clinton 47% to 44%! | ||||
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Originally Posted by motivez
How is what he says any less depth than McCain or Hillary with respect to Iraq? And when it comes to healthcare, you know full well their plans will not pass without some kind of modifications so her depth in that plan is really an exercise in futility. She likes to think of herself as a "policy wonk" but funny thing, many Presidents who were like that had some of the most lackluster Presidencies in our history. Policy wonks make poor leaders | ||||
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| ipsa Scientia Potestas est Pragmatist Greensboro, NC ![]() ![]() ![]()
| Unlike Hillary, Edwards, and McCain, Obama has never really explained in detail what he wants to do in Iraq, at least that I've seen. Not in the debates I've watched or in any speeches I've managed to catch. This most recent time he tried to give a specific answer about something relating to Iraq, about going back in and attacking Al Qaeda.. has been a huge fiasco for him, because it highlighted his inexperience, and let McCain respond in a way that made him look that way. As far as health care, eh, the plans are so similar it doesn't really matter too much, aside from the fact that Obama's plan writes financial instability into the plan from the get go, but aside from that, Obama's plan will be chipped away until it doesn't resemble anything he's talking about now while he gives away the farm in the interest of compromising people that will despise his plan and work as hard as they can to defeat it. And I don't know why you continue to try to get me to defend Hillary, but it's getting pretty old. Having doubts about Obama and wanting more from him doesn't equate to defending Hillary | ||||
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| George W Bush, God's Tool Independent ny ![]() ![]()
| Dude I've never asked you to defend Hillary so your canned answer is getting old and tiering. Your problem with Obama is lack of experience, I'm comparing that to Hillary who people seem to think has it (and since you bring up her name when you talk about it in respect to Obama), so I use it so I can draw contrasts. But ok, take away the name Hillary from my posts, my points still stand about what so called "experience" can do. Yet you don't address, you keep thinking all I am doing it making you defend Her. Don't defend her, but don't complain about experience if you can't even answer the substance of my posts. | ||||
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| ipsa Scientia Potestas est Pragmatist Greensboro, NC ![]() ![]() ![]()
| You imply it in your posts, but whatever. I don't support Hillary. My problem with Obama isn't lack of experience per se, but rather the fact that he's failed time and time again to be expansive on the issues. He talks in generalities instead of specifics. We saw it last debate, if he had been asked the question about Russia before Hillary, I think he would have been in trouble. And, even after relying on Hillary's answer to gloss over giving specifics, he gave really no information about how he'd address the issue. Let's look at the transcript:
In the debates, he relies on another candidate to give the specifics (because they're asked instead of him), then gives a general answer that doesn't really talk about how he'd address the issue. Even after Russert's followup, he essentially said what anyone could say, "Lets work with the international community." .. it's a platitude. If it was just a one time thing, no big deal.. but whoever the next President is will have to be able to have a strong hand and the ability to clean up after Bush, if Obama doesn't give us specifics on how he'd deal with something, how are we supposed to be able to judge his ability to be President? | ||||
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| Political Genius Republican Yorba Linda Ca. ![]()
| Originally Posted by motivez And I think that is starting to worry a number of Democrats.
Lets face it, McCain will never beat Obama at American Idol. So he will come at him by contrasting issues. Hillary has been weak at this because they are to close. McCain will not have as big a problem in trying to define himself as an alternative. He also has a bipartisan record he can back up with facts, not just rhetoric. | ||||
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