10/4/2007 12:43:34 PM
10/4/2007 12:44:26 PM
^ You're continuing to defend a sinking ship...The surge in troops has not generated a surge in progress, which was the real goal in the first place. Instead, since the surge we've seen basically "business as usual." How then can you claim that the surge is a success?Feel free to explain how the surge has made things any better now than they were 4 months ago...
10/4/2007 1:25:39 PM
10/4/2007 3:41:12 PM
10/4/2007 4:27:09 PM
10/4/2007 4:28:22 PM
10/4/2007 4:28:35 PM
It is looking more and more like the surge could be a tactical success, but a strategic failure.
10/4/2007 4:42:22 PM
JCASH how come anyone who wants the US to succeed is labelled a "neocon" by you
10/4/2007 4:47:05 PM
Hah! I have never equated the neoconservatives with success. Unwrap your mind from hard political delineation and accept that certain people don't fit the preconceived mold that you have for them. I have a very special place in my heart for neoconservatives filled with utter loathing, but that doesn’t mean that I want the US effort in Iraq to fail. Contrary to that, I believe that the neoconservative ideology and its refusal to take a realistic look at its failures in the early stages of the war set us up for the mess we’re in now.On the other hand, how come anyone who disagrees with you wants the US to fail?[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 4:54 PM. Reason : thx joe]
10/4/2007 4:51:04 PM
10/4/2007 4:57:31 PM
I don't make presumptions to know what people believe as a whole beyond what they post on TWW but you have expressed ideology along the neoconservative lines, and it is a self-labeled neoconservative administration whose position you are defending (even if you're not defending the administration itself).I was making a larger comment about the administration's consistent refusal to admit bad news or to dismiss it as irrelevant. This position ruined the President's credibility by 2005 and made it exceptionally difficult for good news to be taken seriously. Couple this with the fact that the (by all accounts) sycophantic and ideologically driven staff that surrounds President Bush, and you get an organizational culture that prefers politically continent denial to the hard reality of land combat. This ignorant stubbornness has cost thousands of lives, the momentum we had in the summer of 2003, and the goodwill of the world.The reality that I face is that two of my friends and one of my classmates from college are dead, one of the guys I work with every day will limp the rest of his life because of an IED, and thousands of other Soldiers, Marines, Airmen, and Sailors will live with debilitating injuries because of this ideological stupidity. So when you say the war cannot be quantified, I'll be god-damned if I don't see the quantifiable cost every day.So you see Twista my insistence that progress or failure can be measured, and that we need to weigh the potential for victory against the toll in human lives and on the military as a whole (GEN Cody, Army Chief of Staff has flat out said that the Army is past the breaking point) is not defeatism, it is precisely what we owe the people we send into harms way.[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 5:28 PM. Reason : I'm not setting myself up as a martyr or badass either, the war just isn't an abstraction to me]
10/4/2007 5:17:08 PM
10/4/2007 5:21:50 PM
^ I think it has more to do with your defense and justification of this administration's policies that led him to say that. To be honest, it's a trivial point and not worth debating. I for one don't have the time or inclination to review TreeTwista10's posts to determine is he IS in fact a neocon.Besides, given their track record, that's a pretty big insult to call someone a neocon... one which I don't think even TreeTwista10 deserves
10/4/2007 6:06:27 PM
10/4/2007 7:02:32 PM
So did LogicTwister give up on his "war is unquantifiable" argument or not? I don't feel like wading through the shit to figure this out.]
10/4/2007 8:54:26 PM
^ Honestly I haven't got a clue why any of you are bothering to talk about it.My take - If you're going to try and quantify progress in Iraq, then use stats that have some legitimate value. Lowering deaths 50% in one month means absolutely nothing. 3 years of continually lowering deaths by 10%... now THAT would mean something.
10/5/2007 12:13:17 PM
10/6/2007 1:51:39 PM
Al-Qaeda In Iraq Reported Crippled
10/15/2007 1:54:09 PM
If it's an important question then there must be something you can do with the answer. So if the surge isn't working what would the next step be? While the bush administration continues to make bad moves all I see anyone doing is pointing out that they were bad moves.
10/15/2007 3:08:50 PM
let get dem evil turrists
10/15/2007 3:12:02 PM
kinda makes you wonder why all this discussion about atrocities committed by turkey more than 100 years ago doesn't it.....and why all of a sudden they decide to send forces into iraq....and how this will hurt our supply chain for the troopsI mean all of this seems to be happening rather quickly, and when we have good news out about how the war is going...anyone care to explain?
10/15/2007 3:37:35 PM
Yea, its working. So sorry.http://www.michaeltotten.com/http://michaelyon-online.com/
10/15/2007 3:50:11 PM
It seems weird to me how fascinated you are with that guy and his website? Do you know someone that knows someone? I imagine you don't even read everything he writes (any?) because you never comment about any of it. Anyone can copy and paste and make it look like they read something, what's the fucking point of posting it in every thread if you aren't going to add to it?
10/15/2007 6:18:13 PM
^^^ No less than Bill Maher explains it all in this edifying video clip:http://youtube.com/watch?v=kth7T198VWI(Please embed.)
10/16/2007 12:58:50 AM
buy a premium account and embed your own damn videos actually, that was pretty funny.and yeah, i dont get it either.the House is condemning the Ottoman Empire for some genocide 90 years ago, and the Senate is signing important letters to Mark Mays (Clearwire CEO) about chastising Rush Limbaugh.jesus fucking christ.it's an embarrassing week to be a Democrat[Edited on October 16, 2007 at 1:43 AM. Reason : ]
10/16/2007 1:39:30 AM
^ It's true. The Democrats are doing style over substance now--with the Armenian thing anyway--because they can't seem to get substantive parts of their agenda passed. Even Bill Maher recognizes this and he's hardly a member of the "vast right-wing conspiracy." I don't even mean this as a partisan attack--I swear. But the whole Armenian thing--now?--is just bizarre.[Edited on October 16, 2007 at 2:05 AM. Reason : .]
10/16/2007 1:44:23 AM
Even Bill Maher joe_schmoe recognizes this and he's hardly a member of the "vast right-wing conspiracy.[Edited on October 16, 2007 at 2:10 AM. Reason : ]
10/16/2007 1:47:21 AM
10/16/2007 9:06:44 AM
Here is the more difficult question:Given that the surge is working by your definition, how do propose that we keep the troop levels high enough to preserve the current level of security? Institute a draft? More/longer tours of duty? Some other proposal?What is very worrisome is that none of the likely explanations for reductions in violence appear both positive and sustainable:1) We are succeeding militarily because of our surge strength, which is not sustainable without a draft. No Iraqi institutions are anywhere close to sufficient for assuming responsibility if/when our troops are reduced.2) The autonomous sheiks and warlords really in charge are holding off on attacks as long as we continue buying them off. When we quit providing arms and/or we leave, they will be better armed for the inevitable civil war.3) The surge has pushed insurgents to different locations, but the comparative lull is temporary.Without more happening in the background, my worry is that the surge is simply prolonging the inevitable. Even the current strength has not been enough to build sustainable institutions and rebuild infrastructure. Both proponents and opponents of the surge policy agreed up front that the policy was temporary, and only intended to provide a window for sustainable domestic institutions to form. Without the formation of those institutions, whether the surge is working from a security standpoint becomes more and more irrelevant. Here is the reality that noone wants to acknowledge: whether or not the surge is working, we will have little choice but to abandon it in the coming months.
10/16/2007 11:08:29 AM
10/16/2007 12:22:23 PM
10/16/2007 1:01:14 PM
^ actually, markgoal's post was entirely lucid and exactly to the point.these are the questions that SHOULD have been asked BEFORE we invaded, but the few people with enough expericence and foresight who WERE asking them got summarily dismissed or squelched by Cheney/Rumsfeld/Wolfowitz/Perle and pals.now we're going to pay for it. well... we're going to pay with our money and international credibility. the Iraqis are going to pay for it with their lives and the lives of their children.now please tell me you're joking with that "why do you hate freedom" bullshit.[Edited on October 16, 2007 at 1:59 PM. Reason : ]
10/16/2007 1:57:11 PM
I hate to be a negative nancy about good news, but I watched the Yon cnn clip from above, it's a bit strange that they don't know why things are settled down there now, just that they are settled.Really gives me warm fuzzies about the capability of our forces on the ground (or perhaps the British forces that pulled out of the area if I remember the clip correctly from when I watched it earlier today).
10/16/2007 10:18:32 PM
^
10/16/2007 11:18:04 PM
^^ IIRC, the south of Iraq (Basra, et. al.) has consistently been the most peaceful and stable. largely due to the population being homogeneously Shi'a. that the area ever became, even if only for a while, lawless and violent, was an indication of how badly we were failing in Iraq in general. that the south is stable again, only means we're back to the zero-line. taken alone, relative peace in the south of Iraq is not an indication of overall success by any stretch.and to repeat Markgoal (who is himself summarizing the most informed military analysts), the "surge" is only successful in as much as one that increased troop presence in "area X" has led to decreased violence in "area X". --- but the whole point of the surge is the generally-held theory that political and social stability can only come after physical security, and that physical security will only continue once political stability is achieved. we are providing the the physical security. and yes it is relatively effective, although at a huge cost. but so far, the Iraqis have not made much, if any, progress towards real political and social stability.and we cant maintain the "surge" indefinitely. thats why its called a "surge" and not a "sustained increase"
10/16/2007 11:31:00 PM
If the "surge" in Iraq continues to be effective, the political process and Iraqi security forces can solidify, which is obviously one of the surge's goals, and we won't need to maintain high levels of forces. I mean, this is already starting to happen, folks. 1,000 U.K. Troops Coming Home From IraqBritish PM Announces Cut On Visit To Baghdad; Iraqis To Take Over Basra By Decemberhttp://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/10/02/iraq/main3317474.shtml100,000 U.S. troops could leave soon: Iraq president
10/17/2007 12:12:20 AM
10/17/2007 1:35:46 AM
^ 1. You ignored the second and most important part of the first headline: "Iraqis To Take Over Basra By December".2. The "100,000" number concerning a reduction in US forces may be high, but President Bush has already committed to ~25,000--and possibly more--in 2008.Bush Tells Nation He Will Begin to Roll Back 'Surge'Gen. Petraeus Says U.S. Is Projecting 'Sustainable Security' in Iraq by 2009
10/17/2007 1:47:44 AM
^ i didnt ignore it. its just not the cause for celebration that you seem to think it is.of course the Iraqis are going to take over security when the Brits leave Basra -- who do you think is going to take over? if the few functional Iraqi security units available cant handle Basra, for chrissakes, then we might as well throw in the towel right now. I mean, it's only about the safest place in Iraq. All we're doing is handing the southern province to them, and saying, "please, please, don't fuck this up."(*takes breath*)yeah, okay. its a good first step. here's to hoping they dont fuck up.
10/17/2007 2:03:41 AM
^ A celebration would certainly be premature on my part or anyone else's--and I did nothing of the sort. I simply choose to focus on the positive news coming out of Iraq and there's nothing wrong with doing that. You should try it sometime.
10/17/2007 2:10:30 AM
nah. i like it better this way:you be polly-anna, and i'll be negative nancy.[Edited on October 17, 2007 at 2:26 AM. Reason : [no homo]
10/17/2007 2:23:55 AM
10/17/2007 6:53:13 AM
10/17/2007 9:47:59 AM
^ I find your Wizard of Oz reference disconcerting, Dorothy.
10/17/2007 11:24:54 AM
^ I think you should stick to searching for your long lost brain, Scarecrow
10/17/2007 12:37:17 PM
10/17/2007 2:55:51 PM
I think HUR has been particularly levelheaded in here, are you sure you haven't confused him with someone else? It was glaringly oblivious he was being sarcastic.
10/17/2007 2:57:22 PM
for this thread perhaps ... i kind of blurred over pages 4-10. in any event, you need to watch out, HUR will fuck you up when you're not looking.[Edited on October 17, 2007 at 3:02 PM. Reason : ]
10/17/2007 3:00:38 PM
^x4"If I only had a brain. . . ."My gift to you during this harvest season.
10/18/2007 12:15:19 AM