We probably would have been more interested in Syria if we hadn't just finished a war in Iraq over non-existent WMDs
6/23/2014 1:09:58 PM
I wonder if they will ever release the intel that led the Bush administration to think that there were WMD's. I'm surprised wikileaks didn't get ahold of it.
6/23/2014 1:16:14 PM
Could it be that it doesn't exist?
6/23/2014 1:24:15 PM
Democrats in Congress would not have voted for war had they not been presented with something compelling. I don't doubt that Bush wanted to tie up Sr's loose ends, but there had to have been intel.
6/23/2014 1:26:40 PM
6/23/2014 1:38:18 PM
6/23/2014 1:44:26 PM
6/23/2014 1:44:50 PM
I guess I'm not.Earlier you intoned that we as a nation went to war so Dick Cheney could line his pockets from Haliburton, so I guess he must have been handing out dividends to members of Congress?
6/23/2014 1:46:38 PM
no, i said that's why war criminal Dick Cheney wanted to go to war, and its pretty transparent
6/23/2014 1:48:19 PM
6/23/2014 1:53:23 PM
i mean christ, even the guy with GOP in his username recognizes that the justification was false and only thinks the war was okay "because maybe, under the right circumstances, things wouldn't be any better today, so the hundreds of thousands of deaths and trillions of dollars spent were probably worth it"
6/23/2014 2:01:23 PM
I'm not saying what we did was right. I just said that I would like to see the intel that justified going to war.I would just like to personally believe that it existed.
6/23/2014 2:15:09 PM
i like to personally believe that gnomes live in rocks
6/23/2014 2:16:54 PM
There was no intel. The intel they thought they had was from one Iraqi who we now know lied to fulfill his own agenda.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/16/curveball-rafid-ahmed-alw_n_824175.htmlAnd we KNEW he was lying too (at least that's what intelligence agencies said). The administration wanted to go to war, and they were cherry-picking reasons to sell to the public. The obama administration wanted to go to war with Syria and was using the specter of chemical weapons until putin clowned them by offering up the compromise kerry flippantly mentioned wouldn't be possible. The public probably never hears the real reasons for wars (because it's never really as simple as "they are evil"), because a pres. can't go on CNN explaining the history of the factions involved and the strategic positions at play. They have to pick something simple the public will swallow and lobby their representatives to support (WMDs, he helped Osama), and this worked.The real reason is likely commercial interests related to oil, pushed by Cheney, as well as neocon fantasies of bombing countries into democracies that love America.
6/23/2014 5:15:34 PM
6/23/2014 5:32:08 PM
How could you think it was a "wise" decision when the decision makers didn't even anticipate the insurgency? It's one thing to sell the war to the American public/congress on trumped up BS because the real reason isn't marketable, but it's another thing to be drinking so much of your own Kool-Aid that you actually think our forces will be greeted as liberators instead of thinking that perhaps they won't want us there, and perhaps they might mount an insurgency as a result. Do you believe that the positive outcome of removing Saddam from power was worth the costs of 4489 American military lives (32,000+ wounded), $1 trillion+, 200,000+ Iraqi lives etc? If I'm missing some positive outcomes when include them in your answer too.]
6/23/2014 6:19:11 PM
^ not to mention an early post by Grumpy acknowledges long-standing baathist tensions.The only reason Iraq happened was because of 9/11, it was rammed through despite all indications it was a bad idea, and it ended up being a bad idea.The US should be doing good with its power, but Iraq was not on a war footing when we invaded.
6/23/2014 6:40:55 PM
6/23/2014 6:51:20 PM
6/23/2014 6:56:29 PM
6/23/2014 10:17:41 PM
The conflict in Iraq going on now are the Saudis and the Iranians fighting a proxy war. That's what Syria has been for the past two years as well. Saudis are trying to overturn Iraq being a democracy because Iraq being a democracy means the minority Sunnis which controlled Iraq prior to Saddam's overthrow aren't in control, and the Shiites being in control means they side with Iran, which threatens Saudis' control of the greater Middle East. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also called ISIS) were based in northeastern Syria, crossed over the porous borders, and per some Iraqi posters on geopolitical affairs message boards, a few high up generals that were Sunni and likely sympathized with ISIL ordered the Iraqi Army to retreat and also leave their equipment in Mosul, resulting in a massive PR coup for ISIL and pretty much screwed Iraq's short-term political future. 3 generals have been arrested and will likely be executed.No one in the country is happy with Maliki's leadership. The Kurds appear to have agreed some kind of deal where they and ISIL will not attack one another (although there've been skirmishes) and the Kurds seem to see this as their opportunity to create an independent Kurdistan, and the Turks and Iranians seem to be on board which they'd need to be for an independent Kurdistan to exist. They're heavily pushing how their peshmerga forces are securing areas that the Iraqi Army ran away from to the locals. The Iraqi government have brought in Islamic Revolutionary Guard (Iran) Major General Qassem Suleimani to shape up their military forces. Suleimani turned Hezbollah into the force it is today and was put in charge of the Syrian military after their laughable early performance against the Syrian rebels and he's made them far more credible.ISIL look to have rich Saudi and Qatari benefactors. (In addition to getting about $400 million from Mosul banks when they took over the city.)But pretty much one large Middle Eastern civil war. No one did anything to contain the Syrian conflict and it spilled into another state. Pretty predictable. Just a matter of time before it spills into more if borders get redrawn.Personally, I say it's time to talk to the Iranians and become strange bedfellows if we determine the Saudis are funding this group.Imagine in 20 years or so after this is all (hopefully) over, we'll remove the lines on a map and just call all of this one huge pan-Arab conflict where each side has multiple groups and governments belonging to it:
6/23/2014 11:05:11 PM
6/23/2014 11:31:16 PM
6/23/2014 11:42:11 PM
But wait, Iraq would have been destabilized anyway at this point anyway...it's not our fault that we accelerated the process![/bullshit]
6/24/2014 12:08:40 AM
Judge who sentenced Saddam Hussein to death 'is captured and executed by ISIS'http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2665360/Judge-sentenced-Saddam-Hussein-death-captured-executed-ISIS.html
6/24/2014 1:19:30 AM
^^^In the goddamn sentence you quoted I said he didn't collaborate with OBL but with other terrorists. Saddam morally and financially supported suicide bombers in Palestine shortly before the war.The last I heard about the assassination claims was that they were some doubts, not that they'd been revealed as false. If they are false, that would be upsetting, but it's not an error that can be pinned on Bush and Co. Clinton believed it sincerely enough that he retaliated at the time.
6/24/2014 4:53:42 AM
6/24/2014 7:44:38 AM
That's why I'm excited to hear this about Turkey -- partition always seemed like the best (well, least terrible) choice, except for the Turkish position on the Kurds. My understanding is that they thought an independent Kurdistan would by its very existence encourage Kurds in Turkey to press harder for independence, to say nothing of presumed material support to those groups.
6/24/2014 10:34:23 AM
6/24/2014 11:11:06 AM
I'm not going to read anything from the opinion section of "readersupportednews." Bandwidth in Africa costs too much money for that. The wikipedia articles do a good job of showing that a lot of people wanted to get rid of Saddam Hussein and had wanted to for a long time. No shit. I don't trust O'Neill further than I can throw him and the Tenet article pretty much singled out Cheney. I'll give you Cheney and you're welcome to him. There's also some talk about "plans for a post-Saddam Iraq," which means nothing. The US government has plans to invade France, Canada, Bermuda, and every other speck of land on God's green earth. My only problem with our planning for a post-Saddam Iraq is that we clearly didn't do it very well.What I don't see is any evidence that the Bush administration as a whole had long intended to invade Iraq.
6/24/2014 12:13:19 PM
Good idea? Hindsight is 20/20... sometimes... except when you don't get the whole story on anything.I still think W acted on the information he had and believed he was doing the right thing. Maybe not. Either way, I've never thought that the invasion was carried out properly, but I'm not a 5* general either.I will say one thing though. I think if the wars with Iraq and Afghanistan have achieved anything at all, it's that many Americans no longer want to go to war with anyone if possible. Even for the right causes or good intentions, things just don't go well. I think WWII is one of the few prime examples of a long and destructive war being absolutely necessary.
6/24/2014 12:20:15 PM
So I see this:
6/24/2014 3:11:09 PM
6/24/2014 3:19:49 PM
6/24/2014 4:19:40 PM
6/24/2014 5:17:22 PM
6/24/2014 5:48:45 PM
6/24/2014 6:07:00 PM
6/24/2014 6:19:18 PM
6/24/2014 6:30:00 PM
there are dozens more escalating statements by Bush or his administration about Iraq in the year before 9/11.regarding the statement, i was wrong it was 5 hours later, but its realhttp://www.motherjones.com/politics/2011/12/leadup-iraq-war-timeline9/11/01 Al Qaeda attacks. Minutes taken by a Rumsfeld aide five hours later: "Best info fast. Judge whether good enough [to] hit SH [Saddam Hussein] @ same time. Not only UBL [Usama bin Laden]." [Date the public knew: 9/4/02]9/12/01 According to counterterror czar Richard Clarke, "[Bush] told us, 'I want you, as soon as you can, to go back over everything, everything. See if Saddam did this.'" Told evidence against Al Qaeda overwhelming, Bush asks for "any shred" Saddam was involved. [Date the public knew: 3/22/04][link]http://web.archive.org/web/20080525162254/http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/09/04/september11/main520830.shtml[/link]
6/24/2014 6:31:14 PM
6/24/2014 6:52:55 PM
Jesus. In the day or two after 9/11 the country was a shitshow of confusion. We'd barely hammered down what structures had been hit. I remember evening of, going home to reports that the state department had blown up. I know suspicion had coalesced early around Osama but I'm not surprised they were considering other possibilities, and I suspect the list didn't end at Saddam.But let's say there was a massive conspiracy to invade and nation build Iraq from the get-go. That means I'm wrong about this corner of the issue. It still wouldn't demonstrate that the invasion was a bad idea.
6/24/2014 7:13:14 PM
Sure, maybe I went overboard on that last bit, a lot of Presidents made bad decisions based on the advice of people they trusted. And Bush certainly doesn't deserve to be absolved of all responsibility, he clearly wanted this war as much as anyone. I wouldn't call it a conspiracy either, as they've been entirely transparent about their real motivations before, during, and since the war. The problem is that no one really cared, and roughly half the ones who did watch Fox News.
6/24/2014 7:29:30 PM
6/24/2014 10:04:43 PM
6/25/2014 12:20:57 AM
6/25/2014 12:44:46 AM
The full quote, synapse:
6/25/2014 6:05:54 AM
Wow
6/25/2014 6:21:10 AM
6/25/2014 9:38:29 AM
6/25/2014 10:42:26 AM