I think we all know that Al Qaeda is probably regrouped to some form or fassion because of the agreement between the government of Pakistan and the tribal villages on the Afgan border. Those guys are just able to run free. What I find interesting is to see what Pakistan does now that the "Red Mosque" situation is finished. That should have been a slap in the face to Musharraf that doing those kind of deals with barbarians is only going to hurt him. Why won't Pakistan just let us bomb the shit out of those areas? Why won't they go in? Anyways, I think we need to give the surge its time to work. You can't put another 20k soilders in the middle of a civil war and expect things to get better in 20 days. It's not going to happen in that period of time. I'm sure that if we give it the original intended amount of time, another two-three months, and no progress is made, then we will start to draw down troops. Anything sooner is premature.
7/13/2007 9:21:02 AM
#1, it's been well over 20 days#2, I think the surge total was 30k?#3, Unless congress forces his hand, Bush has shown no desire or interest in drawing down the troops until the as yet undefined success is achievedOn NPR, they mentioned the report and said there were 8 benchmarks being met in some way, 8 that weren't, and 2 that were a mixed bag.This sounds like a much more favorable result than Pelosi's blog, assuming that you can give equal weight to the positive benchmarks and negative. It seems like if TreeTwista were a legitimate contributor to this section, and not a worthless troll, he would do us the favor to do this research, rather than just being an annoyance and attacking the source.
7/13/2007 9:44:30 AM
well are you suggesting that we stop the surge and just bring back the troops right now? what are you suggesting? Anything, or are you just hating
7/13/2007 9:47:37 AM
It's been discussed in other threads. This is a thread to discuss if the surge is working. You have basically said it needs more time, even though a report exist discussing progress towards benchmarks. Seems a little strange, don't you think?
7/13/2007 9:54:48 AM
Pelosi's blog, a NYT editorial, and NPR....and you claim you're not liberal Bwahahaha
7/13/2007 10:50:13 AM
I'm typically fiscally conservative, socially left leaning, but I don't want big government thinking they can run people's lives. At this point, Ron Paul has my vote. Guess that makes me a communist. Shurg
7/13/2007 11:20:21 AM
pushing on a balloon...
7/13/2007 11:48:53 AM
The stories coming out of Baghdad on a local level have been quite moving, I'll grant you. Our soldiers have been hard at work over there for 4 years. I have a friend in Afghanistan putting his civil engineering and architectural degrees to use. And yes, on a local level, my friend and our troops in general are having a significant impact. That of course isn't the problem.The problem is the lack of leadership, political foresight, and diplomacy on a national and international level. The Bush Administration has not gotten the Iraqis to stand on their own. They orchestrated the destruction of the former regime, and in turn they are responsible for putting it back together.From the latest report, they've done an atrocious job doing it.http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/12/news/14web-prexy.php4 years later the Iraqis can't run their own national security. 4 years later and the government exists in name only. 4 years later we still have Shia, Kurds, and Sunnis killing each other, that is when they're not killing us. 4 years later... Al Qaida is evidently back on the rise.Yes, I understand why we need to stay. We need to stay to help nurse the fragile Iraqi government to health. We have to protect the Iraqi citizens so they can resume some semblance of normality in their lives. We have to stay because, damnit, we are responsible for fixing what has been broken. This is all well and good, but....Someone please tell me what we're DOING to make some actual PROGRESS. 4 years isn't long enough to at least have a semi-functional government? 4 years isn't long enough to have an Iraqi led security force to monitor Baghdad? 4 years... and Al Qaida isn't any weaker... it's STRONGER.All this, and we've degraded ourselves in the international community. We've seen our British allies fall by the wayside. The US is now more vulnerable to attack than ever before. Why? Because we've sat in a foreign nation for 4 years, and the some people just seem to take offense to this.I support the US troops. I believe they are doing an exceptional, downright admirable job. But those efforts are for nothing unless the Administration, the one that ordered them there, pulls the strings to get progress going at the national/international levels. Without it, the troops are nothing more than sitting ducks for ongoing terrorism. I support our troops... enough so that if they're hard work is being abused... I will demand that they be brought home.Mr. President, you are NOT waiting on the troops to finish the job. They are waiting YOU. Put them in a position to win, or get them the fuck out.[Edited on July 13, 2007 at 1:03 PM. Reason : efad]
7/13/2007 12:59:10 PM
^ that is actually one of the better responses I've read.
7/13/2007 2:05:53 PM
^^ wow, gg dude!
7/13/2007 2:50:44 PM
people are impatient
7/13/2007 2:53:57 PM
^ ya i no rite? most occupation armies throughout history have had to stay 20-30 years.might as well crack open another beer, we aint goin nowhere.
7/13/2007 3:24:04 PM
cheers
7/13/2007 3:56:56 PM
7/13/2007 4:00:25 PM
I dunno why people are so eager to see forward progress in Iraq. I mean clearly, you have to back slide for four years, return al qaeda to the same strength it was in circa Sept 11, 2001, have more terrorist today than then, and have a less safe United States because of this, before you should start to see any forward progress.Seems reasonable to me, dunno why all the fuss.
7/13/2007 4:54:31 PM
^
7/13/2007 4:56:16 PM
i get scared too when i read pelosi's blog and the NYT and listen to NPR
7/13/2007 5:49:01 PM
i aint skeered. i say we stay the course.and give it time to work.don't question our leaders.now shut up and eat it.and watch American Idol tonight at 8.
7/13/2007 5:59:32 PM
so you were being sarcastic earlier when you mentioned the 20-30 year time frame
7/13/2007 6:14:03 PM
sometimes i think you're pretty clever.other times, not so much.
7/13/2007 6:52:33 PM
If reading the speaker's of the house blog scares you, then you have serious psychological problems.[Edited on July 14, 2007 at 11:11 AM. Reason : eh]
7/14/2007 10:43:00 AM
I thought we wouldn't have a good idea if the surge worked or not until like late August or September. What's with all the early doom and gloom ?Oh, I forgot it's time again for congress to fund the troops while simultaneously convincing the far leftthat they are doing something about the war. Yeah, woo hoo, more political grandstanding at the expense of the troops.
7/15/2007 1:50:46 AM
7/15/2007 3:24:30 PM
7/15/2007 4:34:16 PM
http://www.dni.gov/press_releases/20070717_release.pdfA resounding no if you ask me. Oh god, someone please attack this report for having some bias, rather than discussing the report. I know one of you will.
7/18/2007 9:28:50 AM
BlindSheehan
7/18/2007 10:19:11 AM
I wonder where we'd be now had we concentrated our efforts in only afghanistan. Around the beginning of the Iraq invasion Afg. seemed to be on the right track, nobody disputed the fact that we should be there, and from what I could tell, the civilians welcomed us for the most part. Now, b/c of Iraq, afg. is backsliding, it is becoming increasingly hard to keep order, and the taliban is experiencing a resurgence......Did Iraq and the multi fronted war cost us a favorable outcome in afg. too? The start of the multi fronted war is usually the beginning of the end for the aggressor, especially on foreign soil.
7/18/2007 10:21:51 AM
^ Of course it did. Short of dumping MANY more troops into booth regions, we aren't getting anywhere fast with this "war on terror".With that report in hand, I don't see how the Dems can still be such wimps about this thing. Defund the war. Fucking do something.
7/18/2007 10:37:24 AM
7/18/2007 10:40:52 AM
7/18/2007 11:13:45 AM
7/18/2007 11:26:54 AM
defenselink.mil had an article talking about how militarily the surge has made pretty good progress. things could get interesting
7/18/2007 12:31:29 PM
Link plz?In the process of trying to find it, I stumbled on thishttp://www.defenselink.mil/home/dodupdate/iraq-update/Handovers/index.html
7/18/2007 12:50:45 PM
7/18/2007 1:03:40 PM
7/18/2007 1:07:07 PM
Annoyances in airports. The constant reminder of the threat of a catastrophic attack by those in this administration. At some point, this war has to be paid for somehow. Etc.
7/18/2007 1:11:48 PM
i'm pretty sure the "annoyances" in airports were in response to 9/11 since OBVIOUSLY airport security was not good enoughI mean I know you've got to convince yourself that you're really being unfairly inconvenienced and troubled and that this war personally fucks you over, but the fact is your life isn't really any more different in 2007 than it would be if we hadn't been at war the last 4 years...I mean the news you watch on TV and read about online is clearly different but thats about it
7/18/2007 1:21:49 PM
For once I agree with TreeTwista10. Most "inconveniences" that people experience on a daily basis are 9/11 related and the rising price of gas has as much to do with increased worldwide consumption as it does with the war in Iraq. Other than being bombarded by news reports most people in the US are clueless about what happens over there. I had a fairly intelligent woman the other day ask why we went into Afghanistan. [Edited on July 18, 2007 at 1:31 PM. Reason : .]
7/18/2007 1:30:57 PM
7/18/2007 1:48:22 PM
7/18/2007 1:52:45 PM
how dare you make me take my shoes off when i occasionally travel by airplane...i'd rather have the plane blown up than give up my freedom to wear shoes through an airport
7/18/2007 1:58:38 PM
^^ Nice strawman.I am with you that the inconveniences are slight, however they are there. You also didn't address who pays for this war?^Yea, shoes, and water, and ipod chargers, http://www.makezine.com/blog/archive/2007/07/tsa_and_electronics.html?CMP=OTC-0D6B48984890and babies that talk to much, http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?section=local&id=5472927and rocks starshttp://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Entertainment/2007/07/09/metallica_singer_detained_at_airport/2469/and on and on and on[Edited on July 18, 2007 at 2:33 PM. Reason : y]
7/18/2007 2:04:46 PM
^ Strawman? How?I mean, James Hetfield being detained in a British airport isn't really a compelling argument for why the average American has sacrificed for this war. Keep in mind I'm not arguing that the war was right, far from it I have disagreed with it from the start, I despise the Patriot Act, and I feel like the administration has bungled the war from, ohh around May 03 onward. However, being in the Army I have little sympathy for the average American's inconveniences compared to what my friends have been through. "Ohmigaw, it cost me $2.89 a gallon to drive to the mall this weekend, this is so horrible." Please.[Edited on July 18, 2007 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .]
7/18/2007 2:47:33 PM
James Hetfield isn't an American? British airport policy, driven because of our war in Iraq and the newly created "culture of fear from terrorism" isn't compelling? And replace "James Hetfield" with "anyone with a long beard" and it becomes completely compelling. Shall I go find articles where Arab Americans are being treated in the same manner in American airports?The discussion of "war is hell" as some sort of whammy for everyone not fighting the war but is inconvenienced by it is the glaring strawman. Just because you, as a US soldier, probably in uniform half the time with your own little line, isn't accosted in an airport, doesn't mean a shit ton of other people aren't.For a third time now - who pays for this war and how?
7/18/2007 2:53:09 PM
James Hetfield was detained as a matter of British policy, as was Yusef Islam (aka Cat Stevens). Umm, I mean I can check with my lawyers, but last time I saw, congress doesn't have the authority to create British legislation. Something about 1776 and a declaration of something or another. Let me get back to you on that.War is hell. Sarcasm to make a point, ever heard of it? My intent was that, compared historically to other wars in US history, the impact of this particular war on day-to-day life is minimal at best. You can get as angry as you want in your own little world of blind hate, but you'd be wrong. Its cool though, do what works for you buddy.
7/18/2007 3:03:58 PM
7/18/2007 3:20:47 PM
7/18/2007 3:27:19 PM
7/18/2007 4:09:54 PM
I can't help it that you let yourself be terrorized.
7/18/2007 4:14:53 PM
the undenyable fact is we are less safe than we were immediately after 9/11 despite all the precautions, because of our govenment's actions abroad.imagine what we could have gotten done had we invested the some 600 billion, spent on Iraq so far, domestically.
7/18/2007 4:42:48 PM