RE: virus: War & Peace / Rethinking Iraq

From: Jonathan Davis (jonathan.davis@lineone.net)
Date: Wed May 05 2004 - 17:33:13 MDT

  • Next message: Joe Dees: "Re:virus: War & Peace / Rethinking Iraq"

    If by Bush apologist you mean people like me, then you are right about one
    thing: my opinions have not changed one whit.

    The reasons for going to war are as sound as ever, even with the benefit of
    20:20 hindsight. Even what I considered one of the lower order good reasons
    (of many) - the WMD *threat* - was real and increasingly we see evidence of
    what happened to Saddam's arsenal (it went to Syria) and there are
    studiously under-reported discoveries of his nuclear and weapons program
    almost every day.

    Iranian and Syrian backed insurrections are causing a few problems, but the
    military response has be nothing short of brilliant. The situation in
    troubled but utterly winnable. If people back home have courage,
    determination and good will.

    I this forum, politically, we get a self-reinforcing cycle of anti-Bush and
    anti-War opining that whilst emboldening rabid anti-Semites bigots like Jei
    and spurring my esteemed fellows Jake and Kalkor to harsh claims, is mostly
    unbalanced and based on bunk.

    For quality analysis of what I going on in Iraq, why not try dispassionate
    and balanced commentary? Try:

    http://belmontclub.blogspot.com/

    I also recommend the absolutely brilliant Victor Davis Hanson. Here are two
    latest essays:

    What the President Might Say
    http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson200404300833.asp

    Myth or Reality?
    Will Iraq work? That's up to us.
    http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson200404230833.asp

    His recent essay on the Iraqi torture scandal is magnificent. He concludes:

    "If a small number of soldiers has transgressed, then let us punish them
    severely, as well as the officers who either ordered or ignored such
    reprehensible behaviour. But let us also accept that the reaction to this
    incident is indicative of larger moral asymmetries that are the burdens of
    the West when it goes to war, a culture that so often equates the
    understandable absence of perfection, either moral, political, or military,
    with abject failure -- a fact not lost on our enemies.

    We have seen terrible things since September 11 -- monotonous public
    executions, taped decapitations, videos of brutalized hostages, diplomats
    gunned down, aid workers riddled with bullets, children's bodies blown apart
    by improvised explosive devices, nuts, bolts and rat poison added to suicide
    bombs -- most under either the sponsorship of some autocratic Middle Eastern
    governments or of terrorist cabals that could not exist without at least the
    tacit support of thousands in the Arab street.

    So as we in America address the moral inadequacies of a handful of our
    soldiers, let those in the Middle East take heart from our own necessary and
    stern democratic inquiries and audits, and thus at last now apply the same
    standards of accountability to tens of thousands, far more culpable, of
    their own."

    http://www.benadorassociates.com/article/3955

    Just for the record, Kalkor and Jake what do you recommend as the solution
    to the Iraq situation? US pullout? Reinstatement of Saddam? Handing over to
    Al Sadr?

    I suggest you heed the UN representative to Iraq :

    "A key question is whether a credible political process is even viable under
    such circumstances [Limbic notes this he refers to recent insurrection and
    strife]. It is important to note, in this context, that the limited task we
    are presently engaged in - the formation of an administration to assume
    responsibility as of 30 June - is part of a much broader political process,
    and that this political process has to be seen against the background of the
    realities that made it necessary: namely, war and occupation and, before
    that, a very harsh and brutal regime, and severe, even crippling sanctions,
    not to mention two earlier devastating and costly wars.

    The political process aims at restoring Iraqi sovereignty and independence,
    preserving the country's unity and territorial integrity, and making the
    Iraqi people truly the masters of their own destiny, with the political
    system of their choice and control over their own natural resources.

    So: Is it possible for the process to proceed under such circumstances? Will
    it be viable? Will it be credible? I put it to you and the Council, Mr.
    President, that *there is in fact no alternative but to find a way of making
    the process viable and credible*. Between security on the one hand, and the
    end of occupation, the restoration of sovereignty and independence and the
    advent of a legitimate Iraqi government and political regime on the other,
    there is a dialectical link which is obvious. Security is essential for the
    process to be completed. A viable political process is no panacea. It is a
    powerful contributing factor to security; hence, the importance for a
    credible Iraqi Government to be in place and lead the way in the completion
    of the next phase of the political process. In the end, the solution to
    Iraq's problems will have to come from the Iraqis themselves. The sooner a
    credible Iraqi government is in place to lead the way, the better,
    especially because the absence of such a sovereign government is part of the
    problem in the first place."

    http://www.un.org/apps/news/infocusnewsiraq1.asp?NewsID=730&sID=19

    Let's stop gloating at every setback and roaring "I told you so" so very
    prematurely about circumstances long anticipated and in the scheme of things
    minor setbacks agitated by countries who are trying to divert attention from
    the WMD programs.

    Iraq has to work. If it fails it will not be anyone's fault by the tribal
    mafia/Mujahedin/Islamist alliance, the hostile western and Arab press and
    those of you who continue to take out your anger at being impotent to stop
    the war by supporting the ruining of the peace.

    Regards

    Limbic

    -----Original Message-----
    From: owner-virus@lucifer.com [mailto:owner-virus@lucifer.com] On Behalf Of
    Blunderov
    Sent: 05 May 2004 21:32
    To: virus@lucifer.com
    Subject: RE: virus: War & Peace / Rethinking Iraq

    Jake Sapiens
    Sent: 05 May 2004 10:58 PM
     
    It's generally much more easy and comfortable to attack a source that says
    "I told you so", rather than admit that you were completely or almost
    completely wrong. Habitual Bush apologists seem to have no lack of
    irrational denial to call upon in these situations. I wouldn't expect even
    a bare modicum of intellectual honesty from them from here on out now that
    almost all of their rationalizations have gone up in delusional smoke.
    It's a pretty common human response, however, so I wouldn't automatically
    write them all off as anything less than common without knowing more.
    Disillusion is an ugly process that often has no concern for honesty or
    reality unless and until it has run its course.

    [Blunderov] The whole Iraq scenario is a hideous fiasco and now the whole
    world appears to be seething with bombs in public places. (Hope the Rhino is
    safe.)

    At least Jubagulord made it out OK.

    'Cry Havoc and let slip the dogs of war'. Havoc it certainly is and so it
    looks to remain.

    Gloomily

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