For a minute there I though I was reading a print copy of DU. The right wing Tribune seems to be having some pangs of regret that they supported Bush...
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/(Registration required)
MEASURING THE PRESIDENT
legacy
What will history say about Bush?
By Charles W. Murdock
professor at Loyola University School of Law
Published August 14, 2005
A colleague recently reminded me that, after the 2004 election, I had remarked that President Bush will go down in history either as one of our greatest presidents or one of the worst. He asked whether I still held that somewhat paradoxical view. My response was that events could tip the story either way, but they now seem to be working against the president....
PREDICTION
Forces of politics, not warfare, will bring Iraq pullout by 2006
By E.W. Chamberlain III., E.W. Chamberlain III is a retired Army colonel
Published August 14, 2005
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld rightly states that we need an Iraqi army to defeat the insurgency, and President Bush says it is not yet up to par, so it could be a while before we're out of there.
The president asks us to be patient and stay the course, and that a pullout may take years.
I'll tell you when we'll be out of Iraq.
We will be out of Iraq before the congressional election of 2006. We'll either be completely out or well on our way out with a specified end date.
Here's why.
The toll of the war in both lives and treasure are going well beyond what we were promised. The elections in Iraq already are proving themselves to have been merely a vote of the majority for the majority with no room for any meaningful minority voice in the emerging government...
IRAQ FALLOUT
Deconstructing the war talk as stubborn Bush stays course
By Dennis Jett, dean of the University of Florida International Center and a former U.S. ambassador to Peru and Mozambique
Published August 14, 2005
Nearly half the American people have figured out something that President Bush cannot admit: The war in Iraq is hurting, not helping, the war on terrorism.
According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, 47 percent of Americans have come to that realization. Only 39 percent of those surveyed believe it is helping, and their numbers are steadily falling.
A better understanding of the impact of the war can be found in the comics than in some parts of Washington. In a recent "Doonesbury," journalist Roland Hedley asks a hooded jihadist whether he would concede that by fighting in Iraq, Americans would not have to fight the terrorists on our own streets. The terrorist responds "the war in Iraq is such a godsend for us. It's the greatest recruiting tool in the history of terrorism."...
EVOLUTION OF COMBAT
A new kind of fight changes battle lines
By Leon Daniel, a retired foreign correspondent and editor for United Press International
Published August 14, 2005
The newspaper headshots and thumbnail sketches of our dead in Iraq and Afghanistan disclose that too many of them were teenagers who looked for all the world like the boy or girl next door.
So many of them were 19, the age more-fortunate young Americans begin college. I pay particular attention to the impossibly young faces of the Marines, perhaps because I enlisted in the Corps at age 19 and became a rifle squad leader in the Korean War...
One of the bitter ironies of our current wars is that among their most vocal cheerleaders are men who dodged the one in Vietnam. Some of these war wimps (Vice President Dick Cheney for one) hid behind student deferments, others claimed an "owee knee." Our commander in chief ducked combat by joining the Alabama National Guard.
The president's hell for leather rush to war has dangerously limited our nation's armed forces, which are stretched thin in Afghanistan and Iraq. Multiple tours of duty and extremely heavy reliance on the reserves and national guards have damaged morale. In a few cases, senior citizens have been recalled for duty.
Clarence Page
Mr. President, can we talk about the war too?
Cindy Sheehan's vigil raises uncomfortable questions for Bush
Published August 14, 2005
WASHINGTON -- I sympathize with Cindy Sheehan, the California woman who wants to talk to President Bush about her son Casey, who was killed in Iraq. I also sympathize with President Bush. It can't be easy to look as confident as he usually does while he's trying to get his country out of a bigger mess than he expected to get it into.
It is August, normally a no-news time in which the president can roll up his shirtsleeves and clear brush around his Crawford, Texas, ranch while news cameras click and roll and his approval ratings soar. It is interesting how presidential approvals tend to ascend in August, regardless of which party happens to be in power. The American people, in accord with Thomas Jefferson, seem to appreciate government the most when it is governing the least.
But Mrs. Sheehan isn't having that. The Vacaville, Calif., mom threw a big clod into Bush's butter churn. She set up camp with other war protesters outside the president's ranch on Aug. 6 and vowed to keep her vigil until Bush meets with her and other Gold Star mothers to explain why their children had to die in Iraq and to hear her argument for quickly ending the war....
FINE POINT
Bush using own rules with Roberts
Through an executive order, the White House is controlling which documents about the Supreme Court nominee will be made public
By Michael Tackett
Tribune Washington Bureau chief
Published August 14, 2005
There are plenty of reasons to be ticked at President Bush this summer: a war in Iraq with no clear prospect of an end; a halting economy with only limited signs of recovery; gasoline prices that rapidly empty wallets at the pump.
But those issues are also so complicated that blame can't really be laid at a single doorstep, not even the president's.So take a look instead at an action for which the president is solely responsible, namely Executive Order 13223 that Bush signed Nov. 1, 2001. The order empowered the president to control the release of a former president's records even if the former president wanted the records to be open to the public....
The immediate effect of the order was to limit access to records of Reagan administration officials who were called upon to serve in the Bush administration, shielding them and the president from any potentially embarrassing disclosures. Read another way, it also shielded the public and the Senate (which might be called upon to confirm a presidential appointee) from having the full picture of a nominee's background. It now seems to have been precisely the president's intent. The White House is refusing to release all the documents related to the government service of Bush's first nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court, federal Appeals Judge John Roberts.