|
WWI--Woodrow Wilson--went to war only after asking for and receiving from Congress a declaration of war, because he could not morally or constitutionally do it himself. Not so with Bushboy and Iraq.
Opening line of Wilson's address to congress: "Gentlemen of the Congress: I have called the Congress into extraordinary session because there are serious, very serious, choices of policy to be made, and made immediately, which it was neither right nor constitutionally permissible that I should assume the responsibility of making."
WWII--FDR--asked for and received a declaration of war after attack on Pearl Harbor---did not go to war pre-emptively, and attacked only the people responsible for starting the war--Germany and Japan.--Not so with Bushboy.
Korea--North Korea fired first shots of that war against South Korea. The United Nations immediately drew up resolution demanding North Korea's retreat--when they didn't comply, we entered the conflict.---DSM and absence of WMD, and fact that Saddam let inspectors in, turned over evidence of WMD destruction, shows not so with Bushboy---While I have some reservations about the US involvement in that war--it was not unprovoked or pre-emptive. And, as far as the firing of McArthur, IMHO, as I understand history, if McArthur had done to me, had I been president, what he did to Truman, I would have fired him, too. Truman, after all, was the commander-in-chief---and, in the end, it turned out to be the right decision.--but, that's up for debate.
Vietnam--actually the first American troops were sent in as advisors by a Republican president named Eisenhower. True, Johnson did up the ante in Vietnam by tricking congress into passing the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, and then lying to the country about an attack in that gulf. But, Bushboy publicly supported that war--domino theory and all, while at the same time making sure he didn't have to go by pulling strings to get into the Texas Air National Guard, from where he went AWOL. And, it was pressure from a Democratic Congress and a nation that finally woke up to the fact of the lie that got us in it that forced Nixon to pull the troops out.
Bushboy should have learned his lesson from Vietnam, but at the time he was too messed up with alcohol and cocaine to even care about what was going on.
|