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I agree with your basic premise that a lot of people want a miracle, and that we should be working to win the old fashioned way instead. And Bush is not likely to wind up before the Hague. Europeans are not as into symbolism as Americans. They are more pragmatic, and want to move forward from this point, rather than spending too much time worrying about what's already been done.
But Bush has started a war on a lie, and someone he might be covering for has leaked information to the press that could endanger a covert, and could undermine a lot of intelligence. Impeachment isn't far-fetched. IF people begin turning on Bush, IF things in Iraq continue to go badly and body counts continue to mount, and no progress is made, people will start looking for a scapegoat. If people begin to see Bush as a liar who started a war, and caused a lot of American deaths, not to mention (and I am sincerely hoping we start to notice this one day as a nation) hundreds of thousands of Iraqi deaths, for no reason, then they may turn on him, especially if they begin to see that we are no safer now than two years ago. The Republicans in Congress would turn on him rather than go down with him. By voting impeachment, they can claim they were lied to rather than complicit. Some will be genuinely outraged, even. Then you will see Repubs turn on Bush, and maybe even try to lead the charge to get rid of him.
Keep in mind the hypocrisy charge, too. If evidence mounts against Bush, many will want to defend their integrity by voting to impeach Bush, to prove that Clinton wasn't just a partisan impeachment.
Unlikely. I wish we would all spend more time working to beat Bush rather than hoping for a magic wand solution. But it's not inconceivable.
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