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I have not seen the film, but Frank Rich's article, as I recall, from the NYTimes, made clear that McNamara knew THREE FULL YEARS before we pulled out that the war was a lost cause (and therefore that American soldiers were dying in vain), but he just couldn't figure out how to pull out with pride intact. Is that what you got from the film?
I was so shocked and incensed when I read that. I thought, if I had lost someone in that war during those last three years, well, I would think McNamara should be awfully careful in dark alleys.
What also shocks me is that I have run across no one else who read that. And I'm not even sure if it is from the film or Mc's book. Either way, why aren't people up in arms, and making the obvious comparisons to what is happening now?
I have all respect and admiration and sympathy for those men and women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan now; absolutely; but I fear the Bush administration is using a cost:benefit calculation that counts those precious lives are almost worthless. That makes me sick. And it's enough all by itself to get this administration into the unemployment line.
s_m
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