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Gloria Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:36 PM
Original message
Clark continues to have an impact on the Hill (influence grows)
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 05:43 PM by Gloria
http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/archives/5328.html

September 22, 2005
Clark continues to have an impact on the Hill


Four months ago, Roll Call had a report noting that Dem congressional leaders, including Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, have come to see Wesley Clark as a "go-to guy" on foreign policy matters. As part of this role, Clark has become a frequent visitor to the Hill, speaking to Dem caucuses on the Hill about Iraq and Afghanistan.

If anything, Clark's position as the Dems' foremost advisor on foreign policy has only grown since then. In a presentation to the Out of Iraq Caucus this week, Clark apparently had an impact.

After hearing a presentation from retired Gen. Wesley Clark on Tuesday night, a bloc of House Democrats who have been calling for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq admitted Clark's comments are prompting them to take a new look at the issue.

SNIP

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), who formed the Out of Iraq Caucus, said Clark had "such an impact" because he is "well-respected and knows so much about the military and how it operates and what is going on." Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), a leading voice among Dems urging a troop withdrawal, said Clark "made a lot of sense," and confirmed what many have long believed � that this war "did not need to be fought."

These kinds of briefings are important for congressional Dems � I don't know anyone who doesn't wish party leaders had a better, clearer message when it comes to the war � but there's also that little thing called the 2008 presidential campaign coming up. I wonder how many of these 50 or so liberal Dems might be inclined to back Clark in a couple of years?


Comments follow...
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Crunchy Frog Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:45 PM
Response to Original message
1. "Clark Sways Some on Iraq Strategy."
From Roll Call.

http://www.rollcall.com/issues/51_27/news/10609-1.html (You need a subscription to access it.)

By Erin P. Billings
Roll Call Staff

September 22, 2005

After hearing a presentation from retired Gen. Wesley Clark on Tuesday night, a bloc of House Democrats who have been calling for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq admitted Clark’s comments are prompting them to take a new look at the issue.

Clark met privately with the members of the Out of Iraq Caucus to give them his perspective on the ongoing conflict and offer advice on how Democrats should frame their arguments for bringing troops home. His call: Avoid specific timelines for withdrawal and focus instead on calling for and developing strategies for success that rely not on the military, but on diplomacy.

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), who formed the Out of Iraq Caucus, said Clark gave the group “good recommendations” about how to move forward in talking about bringing an end to the war and developing a strategy to bring home U.S. forces. The Out of Iraq Caucus is developing a strategic plan on the matter to be released in the coming months.

“I think he gave us some more to think about, and more to think about in this whole area of diplomacy,” she said. “He gave us good recommendations that we can form a consensus around.” “What he did was refocus me, and all of us, in coming up with a plan for diplomacy,” Waters added. “We decided we would get together and talk about and formulate a plan based on what he told us to lead this country and pressure this administration on the diplomatic issues that it hasn’t been involved in.” <snip>

More about it here. http://securingamerica.com/ccn/node/1022

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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:45 PM
Response to Original message
2. So he discouraged them from pushing the issue of getting out?
"After hearing a presentation from retired Gen. Wesley Clark on Tuesday night, a bloc of House Democrats who have been calling for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq admitted Clark's comments are prompting them to take a new look at the issue."

Ok, that is one way to do it.

I suspect the reason his influence is growing is because our Democrats on the whole do not want out of Iraq. Many of our congresional Democrats totally supported this war for reasons other than terror, terror. They knew what they were doing.

I further suspect they will continue to reach out to those who want to leave and persuade them that we can not. Our Democrats have too much in stake for us to leave Iraq, as many of them were complicit in the agenda for going there.


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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:00 PM
Response to Reply #2
6. So Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters are just
dupes?

MadFloridian, how dare you?
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:10 PM
Response to Reply #6
10. I did not say that at all. I like them very much.
I don't think they are Democrats who were for the purpose of this war at all. Apparently though, there is reason to stop the get out now movement.

I am all for getting out soon myself.

How dare I do what? I don't like seeing the military getting such influence on our congress. There is nothing wrong with my feeling like that.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:15 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. How dare you underestimate Barbara Lee, in particular.....
She ain't into doing something cause someone told her to.

That's what I mean.

If she's saying that we need to listen to Clark because he knows what he's talking about....who are you to view it as a conspiracy?

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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:16 PM
Response to Reply #11
12. You are making up stuff I did not say at all.
.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:24 PM
Response to Reply #12
13. This is what you said.....
So he discouraged them from pushing the issue of getting out?
"After hearing a presentation from retired Gen. Wesley Clark on Tuesday night, a bloc of House Democrats who have been calling for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq admitted Clark's comments are prompting them to take a new look at the issue."


He didn't discourage anything....he provided information.....and the information obviously made sense and gave food for thought. That's the point of the thread...period.



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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:29 PM
Response to Reply #13
14. So now they are not going to push to get out now.
That was my point. So I gather there is a movement to stop the anti-war movement in play now.

Or at least the get out now part of the anti-war movement.

I have nothing against informing our congressional caucus of things, but why did they not know them before? Why do they need an ex-general to tell them things they did not already know in their role in congress.

I just have a thing about a military person in the oval office, when people are tired of war and tired of shadow-boxing terrorists.

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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:53 PM
Response to Reply #14
19. Maybe because getting out immediatly is a short view answer
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:00 PM by FrenchieCat
to keep our soldiers out of arms way....but in the long run, puts all of us, that much more in arms way.

Maybe some people don't feel like they have the answers to everything, and choose to listen to what those who have actually been on a battlefield and have done diplomacy.

Maybe the fact that Wes Clark advocated for the US to intervene in Rhwanda during the time that it was happening as opposed to understanding it all after the fact that 800,000 had been macheted to death; that he cared enough to insist that boots on the ground would have minimize civilian casualties in Kosovo and lost his job for it; That he was against the Iraq Invasion and did NOT believe that Iraq posed any imminent threat; and also the fact that he still brings up Darfur every chance he gets; and the fact that he understands the problems of Haiti and also makes noise about that....is a testament that Wes Clark knows a lot about a lot of things, and in particular about war and peace...that both Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters both understand that he's not speaking to them to try to hoodwink them.

Maybe they read his piece written 3 days after 9/11, while the politicians were singing on the capital steps....that he wrote, in where one can see that he was advocating a totally different approach to fighting the terrorists who did blow up the WTC.

Maybe some people folks believe in contineously evolving in their position based on facts and evidence, as opposed to acting like they have been gifted with some kind of divine inspiration that gives them all of the answers.


A Long, Tough Job
By Wesley K. Clark
Friday, September 14, 2001; Page A37
The Washington Post

snip
For the United States, the weapons of this war should be information, law enforcement and, on rare occasions, active military forces. The coalition that will form around the United States and its NATO allies should agree on its intent but not trumpet its plans. No vast military deployments should be anticipated. But urgent measures should be taken behind the scenes, because the populations and economic structures of Western nations will be at risk.

And the American public will have to grasp and appreciate a new approach to warfare. Our objective should be neither revenge nor retaliation, though we will achieve both. Rather, we must systematically target and destroy the complex, interlocking network of international terrorism. The aim should be to attack not buildings and facilities but the people who have masterminded, coordinated, supported and executed these and other terrorist attacks.
snip
Our methods should rely first on domestic and international law, and the support and active participation of our friends and allies around the globe. Evidence must be collected, networks uncovered and a faceless threat given shape and identity.

In some cases, astute police work will win the day, here and abroad. In other cases, international intelligence collaboration may be necessary. Special military forces may be called on to operate in states that are uncooperative or simply unable to control their own territory. In exceptional cases, targets will be developed that may be handled by conventional military strikes.
But in the main, this will be arduous, detailed and often covert work to track, detain or otherwise engage and "take down" our adversaries, rolling them up cell by cell and headquarters by headquarters.

Some will call for full disclosure and near-legal standards of evidence before acting. Others will arm a hair trigger, seeking to use the most readily available information, even if scant. But we must not pose legality and expediency as opposite extremes. To be expedient, we must act within the bounds of international law and consistent with consensus among the allied coalition that is emerging. And maintaining this consensus will be one of the prime challenges we face.
snip
We must strengthen our protective measures at airports, at utilities and other public service facilities such as communications networks, and prepare necessary public health and disease control capabilities for the possibility of nuclear and biological events. And if we are successful in preventing further attacks, another challenge will be to maintain our resolve.
http://wesleyclark.h1.ru/usa_attack1.htm

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MissWaverly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:38 PM
Response to Reply #19
31. Look, we have to get out now
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:38 PM by MissWaverly
We have British soldiers masquerading as Arabs, shooting Iraqi policemen, then when they are arrested, then the Brits come and knock the jail down. Problem solved, the situation over there is in chaos, there will never be a peaceful resolution to activities like this, a year ago there might have been a solution, but Bush and Blair have jumped the shark on this one, purple fingers and all. Do I mention Abu Ghraib where the photos are so horrible that the Americans cannot view them and yet the atrocities go on.
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Clarkie1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:39 PM
Response to Reply #31
38. Clark said today that there can be no military solution
only a diplomatic one.

However, diplomacy cannot work if we pull out tommorrow. The pull-out has to follow the diplomacy, not the other way around.
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MissWaverly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:58 PM
Response to Reply #38
48. Look, what if PNAC wants total chaos to siphon off the oil
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 08:58 PM by MissWaverly
the actual war lasted 2 months, the rebuilding of the country has gone
on for 2 years and it is still in shambles. Iraq is roughly twice the
size of Idaho. They are producing more oil than before we went in there, yet their economy and their country is in ruins.
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:20 PM
Response to Reply #31
85. Yes
I have one word for all the people saying we have to stay for the better good and that word is: Vietnam.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:55 PM
Response to Reply #14
20. If I may, mad... I don't think that's what it is at all.
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 06:55 PM by Totally Committed
I think they will be looking at a pull-out in stages that will guarantee the safety of the soldiers and as little instability to the area as possible. I think there is definitely going to be a pull-out.

I hope you'll read what Wes has had to say before you decide about miltary persons in office. He just wants an orderly withdrawal, with honor for those who fought, and as little death and destruction as possible on the way out.

Maxine Waters is not a woman who just "changes her mind" about somethig as important as this. She is just seeing a different way than the one she sees being laid out by other parties.

TC
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:22 PM
Response to Reply #20
86. Honor?
Honey I think they lost that honor a long time ago with the Iraqi people. The only thing they can do is get the hell out and tear down those military bases and never go back again.
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1932 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:31 PM
Response to Reply #14
29. The article doesn't say Waters and Lee changed their minds.
It doesn't name anyone whose mind is changed. It says people are changing their minds, and then quotes two people, creating the impression that they're the ones the article is talking about. However, there's nothing in those quotes that suggest Lee and Waters have, in fact, changed their minds.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:53 PM
Response to Reply #29
33. So what was their minds before......
and what is in their minds now? the same thing exactly or what?

I know you know about what goes on in folks minds. Please do share!
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1932 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 11:42 PM
Response to Reply #33
60. You wouldn't know from reading this article.
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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:40 PM
Response to Reply #14
52. Yeah, Lord knows we don't want a military person near the WH...
...especially when we've seen the wonderful job this current bunch of "never seen a day of combat" idiots have done...
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Kahuna Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:52 PM
Response to Reply #2
18. You refuse to get it. Clark is not saying we shouldn't get out..
He's saying we should not set a deadline or leave before Iraq is secure.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:03 PM
Response to Reply #18
23. I do get it, though.
I have been one who has been confused about how I feel about the leave Iraq now philosophy. I have gone back and forth on it.

Trouble is, what I see going on there now is total chaos, and I don't see how we can secure it now. How can we secure it?

We are trouble financially in this country, we can not even pay for the needs of those of our own in crisis.

So how are we going to make it secure? More men? That would mean draft. More money? We ain't got it.

You guys just don't believe that I am sincere about my questioning. I truly am. You all tell me I refuse to get it, and jump down my throat.

A group of our congress people were ready to form a coalition to get out now, and they were dissuaded from doing that apparently.

Next question, how do we secure a country in total chaos?
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:06 PM
Response to Reply #23
25. Clark has the answers....
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:19 PM by FrenchieCat
on how that could be done. Have you not read his strategy for Iraq?

A better and more important question is....will the Bush administration do any of it?

That's the part that allows Clark to say in the not so distant future that the people will be justified in asking for a pull-out.

This is what you call a set up. Bush is gonna have to take some steps, or we will be outta here.

This is perfect for the 2006 election as the Democratic theme. Puts Democrats in the driver's seat and gives us more of a leadership stance....... Listen to us, we've got a plan to make this work as well as it could......or get the fuck out!

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1932 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:34 PM
Response to Reply #23
30. So long as we stay and control Iraq's fate, their will be chaos.
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:34 PM by 1932
I don't think that Iraq should be abandoned to chaos. But I also don't think that creating a liberterian's and PNAC'ers dream state in Iraq is going to do anything but create chaos.

I'm happy that Hussein is gone. I'm not happy that Halliburton and Bechtel have replaced him as president and vice president of Iraq.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:51 PM
Response to Reply #30
32. When you say "we".....
do you mean "they"? The Administration?

Besides that, what are you truly saying as it relates to Clark's position on Iraq and this OP?
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1932 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 11:43 PM
Response to Reply #32
61. I mean U.S.
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Cosmocat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 10:35 PM
Response to Reply #30
56. The representative from Washington ...
I forget the man's name ... A fairly distinguished older gentleman, spoke on the floor of the house today about this ... He has been over there four times, twice on his own ... He was just over in Jordan, where there are a lot of Iraqi natives riding things out ...

He went out to eat with and spent time with a bunch of Iraqi nationals while he was there ...

Anyway ... He spoke about Iraq for about 45 minutes ... He didn't vote to give Bushco power in 2003, out of the gates ... He called it for what it was, driven by PNAC ... quoted some of the neocons from as far back as the 70s saying they believed it was in the US' interests to destabilize Iraq ...

He said the Admin needs to come clean, not that they will, that a diplomatic meeting needs to be set up in a neutral country in the region to let the nationals work things out ... NO US, and none of the US' hand fed constitution ...

He believed that the Iraqis had a long history of being fairly civil people, and without the US mucking things up, would have a better chance of working things out ...

On a side note, he did a VERY nice job breaking down all the allegiances and how they intermingle, in a simple and clear manner ...
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:31 PM
Response to Reply #56
88. Nice
I think so too. I was once watching on CNN a documentary type thing on Saudi Arabia. A reporter (Britsh or Australian I think, dunno) was in the country following around two different people. One was a guy I'd say in his thirties and the other was a woman I'd say in her fourties. They were talking about the country and how it still had a lot of problems but they've come a long way since the woman could now own her own business (she had one) and everything. The guy said there was still some things he wasn't happy with but in the end basically the whole jist of this documentary was to show how each country has to do things on their own and figure out what works for them and what doesn't. What works for us doesn't work for someone else. We don't know their country since we don't live there. Even someone who studies Iraq doesn't know the country (and is it Iraq or Irak??) since they don't have the personal experience with living there. A while back on Maher's show he had a woman on there who seemed to know a lot about Iraq and according to her Iraq was the most democratic area in the whole region and now we've gone and screwed it all up.
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:24 PM
Response to Reply #23
87. Exactly
Edited on Fri Sep-23-05 07:24 PM by FreedomAngel82
I used to be the same way. I was originially for staying in but now I think we should just leave. Vietnam. Just like it. If we still want to find a way to help the Iraqi people (those who are left anyways) we can give them money and make sure it's distributed out to them who get a job helping to rebuild their country. I think it's what we should do and tear down those military bases. We shouldn't ever be there ever again. The middle east hates us cause we're there! I don't think they're ever going to like us. Certainly not anymore.
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Lena inRI Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:46 PM
Response to Original message
3. Huhhhh. . .like ABSOLUTELY!
And if the entire Democratic Party does not see the exceptional choice that Wesley K. Clark would be for the 2008 ticket, they are utterly, hopelessly insufferable losers.



:mad:
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:33 PM
Response to Reply #3
89. I think I'm getting more to the idea
of either having him with Gore/Clark. Either that or definitley be in the administration.
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roseBudd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:52 PM
Response to Original message
4. I quote Clark in my IRAQ WAR: What is it good for? flyer...
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:02 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. Oooh....very good!
What a contrast! A fool vs. someone who understands the complexity of the situation Pandora's box has wrought! Thanks!
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roseBudd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:00 PM
Response to Reply #7
34. I handed them out today to Veterans at a convention downtown. WWII vets
could turn the tide. They have the knowledge of history having lived through a necassary (WWII) and an unnecessary war (VietNam). Surely most don't fall for NeoCon propaganda.
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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:42 PM
Response to Reply #34
53. nice flyer....good job rosebud n/t
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roseBudd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 03:50 PM
Response to Reply #53
79. I am treating this flyer as a chain flyer, it's says "Make 12 copies &
distribute. I am also putting them on cars of anyone with antiBush stickers.
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frictionlessO Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:29 PM
Response to Reply #4
36. This is where I get confused "When we kill people, we make enemies!
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 08:31 PM by frictionlessO
And when we kill the wrong people, its even worse and less defensible"....

Im not advocating immediate withdrawal as in tomorrow we start evacuating our troops. No, I want a serious discussion of the realities and the possibilities.

What I want is for him to prove to me how staying is going to kill less people in the long and short term.



The way many other very very knowledgable people see it is that we are the proverbial thorn in the side of any hope of peace. If we are not there AQ in Iraq loses support and opens themselves up to the hostile intentions of Al Sadr and The Mehdi Army. Without us there as both a distraction and common target those two enemies will come to blows and I firmly believe The Mehdi Army will quickly and with some albeit "mess" clean up AQ In Iraq. Through in a few other Militias and yes you could have a civil war but AQ In Iraq will have support of even less Sunnis than they do now as there is no more occupier to fight against only other Iraqis, other Muslims.

Most Iraqis do not want civil war... they want civil discourse. They want a respected seat at the UN ( though many despise the way that UN sponsored sanctions destroyed their people) and the ourct of world opinion. They want to enrich themselves and join in commerce and trade and most know that a civil war would put them farther away from that. The Iraqis have been around the block a few thousand times , ya know?
More than 90% of Iraqis just want all bloodshed to stop. Most women want the same or better rights than before we toppled Hussein. They want to work, make love and watch their kids go to college and become doctors and engineers.

Once the occupiers are gone there is only one enemy left and that is AQ in Iraq. What some don't understand is that how significantly we are viewed as the much larger threat than AQ is despite what they have done to Iraqs' humble citizens. That should be as big a clue as you need to understand that as long as we are there Iraq will be violently in turmoil. We are occupiers with bad intentions regarding Iraq and how we want to use it.

We must always remember that not insurgents are terrorists... not by a long shot. not even when an IED goes off accidentally killing some civilians. We must apply that same broad brush to ourselves if that is the case and that would make many hundreds of our service members terrorists, which they are not. This distinction cannot and must never be forgotten when talking about Iraq.

----
To put in a broader perspective.

In order to stay we will have to put more boots on the ground. Our options are dismally limited due to the abuse of our troops frequency and duration of combat tours. Recruitment is as bad as its ever been. This is not a trend that anyone is going to largely reverse over night or even over months. There has been serious damage done to the morale of most of our combat troops even amongst some of our most Gung Ho.

So what that means is that aside from combat attrition and PTSDs (which btw are set to soon far outpace those of Vietnam and may have already and we just don't know it), we are going to have to have people dealing with more and more of the ends of their ropes putting them in circumstances and conditions ripe for the quote General Clark above. I can almost guarantee you that the sick sadistic shit that our troops will inflict as well as recieve is just beggining. That leaves the likes of Blackwater and other mercenary outfits that were somewhat responsible for the abuse in most of our detention facilities. Do you honestly think those guys are going to be making any friends?

They are the reason for Fallujah! Remember those contractors that they killed, let burn and proudly hung on a bridge? They were mercs, and the Iraqi people kew what the mercs had been getting up to in those prisons. They responded by perpetrating this horrible and sadistic attacked probably egged on by some not so very nice men. We responded by killing and injuring and displacing thousands of Fallujahns and flattening their city of thousand year old ancestral homes. Perspective is needed regarding that last part... how many terrorists did we create with that one operation?

I am almost certain more than we killed.
-----

Now lets add to that the future safety of not just our own country but many of our allies and friends, as has been witnessed in Spain and England.

They say anywhere from 2-7% of the insurgency is made up of foreign fighters. I will not even wager a guess as to what percentage of those are actual AQ or not because it doesn't matter, insurgencies mutate constantly in order to survive. However this one is large enough that we can estimate that at least 1000 AQ personel are in Iraq at any given time (that includes support, reconaisance, propaganda and recruitment. Not just their spear tips abducted or otherwise). These people are not the same people over a given period of time. Not just due to attrition if that is where your mind was leading.

Why not?

Well to really just be blunt and over the head about it they are taking their incredible new combat training (ala our staying in Iraq) and teaching others in small cells all across the world what they have learned fighting the most vaunted military power on earth, ever.

Their biggest assets are patience and dedication (or fanaticism). Trust me, the cells that did operations in England shot their wads early. AQ and its medusa like snake sybs learned a lot from that at a relatively cheap price for them. Just like they learned a lot from their predecessors attempt on the WTC. Just like they learn a lot every time we use our military in combat operations. Our every reaction gives away future options.

Heres the kicker, AQ are not the only enemies that learn whenever we show our ass.

If anyone has been paying attention to world politics and alliances over the last couple of years they should be worried about what China, Russia, Iran. N.Korea are taking in intelligence wise... and just about any country that feels like they may have to defend themselves from an invasion from us the UK and ... Poland. Of keen interest to the smaller countries is if a 10-20 % portion of your population has the will, patience and dedication and you pre-supply them with enough AK-47s, rpgs, and IEDS. You can pretty much bring this occupier to its knees.

Thats why staying the course does not make sense to me and many millions of others including a extremely large segment of the Iraqi peoples (both Shia and Sunni... even some Kurds).

If anyone is actually interested in this post and wants to have friendly discourse on this subject and what we think about how we withdrawal and essentially make it up to the
Iraqis and the world in general. Than please respond and we'll discuss plans of action. I already have a plan that is big, bold and requires the kind of courage and self determination that AQ and extremist psychos of all stripes can only dream about. Though if we as a party united around it, we could literally change the world.

Let me know...
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:39 PM
Response to Reply #36
91. A good while ago back in June
I heard an interview on a local show with Harold Ford junior. I'm not a huge fan but he is running for the senate so I'm giving both canidates an equal chance and all that. He was talking about his trip to Iraq he took a year or so ago with Joe Biden. He was basically telling how the Iraqi's don't trust the United States because we haven't given them the necessary things they need to survive such as water and electricity and things like that. If we want to regain their trust we have to take care of them like we promised. I remember watching a video from the truthout.org site on the Cindy section about an Iraq veteran who was telling how there were children and people in general just dying from dehydration and lack of food while they got all the food they could need. It's really sad. :(
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:46 PM
Response to Reply #4
55. Rosebud, this is excellent!
You are so talented!

:yourock:

TC
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FreedomAngel82 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:34 PM
Response to Reply #4
90. I like the line
"when we kill people we make enemies." Yep, we're seeing that now. Each loved one who is killed from someone else that is a new enemy. Once my preacher had a great sermon about this. He basically said you can not expect to counteract evil with evil and expect good to come from it. That's exactly what we are doing in Iraq.
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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 08:41 PM
Response to Reply #90
93. that line....
and what your preacher spoke of reminds me also of this great line from Jimmy Carter..."War may sometimes be a necessary evil. But no matter how necessary, it is always an evil, never a good. We will not learn how to live together in peace by killing each other's children."
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Rowdyboy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 05:55 PM
Response to Original message
5. If he can persuade Barbara Lee and Maxine Waters to reconsider
their strongly held positions for immediate withdrawal from Iraq, then he is, indeed, a master of the art. These are serious women who are not easy to influence. I think Wes Clark has a lot of Bill Clinton's ability to relate to individuals on a personal level and to speak clearly and plainly in a way people can understand.
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Gloria Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:06 PM
Response to Original message
8. He's talking common sense about a huge, long term problem we
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 06:07 PM by Gloria
have in the world, created by Bushco.

"Pulling out" is dangerous for our troops, Iraq, the region, the world. It is not that simple to do that without ongoing efforts on other tracks at the same time.

You have to begin restoring DIPLOMACY as an accepted means of approaching problems. By doing this, you increase the chance that a pullout can be put into place that doesn't jeopardize the lives of our troops and those of the Iraqi people any more than we have to.

One of Clark's ideas is for a regional conference of countries in the region to start figuring out what the hell is going on. Interestingly, there are signs that they are already talking about doing this. If we had a decent leader who would capitalize on this growing impetus and help it along, we'd be in much better shape and troops would be home faster.

Bush is ready to mess with Syria, Iran is swirling around in the mix. This guy is ready to make the whole region blow up. Do you think a "quick" pullout without full consideration of regional stresses would actually solve all these problems we've created?
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AX10 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:47 PM
Response to Reply #8
43. President Kerry would have had the conference already.
Bush will never allow it. Bush/PNAC wants Iraq under their control and they will do what is needed to keep it that way.
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Raiden Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:09 PM
Response to Original message
9. This is good news
I'm pleased to know that Clark is building up some strong connections in Washington. They could prove invaluable in 2008 if he decides to run.
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Bucky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:01 PM
Response to Reply #9
35. "IF"?
Friend, he's running. He may not ever be president of this country. But shame on the generation of Americans who get a leader of this calibre and don't find some way to put him to work in the national interest.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:40 PM
Response to Reply #35
39. If ever a man were born to be POTUS, it is Wes...
he's everything this country needs at this moment in time. We should be ashamed if he diecides to run, and he isn't nominated and put forward as this Party's candidate in 2008. It will tell me we will have learned nothing, and we deserve whomever is shoved down our throats instead. Period.

TC
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HootieMcBoob Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:46 PM
Response to Original message
15. Clark has also said...
That if this administration doesn't start to turn things around in Iraq and implement the things that he's suggested the whole situation is just going to get worse and worse...and of course he has no confidence that they will do anything of the kind...they will continue to blunder on as more and more people are killed.

and if this happens...

He's said that the American people will be totally justified to call for an immediate withdrawl.


Of course I'm paraphrasing this whole thing and I can't even remember where I heard him say it but this is what I remember.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:02 PM
Response to Reply #15
22. It was part of his last WAPO op-ed.....
and you pretty much said what he did say.....even in paraphrasing.
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Lena inRI Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:57 PM
Response to Reply #15
47. I, too, like his qualifier that you paraphrased. . .
and of course he has no confidence that they will do anything of the kind...they will continue to blunder on as more and more people are killed. . . and if this happens...
He's said that the American people will be totally justified to call for an immediate withdrawl.


Clark is a pragmatist above all else.

And you all know that B* and Co. will continue to blunder so much more for the next 39 months that Clark will end up advocating immediate withdrawal eventually.

Unfortunately, he really thinks the Bushies will appreciate his suggestions for diplomatic strategies in Iraq. . .IMHO, I don't share Clark's optimism on this point. . .I am for withdrawal asap.

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Zodiak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:47 PM
Response to Original message
16. I am not that hard-headed
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:08 PM by Zodiak Ironfist
as to only demand an immediate pull-out. I would support an immediate ending to all US-sponsored hostilities and an invitation to the table for all parties involved. I think that a serious, concerted effort at diplomacy CAN work in the area, but it requires an ending to US hostilities. Defensive is fine, but no more bombing villiages. And Bush can't do it...that much is certainly clear.

Diplomacy would entail releasing our stranglehold on Iraqi resources and our insistence on privatization. I would also say that UN troops from non-hostile nations should oversee a REAL Iraqi election without any US sponsorship or influence. This can all be done with the US troops present to ensure the proper defense, but no more death squads, no more bombings, and for God's sakes no more "Terror in the hands of Justice"!

It is a compromise I would listen to, but for diplomacy to work, the death has to be kept at a minimum. If Clark is supporting that, then I will back him (but understand that this will not realistically begin to happen until 2009 at the earliest, barring a massive change in both the house and the senate in 2007. That is a lot of death at the hands of Bush until that time.

We still need to have calls for immediate withdrawal, though, for such a demand may gain resonance and force the Chimperial Majesty to follow this compromise. Clark is great for taking this tack, but the grassroots needs to still play "hard-ball" so we don't get less than we want. It is simple positioning in anticipation of a compromise.

Properly conducted diplomacy just MIGHT head-off having an entire region hating us for centuries to come, but it cannot be done by Bush.

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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:57 PM
Response to Reply #16
21. Clark's first point in his Iraq strategy he laid out
back during the primaries and is still applicable.....

End the American monopoly. From the beginning, the Administration has insisted on exclusive control of the Iraqi reconstruction and occupation. This has cost us the financial and military support of other nations and made America a bigger target for terrorists. Ending the American monopoly will change the way this enterprise is viewed-in Iraq and throughout the world-- Wes Clark
http://www.clark04.com/issues/iraqstrategy/
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Zodiak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:04 PM
Response to Reply #21
24. Thanks for the quote
I am glad that he has made that position public, and yes, I support it.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:14 PM
Response to Reply #24
28. Clark also suggest what no other does.....
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:17 PM by FrenchieCat
that we use diplomacy to bring moderate Arab States and Iraq's neigbors to the table. He states that Syria and Iran think that they are next (wonder how they got that impression? :sarcasm: ), and so, of course, they have no interest in seeing a stable Iraq.....

Clark believes that it is up to the US to show goodwill to these countries and to use the old underused art of diplomacy to get them to do what they right now don't want to do--help in building a stable Iraq. But of course, they would need a share in the economic, military and political aspects of things......

Excerpts from his WAPO op-ed "Before it's Too Late"

From the outset of the U.S. post-invasion efforts, we needed a three-pronged strategy: diplomatic, political and military. Iraq sits geographically on the fault line between Shiite and Sunni Islam; for the mission to succeed we will have to be the catalyst for regional cooperation, not regional conflict.

Unfortunately, the administration didn't see the need for a diplomatic track, and its scattershot diplomacy in the region -- threats, grandiose pronouncements and truncated communications -- has been ill-advised and counterproductive. The U.S. diplomatic failure has magnified the difficulties facing the political and military elements of strategy by contributing to the increasing infiltration of jihadists and the surprising resiliency of the insurgency.
snip
Adding a diplomatic track to the strategy is a must. The United States should form a standing conference of Iraq's neighbors, complete with committees dealing with all the regional economic and political issues, including trade, travel, cross-border infrastructure projects and, of course, cutting off the infiltration of jihadists. The United States should tone down its raw rhetoric and instead listen more carefully to the many voices within the region. In addition, a public U.S. declaration forswearing permanent bases in Iraq would be a helpful step in engaging both regional and Iraqi support as we implement our plans.
http://securingamerica.com/node/253




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AX10 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:45 PM
Response to Reply #21
41. Clark 08'! Wes has had a lifetime of experience in the...
defense field. He is our man. He will win 2008!

Thanks for the support.
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HootieMcBoob Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:06 PM
Response to Reply #16
26. You're absolutely right
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 07:09 PM by HootieMcBoob
* while I was fiddling around FrenchieCat beat me to the punch :)
but I'll keep the post anyway because there's a little extra as well

What you've said is pretty much along the lines of what Clark thinks should happen. What I would add to this is that whatever parts of the rebuilding can be given over to Iraqi companies should be. They should have first shot at any contracts. All of this money that's going over there should be creating good paying jobs for Iraqi citizens not for contrators from Houston. And for the love of God get Haliburton out of there! There has to be somebody - anybody else - who can do that work.

End the American monopoly. From the beginning, the Administration has insisted on exclusive control of the Iraqi reconstruction and occupation. This has cost us the financial and military support of other nations and made America a bigger target for terrorists. Ending the American monopoly will change the way this enterprise is viewed -- in Iraq and throughout the world.

* Re-incorporate our allies. Fixing the Administration's missteps will require skilled diplomacy at the highest levels. Wes Clark recommends calling a summit of leaders from Europe, the United Nations, Japan and the Arab world to launch a new, internationalized effort in Iraq. They will be more willing to help if America works with them on issues they care about: climate change, the International Criminal Court and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.

Transform the military operation into a NATO operation. General Abizaid, commander of US forces in the Middle East, would remain in charge of the operation, but he would report to the NATO Council, as General Clark did as commander of NATO forces in Kosovo. With NATO support and U.N. endorsement, we can also expect some Arab countries to step in. Their presence would prove that this is not an American occupation, but an international and regional effort to stabilize Iraq.


However Clark knows as well as we do that Bush is not going to do that. It's as if he's incapable of doing anything right at all.
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Zodiak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 07:12 PM
Response to Reply #26
27. Well, good!
I cannot hide the fact that I am surprised that my vision of the settlement to the Iraqi problem (without pull-out) coincides with an American General who was head of NATO forces. Perhaps the "Clark compromise" is something we can all agree on.

But we shouldn't tell the freepers.
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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:46 PM
Response to Reply #27
54. Hey Zodiac,
You'll continue to be even more surprised the more you learn and read about General Clark. I know I was. If you were to tell me a couple of years ago...say about June of '03...that I would end up supported a 4 Star General and lifelong militaryman, I would have never believed it....He's not your ordinary General...
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Zodiak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 10:52 PM
Response to Reply #54
57. He has been on my "acceptable" list for about a year, now
I have been tracking progressive opinion of the General for a little bit,and have been pleasantly surprised to see that the blogosphere has warmed to him. I have also read a statement or two from Clark that are much in keeping with true Democratic tradition.

Because 2008 is so far away, I have been spending my time more on the upcoming congressional races, so all of my knowledge has been concentrated there. However, with Clark, I like what I see. When he ran in the last election, I didn't think he "made his bones" yet as a Democrat. At this point he is a veteran as a vocal opposition Democrat just the same as he is as a soldier, so his previous drawback has been taken off of the table.

Good luck convincing others, though. I am a strong, progressive, populist leftie who listens and compromises (but I know a damned turncoat when I see one!...ahem, another thread), but I know many on the left will always see "military-industrial complex" when looking at Clark. I don't blame them for their skepticism; there have been a lot of betrayals since Reagan.

However, these are times that try one's mettle. During our tenure under the demonic yoke of His Chimperial Majesty, slates are wiped clean in favor of what our political allies are doing right NOW. Clark passes that test as well as quite a few others. If he gets nominated, he has my vote at this point.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 07:08 AM
Response to Reply #57
68. Zodiak Ironfist -- What a great post!
I am always amazed when I see a post as well-thought-out and well-written as this one, because it happens so rarely. You really have put a lot of thought and consideration into this and, for that, have won my respect no matter what your eventual choice.

Thanks for starting my day with such a wonderful dose of sanity! This post is a real thing of beauty!

TC
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Eurobabe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 06:52 PM
Response to Original message
17. HOOAH!
Go WES!

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Sparkly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:36 PM
Response to Original message
37. I LOVE Maxine and I LOVE the General -- so this makes me so happy!!
“What he did was refocus me, and all of us, in coming up with a plan for diplomacy,” said my Woman Maxine...

I'm so glad General Clark met with the Out of Iraq Caucus. :woohoo:

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Clarkie1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:41 PM
Response to Original message
40. There is no military solution.
Clark, who is still nursing his own political ambitions, has argued that while he doesn't approve of the policies in Iraq, nor does he believe the war was well advised, the country cannot walk away. He also argues that there is no military end to the effort, rather that a diplomatic one involving other nations must be employed.

Waters said Clark had "such an impact" because he is "well-respected and knows so much about the military and how it operates and what is going on."

"He shared with us that he just never agreed with the war in Iraq and thinks we need to provide more leadership to get us out of Iraq, but we can't just do it right now. We can't just walk away."

Waters added that Clark made clear to Members that leaving now would only encourage terrorism in the region and lead to civil unrest in the country.

"He thinks it's very important to understand that the terrorists would like nothing better than to have us exit right now and then the terrorists would move faster to take over and create this civil war," she said.
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Clarkie1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:46 PM
Response to Reply #40
42. I find it ironic...
That of all the potential presidential candidates of 08', the one with the most expertise in the Middle East/Iraq is also the one with the most expertise in domestic emergency management and response.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:55 PM
Response to Reply #42
45. "I find it ironic..."
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 09:15 PM by Totally Committed
That of all the potential presidential candidates of 08', the one with the most expertise in the Middle East/Iraq is also the one with the most expertise in domestic emergency management and response.

In science that is what's called an "elegant solution" -- an answer of ultimate perfection and completeness. No other solution is needed to solve the problem.

Wes is our elegant solution to the problems we face as a nation.

Simple as that.

TC

On edit:

elegant solution

The word elegant, in general, is an adjective meaning of fine quality. Refinement and simplicity are implied, rather than fussiness, or ostentation.

An elegant solution, often referred to in relation to problems in disciplines such as mathematics, engineering, and programming, is one in which the maximum desired effect is achieved with the smallest, or simplest effort. Engineers, for example, seek the elegant solution as a means of solving a problem with the least possible waste of materials and effort. The elegant solution is also likely to be accomplished with appropriate methods and materials - according to the Elegant Solution Organization, duct tape is not likely to be part of an elegant solution, unless, of course, the problem involves taping ducts.

http://searchwebservices.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid26_gci532314,00.html
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Clark2008 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 11:45 AM
Response to Reply #42
73. Kind of tells us something, doesn't it?
The Democratic Party would be absolute fools not to nominate both someone with this calibur of expertise AND someone who could actually flip a couple of red states!

Military leaders are held in high regard in the South and mid-West. There are tons of disillusioned Republicans and swing-voting moderates who would consider voting for Wes Clark, even if they'd never voted for a Democrat before in their life. I know because I know a ton of 'em!
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 11:51 AM
Response to Reply #73
74. I actually find it stunning...
and not in a good way, that this is so.

TC
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Clark2008 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 01:56 PM
Response to Reply #74
78. Find that what is stunning, TC?
That digruntled Republicans and swing voters in red states might vote for Clark or that the Dem Party hasn't gotten off their asses long enough to realize what an asset Wes Clark is?
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 03:55 PM
Response to Reply #78
80. That, presented with the "Elegant Solution" that is Wes Clark...
"the Dem Party hasn't gotten off their asses long enough to realize what an asset Wes Clark is"

It astounds me. Sorry I was so obtuse about what I meant! You wrote it better, anyway.

TC
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Clark2008 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 06:34 PM
Response to Reply #80
83. That's what I thought you meant, but wanted to clarify for others.
I know you pretty well, TC, and I didn't figure you'd think Republicans and swing voters wouldn't vote for Wes. :)

I wish I had a dollar for every person who told me they wish Wes had been the Dem nominee so they wouldn't have had to vote for the idiot Bush (these are swing voters who couldn't stomach Kerry - for whatever reason - real or perceived). I'd be rich enough to get some of the Bush tax cuts. :hi:
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Sparkly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:56 PM
Response to Reply #40
46. I'm with Maxine.
Not to take anything away from her or others in the Out of Iraq Caucus, and at the risk of sounding like a Clark "cheerleader" or "hero-worshipper," I think of General Clark as a teacher. I really do. I think I'm reasonably intelligent and well-informed, but when he's interviewed or when he writes on a topic, there's a whole new perspective.

He takes things one step deeper and one step further, globally, and explains things in a clear, concise, and honest way. I think his intellect is just amazing, particularly combined with his experiences and his character. He's taught me a lot, stimulated better questions, and given me new ways to think about things. Just what a great teacher would do -- and then some, because he is soooo extraordinarily insightful.
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mmonk Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 08:54 PM
Response to Original message
44. There won't be any success or a point
where things calm down and then we can get out. Not unless the Sunnis are included in the Constitution and the government at adequate strength to address their grievences. There has to be compromise by the Shia government, we have helped install and are enforcing, concerning the Sunnis or we will do nothing except sit in the middlle of civil war.
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Donna Zen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:01 PM
Response to Original message
49. What do Maxine Waters, General Clark and I have in common?
None of the above wanted to invade Iraq! So what are our options:

Where many posters and I agree, and I would venture General Clark agrees, is that bush will not include a diplomatic element into the Iraq War debacle. This entire empire building junta is oh so end of the 19th century, when all the crazy empire builders left their pin stripes in the closet.

Level One-the geopolitical perspective: Someday, maybe next week, or perhaps a 100 years from now, someone somewhere is going to step in to settle the Iraq War with diplomacy. There is a political power struggle going on in Iraq and the region, and that can only be settled diplomatically. Even if we set a "date-certain" for a pull out, and stuck to it, eventually, ending this war will involve diplomats and resulting agreements. The sooner this happens, the better off we all are.

Clark realizes that we are distrusted by everyone in the region, at least publicly, because their populations hate us. When he has spoken in depth about this demand for diplomacy, his call is for our taking a more back bench lead. Call for the formation of a "contact group" but don't call every shot.

Clark has also proposed that the US forswear any permanent basing of American troops in Iraq. In other words, we will pull out, absolutely, but rather than a "date-certain" it will be up to the Iraqis and the region to get the situation under control so that we can leave.

The US declaring a "date-certain" puts the onus on us--we must settle everyone down and provide stability so that we can leave. This is a weak position. It is an invitation to those who oppose our existence to wipe that egg on our faces. Calling for diplomatic efforts to provide the conditions for our withdrawal, puts the onus on the regional players. They want us out, and they don't want to be involved in a regional war, therefore, they must come to the agreement.

There is little hope that Iraq will have a "good" outcome, but if we hope for anything even close to one, this is it. And again, remember, no matter what else happens, eventually, it will come to diplomacy.

^^^^^^^^^

Level Two-domestic political strategy: The public wants out of Iraq, and bush would gladly blame the Democrats for his failure. What the public doesn't realize is just how badly bush has blundered. I doubt they realize for a nano second that bush isn't talking to anyone beyond saying things to Iran and Syria like: "stay where you are or will bomb the fuck out of you." Making an issue of bush/republican failure to handle the world stage is nothing but net. No matter whether the "Get out now" folks seize the day, this is a very big issue. If we are going to make the war an issue, make the republican diplomatic failure a big fucking issue. Also, the continuing republican diplomatic failure sets the stage for the American people to call for the end of this mess.

Call for "no permanent basing" in Iraq. This issue receives no attention and it is important. First, it does more to defuse the insurgency than any time-table will ever do. Secondly, unlike Halliburton, the public does not want us there forever. Force bush to either admit fourteen permanent bases is the plan, or force him to call off PNAC's regional police-station. Really. Again, this is a strong position for Democrats.

We are not in power, and the junta has no one who can pull off diplomatic moves, but, Clark's plan serves the Democratic Party better, the people who want out of Iraq, Clark included, better, and puts the monkey of Iraq squarely on the monkey's back. What is the junta counter? No, we don't talk to anyone and we ain't never leaving Iraq?

It is the course change we need, and hey, it might actually change things. Besides, it puts the Democrats in a very good position with a plan.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:03 PM
Response to Original message
50. Since the world saw our vulnerability after Katrina.....
I don't think we have a chance to fix Iraq. The world saw us as a weakened power, unable to take care of our own. Some were happy about it, many were scared. My friend in Belgium is worried because the world thought we had the strength and power. He has written me a lot during this time, and he worries more as he sees more of the devastation.

We are vulnerable now, and the world knows it. I don't see any way we can stay on in Iraq to even save face even more. We don't have the capability of taking care of our own, much less gaining respect enough back to get security there.

I have wavered on this subject a lot, and I just don't see how any nation will be willing to take on the mess there now.....even if you give them some of the business. Thanks to the torture stuff, and thanks to our arrogance overall, it will only get worse for our own military and for the Iraqis.

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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 09:10 PM
Response to Reply #50
51. Wasn't it JFK who said, during the Cuban Missle Crisis,
Edited on Thu Sep-22-05 09:10 PM by Totally Committed
"Our friends sleep better when they believe the United States is invincible, and so do our enemies."

It was something like that, and I think it was he who said it. But, you have a point. The rest of the world only suspected that Bush had this country on the ropes before. With Katrina, they were shown how vulnerable we are. That revelation, in and of itself, could cause widespread unrest in the world, not to mention an attempt at more terrorism here, on U.S. soil.

Wes knows this only too well, and is trying to come up with a plan that will calm everyone down, so we can maybe get our soldiers out of Iraq without it being a bloodbath that will leave the entire region unbalanced and in conflict -- and hating our guts for hundreds of years.

TC
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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 11:10 PM
Response to Original message
58. Clark should talk to this guy
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/092205E.shtml

But where Dreyfuss and Cole are mistaken is in concluding that US forces can be part of an effort "to prevent the outbreak of such a catastrophic civil conflict." Despite the plausible logic of this argument, the US presence doesn't deter, but contributes to, a thickening civil-war-like atmosphere in Iraq. It is always a dicey matter to project the present into the future, though that never stopped anybody from doing so. The future, by definition, is unknown and so open to the unexpected. Nonetheless, it is far more reasonable, based on what we now know, to assume that if the US were to leave Iraq quickly, the level of violence would be reduced, possibly drastically, not heightened. Here are the four key reasons:

1. The US military is already killing more civilian Iraqis than would likely die in any threatened civil war;
2. The US presence is actually aggravating terrorist (Iraqi-on-Iraqi) violence, not suppressing it;
3. Much of the current terrorist violence would be likely to subside if the US left;
4. The longer the US stays, the more likely that scenarios involving an authentic civil war will prove accurate.

<snip>

In addition, under the strain of an exhausted army and a fractured budget, the Bush administration is seeking to "Iraqify" the occupation by replacing American troops with Iraqis. In 2004, after Sunni police and military units melted under fire or defected to the guerrillas, the US began relying more heavily on Shia recruits (as well as Kurdish militiamen, or Pesh Merga) in their battles with the Sunni resistance. The brutality of the American military plan for pacifying the country, now being enacted by ever more Shia and Kurdish soldiers, has convinced increasing numbers of Sunnis that Zarqawi's claims about the Shia are all too correct, and so has allowed him to recruit increasing numbers of willing martyrs, both in Iraq and in neighboring countries.

Just before Bloody Wednesday, at Tal Afar, Shia (as well as Pesh Merga) soldiers were given frontline responsibility for lethal house-to-house searches, spearheading the wholesale destruction of individual homes, many with residents still inside, and whole neighborhoods. It was no surprise, therefore, when, a few days later, Zarqawi declared that Bloody Wednesday was the beginning of the "battle to avenge the Sunni people of Tal Afar," and also the beginning of a "full scale war on Shiites around Iraq, without mercy." Here again, American action exacerbated rather than suppressed internal Iraqi friction. This constant and escalating provocation only swells the reservoir of willing martyrs and increases the plausibility of Zarqawi's claim that the sole route to "liberation" involves direct attacks on Shia citizens.

On the other hand, history indicates that once the provocation of foreign troops is removed, the reservoir tends to quickly drain. Terrorism expert Robert Pape reports that, in recent history, it is almost unknown for suicide bombings to continue after the withdrawal of the occupying power,... etc.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 11:31 PM
Response to Reply #58
59. Let me just re-iterate this....
This is Bush's war, and he will decide what will be....based on whether he succumbs to pressure and gets them out, or continues on because empiralistic facism is his game...

the bottomline is that Dems don't need to be blamed for whatever fucked up shit turns up in Iraq, and in particular if the shits hits the fan when we leave...because Bush will leave the "wrong" way, you can guarantee it.

Wes was right when he listed all that could go wrong in Iraq, and it did. So I won't be second guessing him now....

Osama and Al queada are just chomping at the bits. They will have a new headquarters, and we will have gifted them with it, if we don't do the diplomatic work prior to leaving!
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Donna Zen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Sep-22-05 11:49 PM
Response to Original message
62. Something is really strange
...when people diss the idea of diplomacy.

Just saying....strange.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:04 AM
Response to Reply #62
63. Gene Lyons "gets" it!

Beginning with a trenchant column in The Washington Post and a subsequent appearance on NBC News’ "Meet the Press," Clark has begun a calculated assault on the Bush administration’s Iraq policy from the right and left simultaneously.

Clark lays down what he calls "a threepronged strategy: diplomatic, political and military" to deal with the realities the Bush administration ignored in its half-baked belief that American invaders would be greeted by flower-throwing throngs. Almost none, frankly, has any likelihood of being enacted. Hire 10,000 Arab-American translators? Convene a regional security council to hash things out with Iraq’s neighbors, i. e., Iran, Syria, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, etc.? Not gonna happen.

And then? "If the administration won’t adopt a winning strategy," Clark writes, "then the American people will be justified in demanding that it bring our troops home." He doesn’t pretend that would be a good thing. Asked about the consequences of retreat in an online forum, Clark concedes that "an exit that leaves behind violence, chaos and civil war will be viewed as a clear American defeat. And it will supercharge terrorist recruiting, increase problems for American diplomacy... and increase the danger closer to home." Clark only implies that retreat could end up being the least bad option.
http://www.nwanews.com/story.php?paper=adg§ion=Editorial&storyid=127033


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Donna Zen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:45 AM
Response to Reply #63
65. Thanks Frenchie
I'd missed this article, and I love Gene Lyons. And yes, when bush pulls the plug because America finally rattles his cage, Wes Clark's plan gives us the "I told ya so." Whereas...well, I've already gone on about the date-certain problems: we take the blame for bush's grand fucking misadventure.

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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 06:57 AM
Response to Reply #63
67. Aw... Gene Lyons is such a mensch!
He really "gets" Wes. He gets the way he thinks... the whole deal. Gotta love the guy!

Gene Lyons.... :loveya:

TC
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xkenx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 06:32 PM
Response to Reply #63
82. If You Missed This Great Gene Lyons Interview
about Wes Clark on Buzzflash, read on. Pay particular attention to the part about Wes Clark not being "One to fuck with." Herein lies the ability of a Democratic Presidential candidate (finally)to take on the Rethugs and win. Wes Clark will slaughter any Swift Boat Liars kind of attack.

October 22, 2003
Gene Lyons, Political Columnist and Co-Author of "Hunting of the President," Chats with BuzzFlash About General Wesley Clark

A BUZZFLASH INTERVIEW

Gene Lyons is one of BuzzFlash's favorite writers and thinkers. He along with co-author Joe Conason wrote the seminal book on how the right-wing tried to tear down a duly elected and popular president and first lady in The Hunting of the President. Always insightful and to the point, we're honored to bring you our third interview with Gene Lyons about another intelligent Arkansas candidate, Wesley Clark, who is seeking the presidency.

Gene Lyons won the National Magazine Award in 1980. He has written extensively for Newsweek, Harper's, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, Texas Monthly, Entertainment Weekly, and many other magazines. His books include The Higher Illiteracy (1988), Widow's Web (1993), and Fools for Scandal (1996). Gene currently writes a political column for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

(Just a reminder: BuzzFlash has not endorsed any Democratic candidate for the presidency in the primaries. We believe that democracy should takes its course. We try to run pieces on all the leading contenders.)

* * *

BUZZFLASH: What's your take on how Ret. Gen. Wesley Clark has shaken up the Democratic field?

GENE LYONS: I wrote a couple of columns in the summer when the talk was starting, sort of urging Wesley Clark to run. I suggested in a column that he ought to hear the call of duty. Given the views that Clark had, and his unique status and political gifts, I felt he almost had a duty to run because his candidacy would affect a lot of Democrats like an electrical charge. And I think it has to the extent that people have heard of him. The people who know about him and who have heard of him, and are not committed to a candidate, have been very turned on and excited by his candidacy. I think that he has a reasonably good chance to end up with the nomination.

BUZZFLASH: What advantages do you perceive, both professionally and personally, that Clark brings to the table that could really give him the edge in not only getting the nomination, but also defeating Bush?

LYONS: What I wrote a long time ago was we didn't know if Clark had the "political hunger." We didn't know if his value as a symbol would be equaled by his value as a politician -- as an actual candidate with the nuts and bolts of going from town to town, trying to sell yourself to people.

And some of those unknowns I think have been allayed. I think what they call it in the army -- his command presence -- is very noticeable. When you meet him, even privately, one-on-one, or in small groups, his personal charisma, which is very real and also very different from Clinton's, is apparent.

It's also true that quality of command presence is partly theatrical. You get to be a general partly by acting like a general. You command respect by acting authoritatively. At the same time, he's affable and approachable.

Clark's intellectual brilliance may be more apparent than Clinton's, because Clark doesn't do the "aw-shucks Southern country boy" act the way Clinton can do it. So you're struck immediately with how intelligent he is. At the same time, he listens to people and pays attention to what they're saying, and responds like a human being.

I want to be careful how I say this, but he has an almost feline presence -- and by that I don't mean "catty," as in bitchy. I mean like a big cat. I once encountered a mountain lion in the Point Reyes National Seashore in California, on a rainy day in winter, when I was all by myself. We stood stock still staring at each other for a few seconds. And there was this moment of "Gee, that's a cougar, this is really cool." And then an instant later, came the feeling of "My God, that's a lion!" There's nothing between me and him, no fence. Clark has a little bit of that kind of presence. You sense a tremendous personal authority about him held in and contained by self-discipline. Not somebody to fuck with, is another way of putting it.

BUZZFLASH: You look at his background -- Rhodes scholar, decorated war hero, Supreme Commander of NATO. It gives him a unique position to criticize Bush on terrorism and the decision to invade and continue to occupy Iraq. It seems that his status allows him to make those criticisms without looking as political as the other candidates -- that Clark's basing his criticism on professional experience.

LYONS: I think that it's hard to depoliticize a candidacy. But I think one of his reasons for running is his very obvious personal ambition, and I think that's something he needs to be careful with. He's clearly a very ambitious person. He clearly thinks that he is among the best qualified people to be President of the United States in his generation. I happen to think he's probably right. But nevertheless, people don't always react well to that quality in people.

I do think his concerns are honest. I think his criticisms of Bush are exactly what he believes. One reason that I think that is I have had an opportunity to talk to him in a sort of a semi-private way.

Going all the way back to the summer of 2002, I got a sense of how strong his feelings about Iraq were. Long before it was clear that the administration was really going to sell a war on Iraq, when it was just a kind of a Republican talking point, early in the summer of 2002, Wesley Clark was very strongly opposed to it. He thought it was definitely the wrong move. He conveyed that we'd be opening a Pandora's box that we might never get closed again. And he expressed that feeling to me, in a sort of quasi-public way. It was a Fourth of July party and a lot of journalists were there, and there were people listening to a small group of us talk. There wasn't an audience, there were just several people around. There was no criticism I could make that he didn't sort of see me and raise me in poker terms. Probably because he knew a lot more about it than I did. And his experience is vast, and his concerns were deep.

He was right, too. How long ago was it that you were hearing all this sweeping rhetoric from the Project for a New American Century; that we were going to essentially conquer the south of Asia, contain China, and dominate the Middle East? And the United States was going to stand astride the world like a colossus. And all of a sudden, we invade a crummy, tin-pot, little third-rate dictatorship like Iraq, and we've already got more than we can handle. It's clear we're not going to dominate the world. And the question is, how in the world do we get out of there with our skins intact? And how do we then find a foreign policy that makes more sense?

BUZZFLASH: Do you think that the situation in Iraq is going to play a significant role in the 2004 election versus domestic issues and the economy?

LYONS: I think it is going to be a big issue. People want to know how in the world we're going to get out of there and not make things worse. I think everybody's nervous about a precipitous pullout, but there's also no reason to think things are going to be markedly better by next fall. I think it's already beginning to impact domestic issues, especially the question of the budget. I think that a lot of people who may not have felt this way before are beginning to center on the question, "Is Bush in over his head?"

You always hear it expressed as a TV metaphor -- is this guy ready for prime time? But then Bush gets in office, and it suddenly occurs to you, "Well, gee, he's not a game show host. He's supposed to run the country." Does Bush know what he's doing? Do the people around him have any sense of reality? Or are they crackpot ideologues? I mean, I see them as utopian fantasists myself. What the Disney people call "imagineers" on a global scale. American foreign policy has begun to resemble the scenario for a James Bond film. And so I think, yes, for all those reasons and more, I think the war's likely going to come down on Bush's judgment.

BUZZFLASH: One of the things that Clark stressed when he announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination was that criticizing George W. Bush is not unpatriotic. And he is in that unique position of being a decorated war hero and a general. It's hard to call someone like that unpatriotic. But nonetheless, if he gets the nomination or if he's asked to be a vice presidential candidate, the right wing is going to go after him.

LYONS: Absolutely.

BUZZFLASH: You're probably one of the most well-informed journalists on how attack politics play themselves out with a culpable media, based on your extensive research and writing on the Clintons. How do you think the right wing is going to go after Clark? What can he expect? What advice would you give Clark and the people who are working for him?

LYONS: Well, the outlines of it are already evident. They're saying he's too tightly wrapped, which is kind of akin to what they tried to do with John McCain. They're saying he's a zealot and tends to become unhinged. They're suggesting he's crazed with ambition.

I wrote in a column a couple of weeks ago that one of their lines of attack would be to portray him as sort of General Jack D. Ripper, who was the megalomaniacal general in Dr. Strangelove who was so concerned with his precious bodily fluids. And that's what I think they will try to do. They might go all the way to the edge of suggesting some kind of mental illness. I don't think he's very vulnerable to that sort of smear.

Clark gave a very interesting quote that I used in a column in a profile in Esquire. He said the whole question about running against George W. Bush boils down to how much pain can you take. So I think he has some idea of what's coming. I think he has some idea that it will be shrill, it will come from that side of the spectrum, and it will be harsh. I think they're going to try to portray him as a crackpot and as wildly ambitious, and therefore dangerous. The right-wing will definitely label him an opportunist and say he's switching parties simply to become President and he's power-mad.

My view is that Clark's campaign -- any democratic candidate's, really -- needs to take a page from the Clinton '92 campaign, in which they set up a kind of a counterintelligence staff which responded immediately and hard to the attacks and lies. I suspect that, given how good Clark is on his feet, and how clever he is, he may be tempted to think he can go this alone -- that he himself can fend this stuff off by addressing each smear one at a time and dealing with it. I don't know if that's possible because the volume of it is going to be beyond anything one person can cope with.

BUZZFLASH: Bush is no doubt going to run a two-sided campaign where he is the friendly Texan trying to stay above the fray, and all his minions such as Karl Rove will be doing the dirty work. There's no better example that what Bush's campaign did to John McCain, claiming he only received medals just to make him feel better for being a prisoner of war. Or, as you pointed out, that he was mentally unsafe or unstable.

LYONS: That's what the Bushes do. George W. Bush plays the affable back-slapper. And while he's slapping your back, Rove and company are preparing the shiv.

People like you and me and most BuzzFlash readers are always lamenting how people treat politics as if it is a TV show, and one that they watch with only passing attention. And so it does become a lot about symbolism. And Bush just seems like -- as my mother always used to say about Reagan -- too nice a fellow for that kind of thing.

BUZZFLASH: BuzzFlash is not going to endorse any of the Democratic candidates. And our position has always been, bottom line, whoever is the Democratic nominee to challenge Bush, in order to win, that candidate has to do four things: 1) Define the terms of the debate and the issues; 2) Defend themselves against the right-wing attacks, wherever they come from; 3) Be willing to go on the offensive and actually go after Bush's credibility on some very key issues such as Treasongate, the Iraq war, job losses, the deficit, etc.; and 4) Not apologize for standing up for Democratic positions and values, thereby activating the Democratic base. Are you impressed with how Clark's campaign is running? And do you foresee him being able to execute those four components against Bush?

LYONS: In a word, yes. I'm like BuzzFlash -- I don't really have a candidate. In fact, I sort of stayed away from the Democratic race because I felt like 10 candidates (now nine since Sen. Bob Graham dropped out) are too many to evaluate. I'm for the Democrat in this race. That's been my sort of default position. It's hard for me to imagine supporting Bush regardless who the wins the Democratic nomination. I mean, the record of failure to me is staggering. If Bush is a success, how you would define failure?

In American political terms, I think Clark is doing well or better than can be expected. I think he's already out-run early expectations. People were saying he was entering too late, and, all of a sudden, the polls come out and he's one of -- if not the -- front runners. The people on the Draft Wesley Clark website were right about there being nine candidates running, but more than half of the likely voters had made no decision yet. So it was pretty clear that people were not seeing what they wanted in the nine candidates. And I think what most Democrats want most passionately is somebody that can win.

BUZZFLASH: If Wesley Clark gets the nomination, it upsets the Republican Southern strategy. Give our readers a little bit of context and history to what the Southern strategy is, and how Clark affects the geo-political landscape and culture war.

LYONS: Well, basically the Southern strategy started with Nixon in the late ‘60s. The idea was to convince the core constituency -- Southern white men -- that the Republican Party was their home and that the Democrats were the women's party, the black people's party, the homosexual party, the party of disgruntled minorities who were anti-religious, anti-patriotic, and anti-American, in a fundamental way. That Democrats supported "race-mixing," immorality, and the welfare state. It worked well enough to swing the South to the Republicans in the wake of the Civil Rights Act.

Lyndon Johnson is famous for having predicted this. Dale Bumpers, the former Arkansas Senator, told me that as a very young man he congratulated LBJ for signing the Voting Rights Act of '64, and Johnson said, "Well, just as long as you understand that the whole South is going to be Republican in 10 years." And it has worked for a long time.

But I think that as a person and as a symbol, Clark has the potential to take all that away from the right-wing. I might add that I also think that there are an awful lot of genuine conservatives, in the classical sense, who are uneasy about where Bush is going. The conquer-the-world schemes, the giant sinkhole of the federal budget. Some of the best writing about Iraq has come from conservative or libertarian columnists like Steve Chapman of the Chicago Tribune or James Pinkerton of Newsday. Now this is sad, but those conservatives aren't going to listen to Carol Mosley Braun make the same criticism as that coming from Wesley Clark, who is a Southerner and a decorated military man. I think it's sad but true. Again, I think it's a battle of symbols.

I think that in practical terms Clark puts several Southern states back in play. Right now, Bush would be very hard-put to win any of the states that Gore won in the last election. So if you can take away from Bush, or at least strongly compete in Arkansas, West Virginia, Kentucky, possibly Georgia, Florida, with all of its military people, you all of a sudden take from Bush this air of invincibility and fundamentally change the electoral map. When you look at it like that you have to ask, how in the world is Bush going to win this election? Where are his electoral votes going to come from?

BUZZFLASH: There's this perception among progressives and Democrats that because the Bush administration is so right wing, and effectively all three branches of government are in the control of the Republican Party, that we're underdogs. But people forget that Gore won the election by a half-million votes. And let's not forget over 95,000 people cast their vote for Ralph Nader in Florida, while Bush "won" by 537 votes. When you look at the electoral map, the Democrats start out much stronger than what you would think they do. I think that the Democrats could feel a little bit more aggressive and empowered based on those things. As you've pointed out, if the Democratic candidate wins every state that Gore won, all the Democrats have to do is just pick off one more, whether it's Arkansas or West Virginia, and the Democrats take the White House.

LYONS: Well, I've been reminding people of that all along. But I also think Clark does more than that. My subjective view was that culturally there was no way that Dean, for example, could win in the South -- he would be a complete non-starter. Dean has a terrific line about this. He says he'd tell the pickup driving set (a group that would include me, for what it's worth) that they've been voting Republican for 30 years, and ask them "What have you got to show for it?" Great line, but would they ever hear it at all coming from a Vermont Yankee? I've got my doubts. And that would allow the Republicans to spend a lot more money in places like Missouri and Pennsylvania and Michigan that are states that are very competitive. And it would make it extremely difficult for Dean to win in that he'd have to run the table in all the other states and pick up one more state somewhere.

I'm just talking about pure symbolism now. I'm not talking about the candidates or their virtues or standards. The symbolism of Clark -- because we are talking about a television show, after all, if we're talking about a presidential campaign -- means you have trouble finding a way for the Republicans to win.

I think Clark would bring back a lot of military people. I think there's great disquiet among people of the old-fashioned style of patriotism right now, and it's looking for a place to go. And I think there's a very good chance it would go to Clark. I think that he would have a strong chance to unite that which has been divided.

I'm not going to tell you everything's wonderful in the South. But the amazing thing is how well the South adapted personally and culturally, in a day-to-day way, to all of the changes brought about forcibly by federal law in the ‘60s as a result of various civil rights acts. People manage to get along most of the time, and there is a much smaller role that racial hatred and racial prejudice plays out in everyday life in the Southern quadrant of the country than it did 30 or 40 years ago -- in public, on the job, in sports, and other areas of daily life.

You almost wouldn't know it from the campaigns of the Republican Party that used the Southern strategy. There is more open opportunity and more genuine friendship among and between different racial groups than ever before. The Republican campaigns in some parts of the South would make you think that everyone was a George Wallace supporter, or would be happy to vote for George Wallace, which isn't true.

Even so, many people that won those kinds of elections are sort of embarrassed by all that -- even people who voted for Wallace are ashamed. Arkansas Republican Gov. Mike Huckabee, for example, is neither racist nor reactionary. I mean, yes, there's a subdued minority who are both of those things. They were the core of the Clinton haters, for example. But remember, Clinton always won.

BUZZFLASH: I get the sense that there's something going below the radar, and it has a lot to do with the surge of Dean and progressives becoming more active. Progressives feel there needs to be a primary goal of knocking Bush out of office, and, secondly, progressives could be more strategic in how they approach presidential politics, at least. There is no question that progressives should continue to work on issue advocacy locally and in grassroots campaigns. But when it comes to the presidential election, voting for a third party is, in fact, helping the Republicans. The difference between a Republican and a Democrat really is quite devastating, as the record of Bush would indicate. Do you get the sense that there's an undercurrent of resentment among several groups that are willing to focus on knocking Bush out?

LYONS: Yes, I do. I think that a lot of people are thinking straight because they feel so endangered by this administration. Fundamental American values seem endangered in a way that they've not seemed before. I think people on the left are going to be more serious about the coming election. They don't want to play around with their own kind of silly symbolism.

Let me suggest another way of putting it. One of the things I've said is I think that Bill Clinton symbolically represented the so-called Woodstock values of the Democratic Party. A lot of people felt that there was some kind of cultural divide. I think that a Clark candidacy has the capacity to close that divide. I've never shaken hands with his son -- I wouldn't know him if he knocked on my door -- but the kid's a Hollywood screenwriter, and his dad's a four-star general.

Some of those cultural divides start to close, and people are prioritizing in a useful way. They're putting some of their own symbolic but relatively trivial issues aside -- identity and gender issues, for example -- and saying we need someone in the country who can beat Bush. We need someone in office who will defend American independence and freedom, and would defend us physically if it came to that, and who knows how to do that, but who doesn't think that we need an American imperium and don't have to conquer the world.

I think that Wesley Clark offers a tremendous opportunity for people to think clearly about foreign policy and re-think how important all kinds of symbolic and "lifestyle issues" are to them -- whether it doesn't make more sense to put some of those things in your back pocket for a time and work on them later after you've dealt with the big threat, which is a guy who is bankrupting the nation and getting us involved in foreign entanglements -- to use Gen. George Washington's words -- of a kind we're not likely to get out of very easily.

Let's just look at the situation like this: How much of a partisan do you have to be to look at George W. Bush and Wesley Clark standing side by side and say to yourself, "I'd pick George W. Bush to lead this country." How partisan do you have to be to decide that Bush is more qualified in a national emergency -- a guy who can scarcely speak in complete sentences -- to handle a crisis over a decorated war hero, a Rhodes Scholar, a retired four star general, and the former Supreme Commander of NATO?

BUZZFLASH: Gene Lyons, always good to talk politics with you. Thank you for your thoughts.

LYONS: Thank you.






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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 06:50 PM
Response to Reply #82
84. That was a great interview! How prophetic Gene's words were:
How partisan do you have to be to decide that Bush is more qualified in a national emergency -- a guy who can scarcely speak in complete sentences -- to handle a crisis over a decorated war hero, a Rhodes Scholar, a retired four star general, and the former Supreme Commander of NATO?

I'd forgotten that part of the interview, to be honest... sadly we have found out exactly how "qualified" Bush was to handle a national emergency, haven't we?

TC
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 01:33 AM
Response to Reply #62
66. Nobody is dissing the idea of diplomacy.
And just because we question Clark's views right now does not make us strange.

It is a mess there, we have lost our credibility in the face of the world since they saw our own people dying and crying on rooftops in New Orleans.

Now the world realizes we are not the power we were thought to be.

The use of diplomacy is really only effective when you are working from a basis of credibility. We have none anymore.

The longer we stay there, the more of our military will die for the lies of Bush. More innocent Iraqis will die. No one believes us to be the superpower anymore, and we have lost our basis for diplomacy.

It is sad but true, I'me afraid. I am not strange at all, I simply wonder why he would try to the coalition that wants us out now to change their views. Whatever good things we might have accomplished can not be done since the world saw that we can not afford to take care of our own.

I don't care to be thought to be strange for questioning.
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Donna Zen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 08:16 AM
Response to Reply #66
69. Huh?
We can agree that we are losing credibility in the world's eyes which supports not negates the call for diplomacy. Considering that much of our diminishing on the world stage results less from Katrina and more from the fact that our country has adopted the role of school-yard bully, until we "change the course" by acting like rational members of the world community, that image will not change and distrust of America will grow. Armies, to the best of my knowledge, rarely if ever, leave a battlefield without someone talking.

After rereading my post that you referred to, I stand by the statement that dissing diplomacy is a strange action. No where does it call anyone a name, and of course it does not specifically refer to anyone.

The people that want us out now could continue along that same path and call for diplomacy simultaneously. In fact, the call to leave is strengthened by demanding that our government act like civilized members of the world community by abandoning their non-verbal thuggishness. We must chew gum and walk at the same time if the Gulf region is to dodge an even more bloody conflict.

Clark never believed that we should go into Iraq, and he does want out of Iraq. He believes that the position one finds oneself in by adopting an "out now" stance is limiting and counter productive. The forces that are staging their power battles within Iraq emanate from both the inside and the outside. "Out now" puts all of the pressure on the US and no pressure on the players who control the situation. Saying that we will leave completely--no permanent bases--takes away one of the talking points that is currently being used to gin up increasing violence. Saudi Arabia wants one thing, Iran wants another, and on and on. Thus, they continue to fight over Iraq, and in doing so, create more enmity, which like Katrina or Rita, grows ever more dangerous while it feeds on all who come into its path. It is to everyone's benefit to break the cycle of violence and begin to talk.

There is nothing wrong with diplomacy.
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 08:25 AM
Response to Reply #69
70. I agree... Wes's is a "big picture" solution,
with a lot of people who just want us out so badly (and there is a part of me that totaly sympathizes with that, btw) they are just unable to see the big picture.

They will come around, or maybe they won't. It's makes no matter, however, because last time I checked, Bush was not checking with Wes for his next move in Iraq. All this bluster is for nothing, really.

Bottom line: Bush doesn't give a shit how many of other people's kids have to die in order to claim "victory". He isn't into diplomacy, there or anywhere...

TC
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Donna Zen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 10:14 AM
Response to Reply #70
71. So true TC
When Wes Clark first proposed the plan, or rather one should say, he refined the original one to mesh with the changing circumstances, I really had to search my war weary soul about how I felt about his words the weakness of an "end date scheme." But I never paused for one moment about supporting the call for diplomacy. I simple do not understand where this disparaging attitude, a very neocon attitude at that, is coming from. I hesitate to ponder that this mysterious might be driven by 1) a hatred of all things Clark or 2) support for a candidate who didn't suggest it first.

When people no longer value communications the world should fasten its equator, for things are about to get worse.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:32 PM
Response to Reply #69
75. I did not diss diplomacy. I think it is too late for it in Iraq.
The horrible mess there does not make it look like we are in control enough to even try for diplomacy.

The horrible mess here in our own country has shown the world we are stretched too thin.

I never said there was anything wrong with diplomcacy. I just think it may too late to try diplomatic measures before getting out of there now. We tore a country apart, and I don't think we can fix things by offering to let other countries repair our damage.

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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 08:34 PM
Response to Reply #66
92. madfloridian ponders...
"I simply wonder why he would try to the coalition that wants us out now to change their views."

Well, they asked him to speak before their Caucus and, of course, he's going to say what he feels to be true, so that is what he did. If that caused some to be swayed, maybe that means he's making sense.....These are tough, smart people we're dealing with here.

If you mean that you can't figure why Clark doesn't want us to pull out now, well, his reasons have been all over the internet...Not hard to find them. You can start with his PAC's site, www.securingamerica.com.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 09:53 PM
Response to Reply #92
97. I do more than "ponder."
I read what you mentioned, I read more at TPM Cafe. I am not the only one a little caught off guard that he convinced the "out of Iraq" coalition that they had to wait and make a plan.

I defended this position when Howard Dean was blasted for it to hell and back..but I actually felt it was a fairly wise one then. I have since become mixed in my views, and even Dean in his last few interviews is wavering a lot on it.

Since the world saw us for what we really are....vulnerable and rather powerless with an administration totally corrupt....then I think that diplomacy is highly unlikely and will just mean more lives on both sides.

I find the fact that some are saying Clark is becoming a major voice in the party to mean something different that you do. I think it means that the "progressive imperialism" is back to stay...perhaps in a "kinder gentler" form but back nevertheless. Or maybe it never left.

I think that Clark's position on the NED board of directors bothers me as well. I know what I say on this is not popular with you guys, and I am sorry. You all stay upset with me anyway, so I might as well say what I really believe. I don't always agree with Matthew Yglesias but his comments at TPM struck a chord with me. It is a thoughtful discussion.
http://www.tpmcafe.com/story/2005/9/23/05834/3560
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Texas_Kat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 10:15 PM
Response to Reply #97
98. I'd be careful there, MY is one of those who insist
"Now" doesn't really mean "Now".

(You should read him regularly ...)
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 10:29 PM
Response to Reply #98
99. I agree. I said I don't always agree.
Read my post. In fact I often do not agree with a lot of the Prospect writers, but sometimes I do. I pretty much think for myself about things.
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CarolNYC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 10:39 PM
Response to Reply #97
100. OK, I'm glad you read his stuff...
Then you know his reasons for not wanting to "change the course" rather than pull out right now...perhaps you disagree with them or have some questions but you should be familiar with his reasons...

As for the Caucus, it's not like he busted his way in there and said "I'm going to make you agree with me!!!" The Caucus, knowing full well the General's views on this as he hasn't exactly kept them secret, invited him to speak to them. You do know that, right? They invited him...he didn't crash the party or anything....Apparently what he said made sense to them. Sorry if that upsets you.

But why are you always saying I'm upset with you? Sorry to disappoint, but you don't upset me. Every time someone responds to one of your posts, it doesn't mean they are upset with you, OK?

Be well....
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windbreeze Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 09:47 PM
Response to Reply #66
96. Wes Clark would be the first one
to give you kudos for questioning...answer your questions...and then go on to encourage you to keep questioning..
windbreeze
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wiley Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:37 AM
Response to Original message
64. Anyone would do well to listen carefully to what Clark has to say.
We cannot afford to ignore or discount any highly experienced or intelligent to resolve this horrible elective war.
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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 11:20 AM
Response to Reply #64
72. I think our biggest handicap as Democrats....
Edited on Fri Sep-23-05 11:20 AM by FrenchieCat
in particular those calling for immediate withdrawal (whatever that means) is that many of us are treasuring our chance (at long last) to be able to say to the Bush administration "I told you so, you dummy"....Rather than to attempt to manage Pandora's Box which is now fully open. We can either leave the box opened "as is", or try to close the lid a bit...understanding that what is already out cannot be put back in.

This "immediate pullout" priority that Dems are lining up behind allows those who normally would value all life and not just those of our American servicemen and women to be blinded with the noble but shortsighted rational of "getting our boys out of harms way ASAP". After all, it sounds so patriotic!

Unfortunately, there is a Dem blind spot which leaves out a realistic analysis as to what the possible predictions are for the future of those we leave behind..... as well as how this "get out now" move, if done without utilizing the right tools could come back to bite us in the ass bigtime at a later point....hence the blind spot Dems are creating in the gleeful haste to prove Bush wrong in what he did in the first place could become the saving grace for the Bush Administration.

Considering that Dems really have no real say so, an intelligent strategy is called for, which is what Wes Clark attempts to provide. The important piece to pay attention to is not so much the plan he calls for as it will never be implemented, but rather the strategy he has devised to put the Democrats in a stronger position when the shit hits the fan with no respise.

I agree with Clark's ulterior strategy--give the White House a plan, let them not use it, and the focus becomes why the White House failed to do what it could have done and yet chose not to do it (i.e., Dems giving the Pugs the rope to hang themselves). If we shout "get out now", and things totally falls apart, then the finger will be pointing our way with as much vigor as it could point to the White House, as Bush will be acting based on our proposed solution.

So although it is true that the less bad solution to all of the bad solutions available is to do diplomacy on our way out, since Bush just won't, Clark has set up the scenario where Dems win by default...

Its just really simple as that.
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Gloria Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:38 PM
Response to Original message
76. And this....up until now the American people have not gone for the
"pull them out now" scenario...they've AGREED with Bush's stuff about the Iraqi forces taking over, then getting out...

HOWEVER, support for a withdrawal has been gaining.....Clark is in a perfect position as he says that if the American people see that Bush's "plan" is not working, that he hasn't followed the Clark (now, hopefully, Democrats) suggestions, then a withdrawal should be in the cards.

The burden of showing improvement in the situation is dumped on Bush, the accountablity....the American people come along, want out, and the Democrats are standing in the correct place and can defend themselves against the bullshit spin about being "weak, anti-troops," etc. etc.

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FrenchieCat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 12:58 PM
Response to Reply #76
77. Yes.....
The "Cut and run" label cannot be worn by Democrats if they offered a diplomatic solution and the WH just didn't listen. That's the below the radar plan that some are missing. Too bad!
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Totally Committed Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 05:39 PM
Response to Original message
81. From WaPo: This is What Wes is Talking About, and Trying to Avoid
Iraq Faces Disintegration, Saudi Says
by Robin Wright

Saudi Arabia warned yesterday that the situation in Iraq is moving "toward disintegration," with a growing danger that the country will dissolve into a civil war that will draw its neighbors into a broader regional conflict.

During a visit to Washington, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud Faisal told reporters that his government has also warned the Bush administration of the dangers of Iraq's unraveling because of tensions between rival ethnic and religious groups, which he said were never as bad during former President Saddam Hussein's rule as they are today.

"The impression is gradually going toward disintegration. There seems to be no dynamic now that is pulling the country together. All the dynamics there are pushing the people away from each other," Faisal said. As a result, Iraq is now a "very threatening" challenge undermining stability throughout the Middle East. "It will draw the countries of the region into conflict. That is the main worry of all the neighbors of Iraq," he said.

Faisal warned that Iraq's further disintegration would also bring Shiite-dominated Iran more directly into support for Iraq's Shiite majority, while Turkey would "not allow" a Kurdish country to emerge on its border. It would also divide Iraq into three parts, all of which would vie for control of the oil resources.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/22/AR2005092202133.html?nav=rss_print/asection

TC
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Texas_Kat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 08:56 PM
Response to Original message
94. Did you catch this from the O'Leilly show?
Edited on Fri Sep-23-05 08:57 PM by Texas_Kat
"I was up there working with Charlie Rangel and others.... on an exit strategy.... success strategy for Iraq."

Cool nugget in a great interview!
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Sparkly Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-23-05 09:02 PM
Response to Reply #94
95. Yup!
"I'm getting some traction now," something like that. :woohoo:
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