I know that some did, but I preferred to think way back in the back of my mind that our Democrats did not think so.
From Meet the Press on Sunday this week.
"But what’s done is done and I, I, I still think it’s important to recognize that if this Iraq experiment could be made to work now, it would be better than if it can’t. No one knows yet whether it can."
And I am terribly afraid that Colin Powell's "omelet" is not going to succeed.
"MR. CLINTON: I did. No, I—here’s what I believe: I think it’s fine to get rid of Saddam and I think it’s fine to try to build a multi-party democracy. I, I spoke to President Talabani today. I think the Kurds are doing pretty well as it is. What I believe was an error was for us to unilaterally invade before the United Nations had finished its inspections. Because we said the reason the Congress was asked to vote to approve this was to give teeth to the U.N. inspections and then to use the authority to invade if he flunked the inspections. I’m glad he’s gone, but I think we have to realize every time you’re someplace, you’re not someplace else; every dollar you spend here, you don’t spend it there. So—but we are where we are now, and since we have broken this egg, as General Powell used to say, we got to try and make an omelet. I think that, that whether this succeeds or fails now depends more on Iraqis than Americans."
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14907031/page/2/I doubt we will ever leave Iraq. Too many Democrats and Republicans have vested interests in this "experiment."
I just called my congressman's office, and I said the Republicans would be remembered as the party of torture and the party who lied us to war.
It made the aide furious. She sort of tried to say that Democrats would accept torture as well.
SO...that sort of ends the debate right there. She's right, you know.