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Old 04-14-2010, 10:45 PM   #5
detbuch
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 7,725
Quote:
Originally Posted by spence View Post
From what I've read it's been about the force. I think Iran knows pretty well how a democratic Iraq would behave. Considering the demographic alignment with their own people and culture, a democratic Iraq might actually be far more desirable than a Sunni dictator.

The insurgents weren't trying to destroy "democracy", they were mostly in a sectarian power grab and trying to settle old scores.

It's not how a democratic Iraq would behave to which I refer. It's how Iranian's and others in the region would react, in time, to seeing their neighbors, who once were under autocratic rule, now choosing leaders. The need of mullahs to suppress such ideas has been difficult enough in Iran without having the citizens of a once mortal enemy now having a freedom that many Iranians wish they had. Even, and especially, in dictatorships and theocracies, the people are a constant threat.

The reporting on this is pretty clear. Rumsfeld wanted nothing to do with post invasion planning. The ideologues were convinced that their understanding of human nature was pure. Clearly nobody in charge bothered to study the founding fathers or pick up a history book.

I believe that the reporting is pretty clear that Rumsfeld was removed and direction was changed.

Non sequitur?

With a point.

True, the Dow was nearly 12,000

Yeah, Georgie got it up there, didn't he? No doubt it will get there again. The Dow has been rising the past 40 years as well as the National Debt. The rise in Government spending has been incessant, a constant setting of records from one administration to the next. And the value of the dollar has correspondingly fallen. But that's a little non sequitur of your own. You know that I was referring to radical Islam, not the economy. What is the connection between a 12,000 Dow and the invasion of Iraq?

Other than that it's pretty much the same world, aside from little being done to curb North Korea or Iran.

No, the world was forced to see a threat that it ignored.

And in the process convinced a huge number of mice that they were in fact rats!

They were already rats and had acted as such for a long time. They were not, in their eyes, mice. Nor rats, for that matter. Their Jihad was roiling in relative anonymity, with occasional outbursts, worldwide. There was planning to create cells, worldwide, cadres that would replace those who died, and the West's perception that they were insignificant, if they were perceived at all, allowed them to gather for a future storm in relative security. They, actually, perceived the West as mice. And thought that a 9/11 attack on the epitome of Western power would frighten us into retreat and embolden their followers by showing how weak we were. Afghanistan, Iraq, then who knows next, prematurely flushed them out into open combat, and it exposed how rat-like and defeatable they are--IF WE PERSIST. And a democratic Iraq, with the life of individual citizens actually improved, would be a substantial threat to their ambitions.

The "new face" is more opposition to Western values. Is the world more or less democratic because of Bush's policies? Looking at Egypt, Russia, Iran etc... there's not a good story.

What Bush policy has changed Egypt, Russia, Iran? They were somehow better before Bush policies? I suppose you've read some books that proved how they were just swimmingly going along till Bush policied them and they just decided to retaliate and become . . . what? Iraq is definitely better because of Bush policies. Anyway, what are you looking for, overnight perfection? After 230 years the U.S. is still bickering, and due to Obama policies, about to lose some more of its individual liberties.

There is no surrender of Sunni's to Iran. The US policy is firmly in the camp of Sunni Islam. al Qaeda influence is small at best and getting weaker. The real threat is from the more legitimate issues that al Qaeda also used to gain acceptance, and that other actors will also exploit to legitimize their own political ambitions.

Al Qaeda is getting weaker because it was forced to actually fight. They, and "other actors" were and will be exploiting to "legitimize" their political ambitions. That certainly happens here in the good ol' US of A. As the "people" get wind of resisting being oppressed by these "actors" and enjoy the ability to vote them out, their lot will improve.

Obama seems quite content to spend billions on defense and kill enemies at will. He's no pacifist...BTW the Left hates him for this.

Good.

But Obama hasn't said anything that indicates he wants to "change" the fabric of America.

-spence
Yes he has.
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