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Maybe They're Wrong After All
ARTICLE ORIGINALLY APPEARED AT
TheBigFiveOh.com Blog @ Yahoo.Com, Sunday March 4, 2007
First: On Friday 16 February, the House of Representatives voted in favor of
a non-binding resolution opposing the "surge" plan to send an additional
21,500 troops to Iraq;
Second...oops, that's it. No other House or Senate bills have been passed.
There are several more still on the docket, but so far the Democrats are 1
for 2, and the bill they passed is a weak, watered-down, nonsensical
non-binding resolution that House leaders never had the guts to submit to
the President for his signature.
If there is such widespread opposition to the war in Iraq, why hasn't there
been any successful efforts made to stop it? Certainly the Democrats with
their supposed "mandate" have the power to cut off funding for the war?
How's this for a radical notion? Maybe the surge continues and the war goes
on because the American people and, yes, even a majority of the members of
Congress, despite their bluster about how incompetently it's been conducted,
really APPROVE of the war?
The cynical may say that the Democrats want the war to continue because more
American casualties in Iraq mean more votes against Republican candidates in
the 2008 elections--it's George Bush's war after all, and anyone even
remotely linked or aligned with the President will suffer politically.
I think there's a lot of truth in that. But I think the real reason is that
a majority of Americans and even a majority of those in Congress want the
war to be a success, no matter what the cost.
Americans are finally starting to realize that we are under attack by
corrupted Islamists that want to destroy the West and set up a network of
nations united under a radicalized version of Islamic law, and if we don't
fight them in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Philippines, Somalia, and a dozen other
countries in the world, we'll end up fighting them over here.
We are starting to understand that the war against radical Islam will be a
long-term battle that will require enormous sacrifice and determination, but
the cost of failure will be much, much higher.
Folks are finally starting to accept the idea that the war on radical Islam
is an undeclared but very real war, like the Cold War against the threat of
militaristic Communism, and it will span generations. It will require the
creation of vast bureaucracies and military units designed specifically to
search, detect, track, and neutralize the threat, and it will require new
laws to enable these units and agencies to effectively do their job, at home
as well as abroad. Everyone will eventually be touched by this new reality.
There will be those that deny that this new war exists. They will say that
creating new agencies and units to combat this "threat" is just an
imperialistic power and money grab by ideological madmen in the White House.
If the Islamists strike again, they will say, it will be because America
provoked them--that we have marginalized and ignored most of the rest of the
world so badly and for so long that the oppressed have no other recourse
than to lash out with asymmetrical weapons and tactics that government
propagandists will call "terrorists" and "insurgents."
But despite the left's paranoia and rhetoric, I feel most Americans believe
that we ARE at war--not a war like the "war on drugs" or the "war on
poverty," but a war like the Cold War, where failure could lead to societal
annihilation.
No war is good, even with the most noble of intentions. Casualties of war
should never be dismissed as statistically insignificant--every casualty is
a tremendous loss for the families and for the whole nation. But some wars
need to be fought and won, and the war on radical Islam is definitely one of
them.
Is the war in Iraq the war that needs to be fought? Only history will answer
that question. Whatever its outcome, military or political, the war in Iraq
will be seen as one of the first major battles between the West and radical
Islam. Maybe it didn't start out as such--Saddam Hussein was definitely no
wide-eyed Muslim fanatic, although he tried to portray himself as a defender
of Islam--but it has certainly devolved into one.
A major criticism of the Iraq war is that it has changed into a civil war
that we didn't plan to fight, didn't sign on to, aren't equipped to fight,
and doesn't threaten America, and therefore we should pull out. Not true.
The civil war in Iraq is a struggle between Muslim fanatics for control of
Middle East oil--and not just Iraqi fanatics but aggressors from Iran and
other Islamic nations and factions. America needs to stay engaged and in
contact with these radicals to prevent our interests from being controlled
by these extremists, because if they get control of the oil they'll have the
monetary and ideological resources to increase their numbers, change or
destroy governments, and attack at will all over the globe with even more
sophisticated weapons.
My brother is headed to Iraq at the end of this month for his second tour in
Operation Iraqi Freedom and his sixth deployment to the Gulf--and separation
from his family--since 1990. The danger, the sadness, and the fear are all
real, and it's really hit home, again, for me. I may quibble with the way
some American forces are being utilized, but I believe in our mission and
our presence in Iraq, and I hope we stay strong, resolute, and committed to
victory, despite the danger and the very real possibility of a tragic
personal loss.
I'm not angry because he might be hurt or killed in Iraq. He's a soldier,
and that's the danger every soldier faces. I'm angry because a lot of
politicians aren't being honest with the American people, and their rhetoric
is hurting our troops who volunteer to place their lives in jeopardy for
America.
If you don't like the war, don't vote for the funding. If you lose and the
money is appropriated, shut your mouth, draft a new resolution, and try to
get it passed. If that one loses, draft another. If what you say is honest
and true, maybe more will listen to you, and perhaps one day you'll be
successful and cut off the funding. You'll have to live with the
consequences of your decision, just as the President must live with the
consequences of his decisions each and every day our troops are in harm's
way.
But if your resolutions keep on getting defeated, maybe you should start to
understand that there are wars that must be fought, and now is the time to
start fighting them.
by Dale Brown,
2007
So let's tally the results so far of the Democratic Congress's attempts to
tell the Commander-in-Chief what he can and cannot do:
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