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Bush is Right On, Obama should Move On: Meanwhile the McCain Express Rides On to the Presidency!

Bush speaks against appeasement, Obama responds.

According to this MSNBC article, on May 15, 2008 before the Israeli Knesset, President Bush said the following:

"Some seem to believe we should negotiate with terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along. We have heard this foolish delusion before. As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator declared: 'Lord, if I could only have talked to Hitler, all this might have been avoided.' We have an obligation to call this what it is — the false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by history."

Okay President Bush is right on here. Everyone knows, but the Democrats neglect, that conservatives believe in attempting negotiations with civilized people and groups before using military force against them. In the case of completely uncivilized maniacs like Hamas, Al-Qaida and the Nazis there is no need to negotiate. We must tell them to stop. Currently, for example, the nations represented by the UN are in total agreement that no one is to negotiate with Hamas until the terrorist group stops targeting innocent civilians and have issued resolutions to the affect. The same was true when Saddam Hussein claimed that he had weapons of mass destruction. What has the left said in these cases? In the case of Saddam Hussein, the left have cried out that it is not worth our sacrifices to liberate the people of Iraq, stop the murderous dictator that ordered the genocide of the people of Kuwait, and believed in the total destruction of Israel. What did the left ask for? More negotiations. In the former case, the sniveling, sick former president Jimmy Carter is meeting with Hamas as they launch rockets into Israel daily and called his meeting with these terrorists “fun.” This is clearly an ideology that we’re dealing with in America and Bush is right on!

Obama took the statement personally and said the following:

"It is sad that President Bush would use a speech to the Knesset on the 60th anniversary of Israel's independence to launch a false political attack," Obama said in the statement his aides distributed. "George Bush knows that I have never supported engagement with terrorists, and the president's extraordinary politicization of foreign policy and the politics of fear do nothing to secure the American people or our stalwart ally Israel."

Obama is all over the map as usual. First off, what is false about President Bush’s statement? If Obama agrees with Bush, why doesn’t Obama consider Bush’s statement a criticism of Moveon.org? Secondly, Obama is lying. Everyone knows that Obama has suggested having negotiation talks with the leaders of Iran who are currently supplying arms and sponsoring attacks targeting American troops in Iraq. Also, Iraq’s President is a holocaust denying, anti-Semite who favors the destruction of Israel (I know those descriptors were redundant, I just wanted to drive the point home.). Obama has said that he wants to meet with a man who won’t even acknowledge the legitimacy of the existence of a Jewish state and Obama thinks of Israel as a “stalwart ally”? Obama loves Israel, he just went a church that published statements by Hamas in their church bulletin for the free donuts. Obama loves Israel, he just associates with anti-Semitic, anti-Americans namely his recent campaign advisor Rober Malley, campaign fundraiser, William Ayers, and campaign contributor, Tony Rezko because he enjoys talking politics while sipping lattes and getting the campaign strategy, the weather report, and paying his rent all in one shot.

Finally, the really disturbing part is that Obama believes, and Nancy Pelosi agrees, that foreign policy should be off the table for political discussion. Of course foreign policy is legitimate in political discourse. When the Democrats are pandering to the far left Code Pink types by running on a platform of surrender, cut, and run in Iraq…when Democrats want to abandon the people of Iraq in the midst of the battle for their freedom…when Democrats want to see our military defeated, of course foreign policy is legitimate political discussion!! But Obama says this is nothing more than the “politics of fear,” unlike those who say that we are to be inundated with water and all die by hurricane if we don’t regulate carbon-emissions. Yeah, carbon-emissions are legitimate. Last time I picked up a paper, I read that people are actually dying from terrorist attacks daily. I think Obama has his priorities confused.

You know the real reason why Obama doesn’t want to talk about foreign policy?!? It is because he is a foreign policy moron. He knows that McCain has a top-notch record on foreign policy. He knows that McCain has the record and the experience that this great nation deserves when it comes to commanding our troops, defending our nation, and spreading the great cause of freedom around the world for all people! McCain is strong and Obama is afraid. Americans deserve a great leader like McCain and they are going to show up in the fall to prove it!
 
 
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Lesson from Vietnam: An Opinion by Arthur Herman

Read it here: Wall Street Journal
 
As heard of on the Dennis Prager Show show:

Democrats and the Killing Fields

By ARTHUR HERMAN
May 1, 2008; Page A17

Most people have never heard of Operation Frequent Wind, which ended on April 30, 1975, 33 years ago. But every American has seen pictures of it: the Marine helicopters evacuating the last U.S. personnel from the embassy in Saigon, hours before communist tanks rolled into the city. Thousands of desperate Vietnamese gathered at the embassy gate and begged to be taken with them. Others committed suicide.

Those scenes are a chilling reminder of what happens when a great power decides to cut and run. Two of the three presidential candidates are proposing to do just that in Iraq. We need to remember what happened the last time we gave up on an unpopular foreign policy, not only in humanitarian terms but in terms of American power and prestige.

Actually, the U.S. had won the war in Vietnam on the battlefield, just as the surge has done today in Iraq. Over Easter 1972, South Vietnamese forces, backed by U.S. airpower, crushed the last communist offensive, killing nearly 100,000 North Vietnamese troops.

The North was forced to sign peace accords in Paris recognizing the Republic of South Vietnam. The last 2,500 U.S. support troops went home. What they left was a fragile but sustainable peace, and an elected government in Saigon that was growing stronger every month.

But with 160,000 North Vietnamese soldiers still in South Vietnam, keeping the South free was going to require continued U.S. help, especially air support and military equipment if the North ever attacked again.

Democrats and American public opinion, however, had had enough. Much like Iraq today, the vast majority of South Vietnam had been pacified. Its government was taking on difficult but essential political changes, including land reform. The Democratic-controlled Congress, however, did not want to hear about success. They assumed failure in Vietnam would complete their rout of the hated Richard Nixon, who was already out of office thanks to Watergate, and position them for victory in the 1976 presidential election.

Meanwhile, the American public had been conditioned by the media to see Vietnam as a failed policy, and taught that America had gotten itself in the middle of a "civil war" which the Vietnamese had to sort out themselves. Once the last American troops left Vietnam, public opinion would never tolerate re-entry into a war widely seen as a blunder and endless quagmire.

In early 1975 the communists launched a massive attack. President Gerald Ford asked for $1 billion in supplemental funds to help the South Vietnamese, and Congress refused. They had already pulled the plug on the U.S.-supported government of Lon Nol in Cambodia. Ford had no choice but to order the evacuation of remaining U.S. personnel.

After nearly two decades of devastating war and 58,000 American combat deaths, the U.S. left Southeast Asia. As the last helicopter lifted off from Saigon, the New York Times's Sydney Schanberg wrote an article with the title, "Indochina Without Americans: For Most, a Better Life." And the Times's columnist Anthony Lewis asked, "what future could possibly be more terrible than the reality" of a war that had cost so much in lives and treasure?

With the North Vietnamese Communists and the Khmer Rouge taking over, the world was about to find out.

At least 65,000 Vietnamese were murdered or shot after "liberation" – the equivalent in terms of Vietnam's population at the time, of killing three-quarters of a million people in today's U.S. The new communist regime ordered somewhere between one- third to one-half of South Vietnam's population to pass through its "re-education" camps, where perhaps as many as 250,000 died of disease, starvation, or were worked to death (the last inmates were not released until 1986).

That number does not include the thousands of "boat people" who tried to flee the totalitarian nightmare of communist Vietnam, and perished at sea.

Cambodia's fate was even worse. At least one and a half million innocent Cambodians were butchered or starved to death in the Khmer Rouge's killing fields and re-education camps, put to death by a fanatical regime that believed that anyone who wore eyeglasses must have "bourgeois intellectual tendencies" and be shot.

The scale of moral collapse and suffering went beyond Indochina. The pullout had a ripple effect on U.S. power and prestige, just as the proponents of the so-called "domino theory" had warned. American foreign policy, crippled by remorse and self-doubt, stood helplessly as others rushed into the power vacuum.

Marxist-Leninist regimes emerged not only in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, but in Ethiopia and Guinea Bissau (1974), Madagascar, Cape Verde, Mozambique, and Angola (1975), Afghanistan (1978), and Grenada and Nicaragua (1979). Soviet troops were welcomed in Fidel Castro's Cuba for the first time since the 1962 missile crisis. Cuban troops traveled freely to Africa to prop up Marxist regimes there.

In 1979 the Ayatollah Khomeini was able to establish his brutal theocratic rule over Iran, confident that America, having learned "the lessons of Vietnam," would never intervene.

The judgment of history, as Raymond Aron once remarked, is without pity. History will judge how America and its leaders handle global responsibility in Iraq and the Middle East in the next decade.

As Winston Churchill said of the appeasement of Hitler at Munich, in 1975 Americans were "weighed in the balance and found wanting." We have a responsibility to the Iraqis – and to the memory of those we left behind – not to let that happen again.

Mr. Herman is the author, most recently, of "Gandhi and Churchill: The Epic Rivalry That Destroyed An Empire and Forged Our Age," just published by Bantam.

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Progress in Iraq: American military to thank.

I received this list of facts about Iraq in an email from my beloved mother-in-law. You should be able to verify all of these facts on the Department of Defense website: http://www.defenselink.mil/
 
Facts:
- 47 countries' have reestablished their embassies in Iraq.
- The Iraqi government currently employs 1.2 million Iraqi people.
- 3100 schools have been renovated,
364 schools are under rehabilitation,
263 new schools are now under construction;
and 38 new schools have been completed in Iraq.
- Iraq's higher educational structure consists of 20 Universities, 46 Institutes or colleges and 4 research centers, all currently operating.
- 25 Iraq students departed for the United States in January 2005 for the re-established Fulbright program.
- The Iraqi Navy is operational. They have 5 - 100-foot patrol craft, 34 smaller vessels and a naval infantry regiment.
- Iraq's Air Force consists of three operational squadrons, which includes 9 reconnaissance and 3 US C-130 transport aircraft (under Iraqi operational control) which operate day and night, and will soon add 16 UH-1 helicopters and 4 Bell Jet Rangers.
- Iraq has a counter-terrorist unit and a Commando Battalion.
- The Iraqi Police Service has over 55,000 fully trained and equipped police officers.
- There are 5 Police Academies in Iraq that produce over 3500 new officers every 8 weeks.
- There are more than 1100 building projects going on in Iraq. They include 364 schools, 67 public clinics, 15 hospitals, 83 railroad stations, 22 oil facilities, 93 water facilities and 69 electrical facilities.
- That 96% of Iraqi children under the age of 5 have received the first 2 series of polio vaccinations.
- 4.3 million Iraqi children were enrolled in primary school by mid October.
- There are 1,192,000 cell phone subscribers in Iraq and phone use has gone up 158%
- Iraq has an independent media that consists of 75 radio stations, 180 newspapers and 10 television stations.
- The Baghdad Stock Exchange opened in June of 2004.
- 2 candidates in the Iraqi presidential election had a televised debate recently.
 
What this shows is that Iraq is becoming a well developed country with many opportunities and freedoms afforded to the people. America has not acted imperialistically, on the contrary, we have acted benevolently. Our brave men in women in uniform have done the world a great service by fighting the forces of Islamism, which teaches that men and women do not have equal rights, that freedom in America is evil, and that is praiseworthy to murder infidels in the name of Islam. You want to talk about hope America? Look to the military for providing it through the sacrifice of their lives.
 

 

 
 
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