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Yonivore
07-25-2007, 02:44 PM
...Again!

Not that it will be widely reported by the Mainstream media but, President Bush issued a detailed defense of the proposition that fighting al Qaeda in Iraq is an integral part of the broader War on Terror in a speech at Charleston Air Force Base.


"There's a debate in Washington about Iraq, and nothing wrong with a healthy debate. There's also a debate about al Qaeda's role in Iraq. Some say that Iraq is not part of the broader war on terror. They complain when I say that the al Qaeda terrorists we face in Iraq are part of the same enemy that attacked us on September the 11th, 2001. They claim that the organization called al Qaeda in Iraq is an Iraqi phenomenon, that it's independent of Osama bin Laden and that it's not interested in attacking America."
Whether or not you agree with President Bush, the speech provides an insight into how he understands the strategic role that Iraq plays. Or at least, it lays out how he wishes it to be regarded by the public.


Nearly six years after the 9/11 attacks, America remains a nation at war. The terrorist network that attacked us that day is determined to strike our country again, and we must do everything in our power to stop them. A key lesson of September the 11th is that the best way to protect America is to go on the offense, to fight the terrorists overseas so we don't have to face them here at home. And that is exactly what our men and women in uniform are doing across the world.

The key theater in this global war is Iraq. Our troops are serving bravely in that country. They're opposing ruthless enemies, and no enemy is more ruthless in Iraq than al Qaeda. They send suicide bombers into crowded markets; they behead innocent captives and they murder American troops. They want to bring down Iraq's democracy so they can use that nation as a terrorist safe haven for attacks against our country. So our troops are standing strong with nearly 12 million Iraqis who voted for a future of peace, and they so for the security of Iraq and the safety of American citizens.

There's a debate in Washington about Iraq, and nothing wrong with a healthy debate. There's also a debate about al Qaeda's role in Iraq. Some say that Iraq is not part of the broader war on terror. They complain when I say that the al Qaeda terrorists we face in Iraq are part of the same enemy that attacked us on September the 11th, 2001. They claim that the organization called al Qaeda in Iraq is an Iraqi phenomenon, that it's independent of Osama bin Laden and that it's not interested in attacking America.

That would be news to Osama bin Laden. He's proclaimed that the "third world war is raging in Iraq." Osama bin Laden says, "The war is for you or for us to win. If we win it, it means your defeat and disgrace forever." I say that there will be a big defeat in Iraq and it will be the defeat of al Qaeda.

Today I will consider the arguments of those who say that al Qaeda and al Qaeda in Iraq are separate entities. I will explain why they are both part of the same terrorist network -- and why they are dangerous to our country.

A good place to start is with some basic facts: Al Qaeda in Iraq was founded by a Jordanian terrorist, not an Iraqi. His name was Abu Musab al Zarqawi. Before 9/11, he ran a terrorist camp in Afghanistan. He was not yet a member of al Qaida, but our intelligence community reports that he had longstanding relations with senior al Qaida leaders, that he had met with Osama bin Laden and his chief deputy, Zawahiri.

In 2001, coalition forces destroyed Zarqawi's Afghan training camp, and he fled the country and he went to Iraq, where he set up operations with terrorist associates long before the arrival of coalition forces. In the violence and instability following Saddam's fall, Zarqawi was able to expand dramatically the size, scope, and lethality of his operation. In 2004, Zarqawi and his terrorist group formally joined al Qaida, pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden, and he promised to "follow his orders in jihad."

Soon after, bin Laden publicly declared that Zarqawi was the "Prince of Al Qaida in Iraq" -- and instructed terrorists in Iraq to "listen to him and obey him." It's hard to argue that al Qaida in Iraq is separate from bin Laden's al Qaida, when the leader of al Qaida in Iraq took an oath of allegiance to Osama bin Laden.

According to our intelligence community, the Zarqawi-bin Laden merger gave al Qaida in Iraq -- quote -- "prestige among potential recruits and financiers." The merger also gave al Qaida's senior leadership -- quote -- "a foothold in Iraq to extend its geographic presence ... to plot external operations ... and to tout the centrality of the jihad in Iraq to solicit direct monetary support elsewhere." The merger between al Qaida and its Iraqi affiliate is an alliance of killers -- and that is why the finest military in the world is on their trail.

Zarqawi was killed by U.S. forces in June 2006. He was replaced by another foreigner -- an Egyptian named Abu Ayyub al-Masri. His ties to the al Qaida senior leadership are deep and longstanding. He has collaborated with Zawahiri for more than two decades. And before 9/11, he spent time with al Qaida in Afghanistan where he taught classes indoctrinating others in al Qaida's radical ideology.

After Abu Ayyub took over al Qaida's Iraqi operations last year, Osama bin Laden sent a terrorist leader named Abd al-Hadi al Iraqi to help him. According to our intelligence community, this man was a senior advisor to bin Laden, who served as his top commander in Afghanistan. Abd al-Hadi never made it to Iraq. He was captured, and was recently transferred to the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay. The fact that bin Laden risked sending one of his most valued commanders to Iraq shows the importance he places on success of al Qaida's Iraqi operations.

According to our intelligence community, many of al Qaida in Iraq's other senior leaders are also foreign terrorists. They include a Syrian who is al Qaida in Iraq's emir in Baghdad, a Saudi who is al Qaida in Iraq's top spiritual and legal advisor, an Egyptian who fought in Afghanistan in the 1990s and who has met with Osama bin Laden, a Tunisian who we believe plays a key role in managing foreign fighters. Last month in Iraq, we killed a senior al Qaida facilitator named Mehmet Yilmaz, a Turkish national who fought with al Qaida in Afghanistan, and met with September the 11th mastermind Khalid Shaikh Muhammad, and other senior al Qaida leaders.

A few weeks ago, we captured a senior al Qaida in Iraq leader named Mashadani. Now, this terrorist is an Iraqi. In fact, he was the highest ranking Iraqi in the organization. Here's what he said, here's what he told us: The foreign leaders of Al Qaida in Iraq went to extraordinary lengths to promote the fiction that al Qaida in Iraq is an Iraqi-led operation. He says al Qaida even created a figurehead whom they named Omar al-Baghdadi. The purpose was to make Iraqi fighters believe they were following the orders of an Iraqi instead of a foreigner. Yet once in custody, Mashadani revealed that al-Baghdadi is only an actor. He confirmed our intelligence that foreigners are at the top echelons of al Qaida in Iraq -- they are the leaders -- and that foreign leaders make most of the operational decisions, not Iraqis.

Foreign terrorists also account for most of the suicide bombings in Iraq. Our military estimates that between 80 and 90 percent of suicide attacks in Iraq are carried out by foreign-born al Qaida terrorists. It's true that today most of al Qaida in Iraq's rank and file fighters and some of its leadership are Iraqi. But to focus exclusively on this single fact is to ignore the larger truth: Al Qaida in Iraq is a group founded by foreign terrorists, led largely by foreign terrorists, and loyal to a foreign terrorist leader -- Osama bin Laden. They know they're al Qaida. The Iraqi people know they are al Qaida. People across the Muslim world know they are al Qaida. And there's a good reason they are called al Qaida in Iraq: They are al Qaida … in … Iraq.

Some also assert that al Qaida in Iraq is a separate organization because al Qaida's central command lacks full operational control over it. This argument reveals a lack of understanding. Here is how al Qaida's global terrorist network actually operates. Al Qaida and its affiliate organizations are a loose network of terrorist groups that are united by a common ideology and shared objectives, and have differing levels of collaboration with the al Qaida senior leadership. In some cases, these groups have formally merged into al Qaida and take what is called a "bayaat" -- a pledge of loyalty to Osama bin Laden. In other cases, organizations are not formally merged with al Qaida, but collaborate closely with al Qaida leaders to plot attacks and advance their shared ideology. In still other cases, there are small cells of terrorists that are not part of al Qaida or any other broader terrorist group, but maintain contact with al Qaida leaders and are inspired by its ideology to conduct attacks.

Our intelligence community assesses that al Qaida in Iraq falls into the first of these categories. They are a full member of the al Qaida terrorist network. The al Qaida leadership provides strategic guidance to their Iraqi operatives. Even so, there have been disagreements -- important disagreements -- between the leaders, Osama bin Laden and their Iraqi counterparts, including Zawahiri's criticism of Zarqawi's relentless attacks on the Shia. But our intelligence community reports that al Qaida's senior leaders generally defer to their Iraqi-based commanders when it comes to internal operations, because distance and security concerns preclude day-to-day command authority.

Our intelligence community concludes that -- quote -- "Al Qaida and its regional node in Iraq are united in their overarching strategy." And they say that al Qaida senior leaders and their operatives in Iraq -- quote -- "see al Qaida in Iraq as part of al Qaida's decentralized chain of command, not as a separate group."

Here's the bottom line: Al Qaida in Iraq is run by foreign leaders loyal to Osama bin Laden. Like bin Laden, they are cold-blooded killers who murder the innocent to achieve al Qaida's political objectives. Yet despite all the evidence, some will tell you that al Qaida in Iraq is not really al Qaida -- and not really a threat to America. Well, that's like watching a man walk into a bank with a mask and a gun, and saying he's probably just there to cash a check.

You might wonder why some in Washington insist on making this distinction about the enemy in Iraq. It's because they know that if they can convince America we're not fighting bin Laden's al Qaida there, they can paint the battle in Iraq as a distraction from the real war on terror. If we're not fighting bin Laden's al Qaida, they can argue that our nation can pull out of Iraq and not undermine our efforts in the war on terror. The problem they have is with the facts. We are fighting bin Laden's al Qaida in Iraq; Iraq is central to the war on terror; and against this enemy, America can accept nothing less than complete victory.

There are others who accept that al Qaida is operating in Iraq, but say its role is overstated. Al Qaida is one of the several Sunni jihadist groups in Iraq. But our intelligence community believes that al Qaida is the most dangerous of these Sunni jihadist groups for several reasons: First, more than any other group, al Qaida is behind most of the spectacular, high-casualty attacks that you see on your TV screens.

Second, these al Qaida attacks are designed to accelerate sectarian violence, by attacking Shia in hopes of sparking reprisal attacks that inspire Sunnis to join al Qaida's cause.

Third, al Qaida is the only jihadist group in Iraq with stated ambitions to make the country a base for attacks outside Iraq. For example, al Qaida in Iraq dispatched terrorists who bombed a wedding reception in Jordan. In another case, they sent operatives to Jordan where they attempted to launch a rocket attack on U.S. Navy ships in the Red Sea.

And most important for the people who wonder if the fight in Iraq is worth it, al Qaida in Iraq shares Osama bin Laden's goal of making Iraq a base for its radical Islamic empire, and using it as a safe haven for attacks on America. That is why our intelligence community reports -- and I quote -- "compared with [other leading Sunni jihadist groups], al Qaida in Iraq stands out for its extremism, unmatched operational strength, foreign leadership, and determination to take the jihad beyond Iraq's borders."

Our top commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, has said that al Qaida is "public enemy number one" in Iraq. Fellow citizens, these people have sworn allegiance to the man who ordered the death of nearly 3,000 people on our soil. Al Qaida is public enemy number one for the Iraqi people; al Qaida is public enemy number one for the American people. And that is why, for the security of our country, we will stay on the hunt, we'll deny them safe haven, and we will defeat them where they have made their stand.

Some note that al Qaida in Iraq did not exist until the U.S. invasion -- and argue that it is a problem of our own making. The argument follows the flawed logic that terrorism is caused by American actions. Iraq is not the reason that the terrorists are at war with us. We were not in Iraq when the terrorists bombed the World Trade Center in 1993. We were not in Iraq when they attacked our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. We were not in Iraq when they attacked the USS Cole in 2000. And we were not in Iraq on September the 11th, 2001.

Our action to remove Saddam Hussein did not start the terrorist violence -- and America withdrawal from Iraq would not end it. The al Qaida terrorists now blowing themselves up in Iraq are dedicated extremists who have made killing the innocent the calling of their lives. They are part of a network that has murdered men, women, and children in London and Madrid; slaughtered fellow Muslims in Istanbul and Casablanca, Riyadh, Jakarta, and elsewhere around the world. If we were not fighting these al Qaida extremists and terrorists in Iraq, they would not be leading productive lives of service and charity. Most would be trying to kill Americans and other civilians elsewhere -- in Afghanistan, or other foreign capitals, or on the streets of our own cities.

Al Qaida is in Iraq -- and they're there for a reason. And surrendering the future of Iraq to al Qaida would be a disaster for our country. We know their intentions. Hear the words of al Qaida's top commander in Iraq when he issued an audio statement in which he said he will not rest until he has attacked our nation's capital. If we were to cede Iraq to men like this, we would leave them free to operate from a safe haven which they could use to launch new attacks on our country. And al Qaida would gain prestige amongst the extremists across the Muslim world as the terrorist network that faced down America and forced us into retreat.

If we were to allow this to happen, sectarian violence in Iraq could increase dramatically, raising the prospect of mass casualties. Fighting could engulf the entire region in chaos, and we would soon face a Middle East dominated by Islamic extremists who would pursue nuclear weapons, and use their control of oil for economic blackmail or to fund new attacks on our nation.

We've already seen how al Qaida used a failed state thousands of miles from our shores to bring death and destruction to the streets of our cities -- and we must not allow them to do so again. So, however difficult the fight is in Iraq, we must win it. And we can win it.

Less than a year ago, Anbar Province was al Qaida's base in Iraq and was written off by many as lost. Since then, U.S. and Iraqi forces have teamed with Sunni sheiks who have turned against al Qaida. Hundreds have been killed or captured. Terrorists have been driven from most of the population centers. Our troops are now working to replicate the success in Anbar in other parts of the country. Our brave men and women are taking risks, and they're showing courage, and we're making progress.

For the security of our citizens, and the peace of the world, we must give General Petraeus and his troops the time and resources they need, so they can defeat al Qaida in Iraq.

Thanks for letting me come by today. I've explained the connection between al Qaida and its Iraqi affiliate. I presented intelligence that clearly establishes this connection. The facts are that al Qaida terrorists killed Americans on 9/11, they're fighting us in Iraq and across the world, and they are plotting to kill Americans here at home again. Those who justify withdrawing our troops from Iraq by denying the threat of al Qaida in Iraq and its ties to Osama bin Laden ignore the clear consequences of such a retreat. If we were to follow their advice, it would be dangerous for the world -- and disastrous for America. We will defeat al Qaida in Iraq.

In this effort, we're counting on the brave men and women represented in this room. Every man and woman who serves at this base and around the world is playing a vital role in this war on terror. With your selfless spirit and devotion to duty, we will confront this mortal threat to our country -- and we're going to prevail.

I have confidence in our country, and I have faith in our cause, because I know the character of the men and women gathered before me. I thank you for your patriotism; I thank you for your courage. You're living up to your motto: "one family, one mission, one fight." Thank you for all you do. God bless your families. God bless America.
I think some critics of Bush's speech will say "Well, al Qaeda may be in Iraq now and Bin Laden may be sending important assets to it now, but that was only because we got rid of Saddam. Had Saddam been kept in power then al Qaeda would never have been able to expand in the aftermath of a regime change". There are a few problems with this argument. The first is that the decision to remove Saddam was a bipartisan one -- dating back to the Liberation of Iraq Act of 1998.

Therefore, the more proper and robust criticism of the President's thesis is probably: "Ok. We all agreed to remove Saddam but had you not made a hash of the the subsequent situation, al Qaeda would never have gotten a foothold in Iraq."

But that case is quite a different kettle of fish because it concedes the basic correctness of the policy but attacks the shortcomings of the implementation. And, it invites the response "Okay, if things are wrong, how do we improve the implementation."

Barack Obama, I think, correctly understands the dangers of going down that line of argument and has maintained steadfastly that Iraq was a mistake from the beginning. That the US ought never have tried to topple Saddam. In order to be on the soundest possible ground, the antiwar case against Operation Iraqi Freedom must hold it to be conceptually flawed and not simply defective in implementation. Otherwise critics will be invited to "fix it". In truth, they want no part of it.

Historically, very few of those opposed to toppling Saddam in the first place objected in anticipation of getting into a fight with al Qaeda there. Most of the reservations about the soundness of the original decision to mount Operation Iraqi Freedom center around the presence or absence of WMDs or disagreements about International Law. Had anyone in 2003 actually argued we ought not to go into Iraq because we would find al Qaeda there or that al Qaeda would come out of its caves to meet America it would have been a very unpopular argument at the time. (Hell, it should be an unpopular argument now.)

However the history may be, the current question is whether al Qaeda is now to be found in Iraq. And I think the honest answer to that must be yes. Al Qaeda claims to be in Iraq on every website it can post on. Since it is still apparently the national goal to fight al Qaeda, the problem facing the anti-war camp is how to justify walking away or retreating from Iraq when the enemy claims to be there in large numbers. And as best I can figure out, the answer to that challenge has been to put forward arguments of varying sophistication maintaining that the best way to fight al Qaeda in Iraq is not to fight it in Iraq. The basic logic behind these types of "fight by retreating" assertions is that the US is an accelerant which enables al Qaeda in Iraq. Remove America and al Qaeda dies on the vine as a fire dies when oxygen is withdrawn.

If that's true, however, then there is no reason why the same argument shouldn't apply everywhere else. If "fighting" terrorism is an incitement to more terrorism, then why fight it at all? Therefore, we have in the wings a number of undeveloped, but supposedly promising alternative methods of fighting terrorism without physically fighting it. These include a "new Peace Corps", regional diplomacy, or personal diplomacy with heads of "rogue" states. Though how a future President will make his way to see Zawahiri or Bin Laden still remains to be explained.

SA210
07-25-2007, 02:46 PM
Where's Bin laden?

xrayzebra
07-25-2007, 02:50 PM
^^You want to tell us. He is a homeless person you know. And
you specialize in these types.

boutons_
07-25-2007, 03:13 PM
I love Yoni's desperate defensivenss and reaching as dubya's disapproval hits 65%, the Iraqis remain incapable governing themselves and of stopping their civil war.

4000 US dead, 10s' of 1000s of casualties, and $1T wasted into the Iraqi sands are not justifiable for the number of AQI killed in Iraq.

The AQ we really care about is in the Paki FATAs.

And today we hear the AQ has cells in the US (strangely, the AQ threat in the US has been cranked up to coincide with Gonzo before Congres and dubya's disapproval hitting 65%), so fighting AQ over there hasn't stopped them (oops, reason #13 gone1), ON DUBYA'S WATCH, from being in the USA.

If the neo-justification, aka moving the goalposts again in dubya's loser's game, for the Iraq fiasco is fighting AQ, why wasn't Afghanistan a sufficient battlefield? Taleban and AQ WERE in Afghanistan, are STILL in Afghanistan? AQ was NOT in Iraq in March 2003.

yep, makes a LOT of sense.

PixelPusher
07-25-2007, 06:18 PM
I think some critics of Bush's speech will say "Well, al Qaeda may be in Iraq now and Bin Laden may be sending important assets to it now, but that was only because we got rid of Saddam. Had Saddam been kept in power then al Qaeda would never have been able to expand in the aftermath of a regime change". There are a few problems with this argument. The first is that the decision to remove Saddam was a bipartisan one -- dating back to the Liberation of Iraq Act of 1998.
"Bipartisan support" is not a defense. There was bipartisan support for that immigration bill you guys hate so bad, remember?


Therefore, the more proper and robust criticism of the President's thesis is probably: "Ok. We all agreed to remove Saddam but had you not made a hash of the the subsequent situation, al Qaeda would never have gotten a foothold in Iraq."

But that case is quite a different kettle of fish because it concedes the basic correctness of the policy but attacks the shortcomings of the implementation. And, it invites the response "Okay, if things are wrong, how do we improve the implementation."

Barack Obama, I think, correctly understands the dangers of going down that line of argument and has maintained steadfastly that Iraq was a mistake from the beginning. That the US ought never have tried to topple Saddam. In order to be on the soundest possible ground, the antiwar case against Operation Iraqi Freedom must hold it to be conceptually flawed and not simply defective in implementation. Otherwise critics will be invited to "fix it". In truth, they want no part of it.
Pointing out the incompetence of the Bush Administration's execution does not nullify the argument that it was a mistake to begin with.



However the history may be, the current question is whether al Qaeda is now to be found in Iraq. And I think the honest answer to that must be yes. Al Qaeda claims to be in Iraq on every website it can post on. Since it is still apparently the national goal to fight al Qaeda, the problem facing the anti-war camp is how to justify walking away or retreating from Iraq when the enemy claims to be there in large numbers. And as best I can figure out, the answer to that challenge has been to put forward arguments of varying sophistication maintaining that the best way to fight al Qaeda in Iraq is not to fight it in Iraq. The basic logic behind these types of "fight by retreating" assertions is that the US is an accelerant which enables al Qaeda in Iraq. Remove America and al Qaeda dies on the vine as a fire dies when oxygen is withdrawn.

If that's true, however, then there is no reason why the same argument shouldn't apply everywhere else. If "fighting" terrorism is an incitement to more terrorism, then why fight it at all? Therefore, we have in the wings a number of undeveloped, but supposedly promising alternative methods of fighting terrorism without physically fighting it. These include a "new Peace Corps", regional diplomacy, or personal diplomacy with heads of "rogue" states. Though how a future President will make his way to see Zawahiri or Bin Laden still remains to be explained.
The deep flaw in this line of reasoning that you, the blogger who wrote this, and Bush makes is the same; you assume that a military solution is the ultimate solution to the problem of terrorism. This is a desperate attempt to justify staying in Iraq in the face of all the other non-terrorism related issues that makes our presence there a continual tragedy. No, leaving Iraq does not mean we "lose" the War On Terror any more than staying ensures that we "win" it. Terrorism isn't an army to be defeated or a nation to be conquered; continuing to conflate it with Iraq is foolish.

You often accuse the Democrats of "sharing" their talking points with al-Qaeda, but you're only too ready to take Osama bin-Laden at his word when he designates Iraq as the central battleground and now both side think "Ha! We have them right where we want them!" The recently released NIE report confirms that the advantage remains with al-Qaeda.

Is Iraq more stable now than it was 4 years ago? No.
Is jihadist movement in the Middle East smaller than it was 4 years ago? No.

We turned a brutal, secular authoritarian state into a brutal, fractured sectarian clusterfuck that aspires to be a brutal Islamic theocracy. How could that be called a "victory"?

SA210
07-25-2007, 10:05 PM
^^You want to tell us. He is a homeless person you know. And
you specialize in these types.
You tell us. Didn't Your leader promise to find him? He sure did find Saddam pretty quick didn't he? hmm...

xrayzebra
07-26-2007, 10:14 AM
You tell us. Didn't Your leader promise to find him? He sure did find Saddam pretty quick didn't he? hmm...


Your leader did find him and let him go twice. How come?
And like I said homeless people are your forte, so call
in some of your connections. I am sure you will be rewarded.

George Gervin's Afro
07-26-2007, 10:25 AM
Your leader did find him and let him go twice. How come?
And like I said homeless people are your forte, so call
in some of your connections. I am sure you will be rewarded.


Why Ray? Rememebr that little impeachment thingy? I remember quite well the 'wag the dog' theories when Clinton struck Iraq..Can you imagine the outcry if Clinton actually attemp5ted to strike Bin laden? Of course Bin laden hadn't done anything yet but I know full well that you and your sisters would have cried Clinton's WAGGING THE DOG! One of those attempts would have resulted in massive collateral damage ( kids primarily) and we know you nuts would have slamed Clinton for using the military for political gain and he killed innocent kids!! Osama haden't done anything yet..So you want me to believe that Clinton was supposed to strike a guy who hadn't done anything yet and killed a bunch of kids in the process....


On a side note Fox News' best Clinton basher Dick Morris has repeatedly said that one of the main reasons why Clinton didn't take a shot was because of his being preoccupied with the investigations/impeachment goings on.. Yes Ray we could actually blame the people who were hammering Clinton for wagging the dog and undermining him when he could have taken out Osama...

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 10:44 AM
Why Ray? Rememebr that little impeachment thingy? I remember quite well the 'wag the dog' theories when Clinton struck Iraq..Can you imagine the outcry if Clinton actually attemp5ted to strike Bin laden? Of course Bin laden hadn't done anything yet...
What are you talking about?

By that time, he had been responsible for the multiple bombings on U. S. assets in 2 or 3 countries -- not to mention the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center.


...but I know full well that you and your sisters would have cried Clinton's WAGGING THE DOG! One of those attempts would have resulted in massive collateral damage ( kids primarily) and we know you nuts would have slamed Clinton for using the military for political gain and he killed innocent kids!! Osama haden't done anything yet..So you want me to believe that Clinton was supposed to strike a guy who hadn't done anything yet and killed a bunch of kids in the process....


On a side note Fox News' best Clinton basher Dick Morris has repeatedly said that one of the main reasons why Clinton didn't take a shot was because of his being preoccupied with the investigations/impeachment goings on.. Yes Ray we could actually blame the people who were hammering Clinton for wagging the dog and undermining him when he could have taken out Osama...
Or, Clinton could have saved the country the trouble and resigned.

DarkReign
07-26-2007, 10:50 AM
Or, Clinton could have saved the country the trouble and resigned.

At least Clinton honored the legal implications of the impeachment process.

I have a startling feeling that Bush would claim "Executive Privilege" and conveniently skip the court date.

boutons_
07-26-2007, 11:06 AM
"Clinton could have saved the country the trouble and resigned."

... in the face of harassment and witch-hunting by Mellon-Scaif/FLAG?

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 11:18 AM
At least Clinton honored the legal implications of the impeachment process.
Huh? How so? He obstructed the process at every turn.


I have a startling feeling that Bush would claim "Executive Privilege" and conveniently skip the court date.
Of what impeachable offense is President Bush being accused?

Then, back to your silly assertion that Clinton had no justification to kill bin Laden and would have been excoriated for doing so. Slick Willy was a master at justifying his policies -- killing bin Laden would have been a piece of cake given all the violence he had wrought to that point and the dead Americans lying at his feet.

DarkReign
07-26-2007, 11:23 AM
Huh? How so? He obstructed the process at every turn.


Of what impeachable offense is President Bush being accused?

Then, back to your silly assertion that Clinton had no justification to kill bin Laden and would have been excoriated for doing so. Slick Willy was a master at justifying his policies -- killing bin Laden would have been a piece of cake given all the violence he had wrought to that point and the dead Americans lying at his feet.

:lmao In comparison to whom?

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 11:24 AM
:lmao In comparison to whom?
What do you mean?

DarkReign
07-26-2007, 11:25 AM
What do you mean?

The Decider.

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 11:51 AM
The Decider.
Then, yes. Clinton had more opportunities to kill bin Laden than has President Bush.

Sudan even tried to hand him over on at least one occassion.

George Gervin's Afro
07-26-2007, 12:15 PM
What are you talking about?

By that time, he had been responsible for the multiple bombings on U. S. assets in 2 or 3 countries -- not to mention the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center.


Or, Clinton could have saved the country the trouble and resigned.


I thought we caught the mastermind and all of the parties involved in the 93 WTC bombing.. I am assuming you can provide documentation that proves Osama was responsible for the 93 WTC and the other US assets.. Clinton did say Osama had done nothing to the US as of that time for him to take custody of him..Was Clinton lying?



The World Trade Center bombing was carried out by a group headed by Ramzi Yousef, who is serving a 240-year prison term. Federal authorities say Yousef's group received financial support from al-Qaeda via Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks. But a direct al-Qaeda role in the 1993 attack hasn't been established.


So now 10 + years later we still don't have defnitive proof Al-Qaeda role for the 93 WTC bombings.. yet Clinton was supposed to get Osama for that?

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 12:28 PM
I thought we caught the mastermind and all of the parties involved in the 93 WTC bombing.
Well, you thought wrong. The connection between Ramzi Yousef and bin Laden were established shortly after his arrest in Pakistan.


I am assuming you can provide documentation that proves Osama was responsible for the 93 WTC and the other US assets.
You and your fucking "proving." There is contemporaneous evidence that Yousef and bin Laden had a relationship. It became clearer as time passed.

http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/context.jsp?item=aspring93yousefosama#aspring93you sefosama


Clinton did say Osama had done nothing to the US as of that time for him to take custody of him..Was Clinton lying?
Yes. I think so. Clinton had also expressed a desire to treat terrorism as a law enforcement matter.

I think Clinton was reluctant to make a broader case for how global terrorism was responsible for the first WTC bombing and other acts against American assets because he was a chicken shit who hoped he could get out of office before the shit hit the fan.

I'd say he succeeded. Unfortunately for him, his incompetence is more and more being realized as facts -- known or suspected, during his administration, come to light.

George Gervin's Afro
07-26-2007, 12:33 PM
Well, you thought wrong. The connection between Ramzi Yousef and bin Laden were established shortly after his arrest in Pakistan.


You and your fucking "proving." There is contemporaneous evidence that Yousef and bin Laden had a relationship. It became clearer as time passed.

http://www.cooperativeresearch.org/context.jsp?item=aspring93yousefosama#aspring93you sefosama


Yes. I think so. Clinton had also expressed a desire to treat terrorism as a law enforcement matter.



I'd say he succeeded. Unfortunately for him,




I think Clinton was reluctant to make a broader case for how global terrorism was responsible for the first WTC bombing and other acts against American assets because he was a chicken shit who hoped he could get out of office before the shit hit the fan.

Sort of like a certain president leaving the Iraq mess when he leaves office? You say he was chickenshit? Your opinion again.. but hey your on a roll...



his incompetence is more and more being realized as facts -- known or suspected, during his administration, come to light.

Incompetence and George Bush go hand in hand ... I guess we'll see more of Bush's incompetence once he leaves office..

xrayzebra
07-26-2007, 02:35 PM
Hey GGA sorta like what others before George Bush left the mess
they did. Of course that doesn't count, right?

What is competence? Doing nothing? That is what Clinton and
Carter did. Well they did do something. They gave our enemies
everything they wanted. And left them thinking we were a
bunch of wimps who would not defend ourselves. You know
much like what Reid and Pelosi do now.

George Gervin's Afro
07-26-2007, 02:39 PM
Hey GGA sorta like what others before George Bush left the mess
they did. Of course that doesn't count, right?

What is competence? Doing nothing? That is what Clinton and
Carter did. Well they did do something. They gave our enemies
everything they wanted. And left them thinking we were a
bunch of wimps who would not defend ourselves. You know
much like what Reid and Pelosi do now.


Yeah ray I guess 'doing something' means starting an unecessary war.. I will give you that Bush did do something.. Of course that something will have to be finished by someone else... I thought we would be greeted as liberators and be out of there in 6 months.. but,but,but he did something..

Ray your a moron.

xrayzebra
07-26-2007, 02:45 PM
Ray your a moron.

Only because I attempt to talk to them. But then
guess I am a glutton for punishment.


There is always hope for you, at least you can use a
computer and long-on to the Internet.

exstatic
07-26-2007, 06:56 PM
You NeoCons have said REPEATEDLY that Clinton was responsible for 9/11 because the planning happened on his watch. THAT logic puts the 1993 WTC attacks squarely in Bush I's lap, since it happened in the first year of Clinton's presidency. Can't have it both ways, boys.

Yonivore
07-26-2007, 10:28 PM
You NeoCons have said REPEATEDLY that Clinton was responsible for 9/11 because the planning happened on his watch. THAT logic puts the 1993 WTC attacks squarely in Bush I's lap, since it happened in the first year of Clinton's presidency. Can't have it both ways, boys.
Except that al Qaeda was in its formative stages during the Clinton administration.

It would have been a nice time to crush them in their proverbial crib.

And, another thing, I wasn't blaming Clinton for the '93 bombing. I was criticizing him for not aggressively pursuing the terrorists back to their source and, instead, treating it like a law enforcement matter -- closing the book when Yousef was arrested.

PixelPusher
07-26-2007, 10:34 PM
Except that al Qaeda was in its formative stages during the Clinton administration.

It would have been a nice time to crush them in their proverbial crib.
Tora Bora in back in 2002 would have been a nice time too.

Hell, Waziristan today would be a nice time to crush them in their proverbial crib.

boutons_
07-26-2007, 11:22 PM
"It would have been a nice time to crush them in their proverbial crib."

The 94 Repug Revolution in Congress, aided by assholes like Mellon-Scaife/FLAG, was 100% committed to harassing and witching Clinton to distraction. They succeed.

Even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in a while. Even Mellon-Scaif has trashed dubya and dickhead for the Iraq war.

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003612271


And of course, the AQ WTC attackers were making final preparations, with lots of noise, chatter, red-lights blinking between Jan-Sep 2001, and the motherfucking Repug Exec did absolutely nothing.