I don't know if Ike used the very loaded term "war criminal." That is a finger-pointing word that shuts down any further discussion. But he definitely said that the dropping of two nuclear bombs which resulted in thousands of civilian deaths was unnecessary.
Firebombing Dresden was also totally unnecessary and wouldn't have happened if Roosevelt had still been exercising control.
What should have been the obvious point is that we should be able to look at our past and critique decisions that were made, things that we don't want to repeat, that aren't consistent with our values, even among those whom we respect and admire for the greater part of their work. To do that doesn't mean we are saying "America = evil." To claim that is idiotic. No country gets it right, because countries are full of flawed people. Governments are run by flawed people. If we had a scale of government virtue, where 0 was Nazi Germany and 100 was the ideal of perfect altruism and wisdom, the U.S. might deserve a 4. But 4 would be close to the highest score anybody has ever gotten.
I basically cribbed Al Franken for the "America = daddy" theme. I read his book years ago for opposition research. I rolled my eyes when I read it. "We don't do that," I thought. In retrospect, he was totally freaking right. What the happened to the "government is the problem" type of conservatism? When did it become "government is the authority we can always trust and we must never question its benighted wisdom" conservatism? Bob Dole championed the 1950's, secessionists seemingly champion the 1850's, so what is this last type? Championing the 1350's?
Now I'm not exactly a big fan of Justin Raimondo, but he nailed one thing on the head. There is no altruism in sitting in judgment of what "the other side" when one's own side does and has done the same things. The first thing to do is to look at the things we ourselves are doing and if we really think they are bad, stop doing them. Our culture is haunted by some guy a lot time ago who said something to that effect.
It's nice once in a while to have somebody who speaks as a prophet in the wilderness to the ideals we are supposed to be aspiring to, rather than discussing the latest, greatest way we are going to compromise them in the name of expediency. That it has to come from a guy like Raimondo maybe should give us pause to what utter failures the rest of us have become.