Libya: Portrait of a Failure
sabadabada
5,966 Posts
Get cracking Motown, or are you just the craven hypocrite I always knew you were?
Comments
Bob "Meet me in the DU Lounge" Desperado.... where art thy truth bombs?
Nothing has failed yet. But when all you got is a sack of Tomahawks, every problem starts to look like a concrete bunker.
If it's a cause worth dying for, boots on the ground is the only way to go. You would get volunteers. That's how it went down before Vietnam. UNPROFOR with mechanized infantry and no fly zone enforced through jamming not shock and awe. It would cost a fraction of the price in cash terms, politically, that capital has been spent 4x over since Clinton.
Rebels have already probably committed plenty of war crimes. They have enough oil and cash to put up a good fight against Gaddafi. Let them do it. But then oil price spike in Europe would put Cameron and Sarkozy in the firing line. Not live rounds, luckily. When you look back at our time in history, the "coalition's" adventures in the Oil Lands will very much be seen as a battle for resources. Nothing to do with Bush or "My Dude". Opening markets with aircraft carriers, it is called. Russia, China, India, Latin America are happy to sit by and watch the Centurians charge around their dwindling empire, while they themselves invest a much larger % of their GDP into alternative energy. Double winning.
This one is for Rock - should make your heart beat faster, but maybe Malc's inside game was too weak for you? Or maybe he had ideas above his station?
I don't know where anyone got the notion that I'm a pacifist. I'm not.
I hope the rebels succeed and this limited involvement seems like it might work. We'll see. I'm very much against "boots on the ground" here.
I'm more disturbed by the expansion of the war in Afghanistan.
I think the notion is more that you are a hypocrite. A "ditto monkey" if you will.
The "liberals" on this "left-leaning" (LOLbarf) board need to change affiliation to the Reality Party. It's quite liberating actually. I'm not even wearing any underwear right now.
Good? Bad?
That's your notion. My notion is that you're an idiot.
My "hypocrisy" is all in your head.
good???????
BAD!
I guess that currently not too many people want these sorts of boots on a ground anywhere near them.
The Top Ten Reasons Conservatives Should Vote For Obama
10. A body blow to racial identity politics. An end to the era of Jesse Jackson in black America.
9. Less debt. Yes, Obama will raise taxes on those earning over a quarter of a million. And he will spend on healthcare, Iraq, Afghanistan and the environment. But so will McCain. He plans more spending on health, the environment and won't touch defense of entitlements. And his refusal to touch taxes means an extra $4 trillion in debt over the massive increase presided over by Bush. And the CBO estimates that McCain's plans will add more to the debt over four years than Obama's. Fiscal conservatives have a clear choice.
8. A return to realism and prudence in foreign policy. Obama has consistently cited the foreign policy of George H. W. Bush as his inspiration. McCain's knee-jerk reaction to the Georgian conflict, his commitment to stay in Iraq indefinitely, and his brinksmanship over Iran's nuclear ambitions make him a far riskier choice for conservatives. The choice between Obama and McCain is like the choice between George H.W. Bush's first term and George W.'s.
7. An ability to understand the difference between listening to generals and delegating foreign policy to them.
6. Temperament. Obama has the coolest, calmest demeanor of any president since Eisenhower. Conservatism values that kind of constancy, especially compared with the hot-headed, irrational impulsiveness of McCain.
5. Faith. Obama's fusion of Christianity and reason, his non-fundamentalist faith, is a critical bridge between the new atheism and the new Christianism.
4. A truce in the culture war. Obama takes us past the debilitating boomer warfare that has raged since the 1960s. Nothing has distorted our politics so gravely; nothing has made a rational politics more elusive.
3. Two words: President Palin.
2. Conservative reform. Until conservatism can get a distance from the big-spending, privacy-busting, debt-ridden, crony-laden, fundamentalist, intolerant, incompetent and arrogant faux conservatism of the Bush-Cheney years, it will never regain a coherent message to actually govern this country again. The survival of conservatism requires a temporary eclipse of today's Republicanism. Losing would be the best thing to happen to conservatism since 1964. Back then, conservatives lost in a landslide for the right reasons. Now, Republicans are losing in a landslide for the wrong reasons.
1. The War Against Islamist terror. The strategy deployed by Bush and Cheney has failed. It has failed to destroy al Qaeda, except in a country, Iraq, where their presence was minimal before the US invasion. It has failed to bring any of the terrorists to justice, instead creating the excrescence of Gitmo, torture, secret sites, and the collapse of America's reputation abroad. It has empowered Iran, allowed al Qaeda to regroup in Pakistan, made the next vast generation of Muslims loathe America, and imperiled our alliances. We need smarter leadership of the war: balancing force with diplomacy, hard power with better p.r., deploying strategy rather than mere tactics, and self-confidence rather than a bunker mentality.
Those conservatives who remain convinced, as I do, that Islamist terror remains the greatest threat to the West cannot risk a perpetuation of the failed Manichean worldview of the past eight years, and cannot risk the possibility of McCain making rash decisions in the middle of a potentially catastrophic global conflict. If you are serious about the war on terror and believe it is a war we have to win, the only serious candidate is Barack Obama.
Earlier Monday, Henri Guaino, a top adviser to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, said allied military intervention likely to last "a while," and that the U.N.-mandated goal of protecting civilians is not "totally achieved."
France was the first country to give diplomatic recognition to Libya's opposition and Sarkozy pushed hard for Arab world support for the no-fly zone authorized by the Security Council. While not called for under the U.N. resolution, Gaddafi's ouster is a key aim of France and the rebels.
"Gaddafi must disappear. He should leave as soon as possible," Zeidan said. "We would like to establish a new state on the basis of democracy ... we do not want an Islamist government."
He said his movement's long-term goal is to improve education, health care and bring back 50,000 educated Libyans living in the United States and Europe to Libya to restore the country's intellectual fabric and economy."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/21/rebels-want-gaddafi-ousted-not-dead_n_838482.html
Two-thirds of them have a negative opinion of Sheen, and that cuts across party lines.
But while Sheen would go down in flames in humorous, hypothetical White House
matchups with either President Obama or Sarah Palin, Americans are evidently at least a
little more willing to cast a ballot for Sheen against Palin than against the president.
84% of Republicans would go with Palin, and the same proportion of Democrats would
side with Obama.
But while independents mirror the overall electorate in choosing
Obama over Sheen by a 57-22 margin, they actually would prefer the actor to the exgovernor,
41-36. That is how low Palin???s public image has fallen.
In yesterday???s release, 86% of Democrats viewed Palin negatively,
versus only 64% who see Sheen that way.
Similarly, 86% of Republicans disapprove of Obama???s job performance,
while 73% see Sheen unfavorably.
Naturally, then, Democrats would still prefer Sheen to Palin (44-24)
and Republicans Sheen to Obama (37-28).
Apparently Democrats are even more intense in their hatred of Palin than Republicans toward
Obama. Thus, Palin ???only??? beats Sheen, 49-29, but the president does, 57-24.
1) If the 2012 Presidential election were today and the candidates were Sarah Palin v Charlie Sheen who would you vote for?
2) It the 2012 Presidential election were today and the candidates were Obama v Charlie Sheen who would you vote for?
2) It the 2012 Presidential election were today and the candidates were Gilbert Gottfried v a Horseshoe Crab who would you vote for?
^ This blood is truly on Obama's hands. There is no other conclusion to come to. The Der Spiegel photos are worse than Abu Ghraib, as they represent wartime atrocities involving the murder and dismemberment of innocent and unarmed civilians. What a colossial failure our President has turned out to be.
we really should just get the fuck out there
let them kill each other instead
that way our hands are clean
-Dispatches
Michael Herr
Agree with the 'war is crazies.' Seriously, Obama signed off on that? No.
There are five soldiers being prosecuted for war crimes in connection with these photos.
Who do you suppose is prosecuting them? Elves?
I'm against the expansion of the war in Afghanistan, but holding Obama responsible for murders committed by some rogue scumbags only makes sense if you can show a pattern of ignoring or condoning this kind of thing. That was the case with Abu Ghraib, which only came to light because of leaked photos. Here the photos are part of a prosecution that's already underway.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/world/51475985-68/der-morlock-spiegel-photos.html.csp
Or perhaps, it gets more coverage here because we are closer Ft Lewis.
The prosecution of the soldiers involved has been news for months and their crimes have been detailed in prose as gruesome (or more) as the photos.
To anyone who thinks, this just happens in wars, I want to say "Fuck You!".
Nice way to support our troops. Tell them you think they are cold blood murders who do it for sport. Fuck you.
* I know that's not you Luck.