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[personal profile] billroper
The thing that saddens me most about the election tomorrow is that I see people -- who I like -- posting things that are patently untrue, things that are echoes of things that were said about a person that I suspect that they revere, the late President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Certainly there were many people who felt that he would do anything to get us into World War II, up to and including lying about foreknowledge of the Pearl Harbor attack.

And despite anything bad that the current President may have done, nothing that he has done quite compares to herding the entire population of American citizens of Japanese descent in the Western United States into detainment camps. Yeah, I know we'd all agree now that what he did then was a pretty bad thing, but some things are easier to figure out from a distance than they are at the time that you're doing them.

And who could argue with the idea that the right thing to do was to go to war to remove a crazed dictator who was murdering tens of thousands of his own citizens? The biggest question, I suspect, in either case ought to be, "What took you so long to save us?", a question that we might well be correctly putting to the United Nations on the subject of Darfur.

Governments are made up of imperfect men and they will make mistakes.

So will the rest of us.

And maybe some time in the next 75 years, we'll figure out how to do it better. God knows, we haven't figured it out yet.
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Date: 2006-11-07 05:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tanac.livejournal.com
So we're not allowed to complain until they fill the detention camps that they are now, at this very moment, building*?

It doesn't take a conspiracy theorist to be angry that every justification they gave for wanting to go to war in Iraq was a bold-faced lie that they have since said they never meant to say.

*http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=eed74d9d44c30493706fe03f4c9b3a77 is one link, but many places have reported on this so far.

Date: 2006-11-07 05:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
Why do you hate freedom?

B

Date: 2006-11-07 05:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] filkerdave.livejournal.com
It is a bloody (and I mean that literally) disgrace that nothing's being done in Darfur.

Date: 2006-11-07 05:47 am (UTC)
patoadam: Photo of me playing guitar in the woods (Default)
From: [personal profile] patoadam
And who could argue with the idea that the right thing to do was to go to war to remove a crazed dictator who was murdering tens of thousands of his own citizens?

That was not Bush's primary justification for the invasion.

Invading a foreign country because you disapprove of its form of government is, indeed, arguable.

Grotesquely mismanaging the occupation of a foreign country after you have invaded is both incompetent and negligent.

I've read that Saddam Hussein killed approximately 500,000 Iraqis. George W. Bush started a war in which approximately 650,000 Iraqis have died, with no end in sight.

"Nothing America could have done would have provided al Qaeda... a better recruitment device than our unprovoked invasion of an oil-rich Arab country... It was as if Usama [sic] bin Laden, hidden in some high mountain redoubt, were engaging in long-range mind control of George Bush, chanting 'invade Iraq, you must invade Iraq'."
-- Richard A. Clarke, _Against All Enemies_, p. 246

"The acknowledged gain of the war was that a treacherous and murderous dictator was removed, but the rest has been tragedy and failure. It has stimulated terrorism."
-- Hans Blix

"To occupy Iraq would instantly shatter our coalition, turning the whole Arab world against us and make a broken tyrant into a latter-day hero ... assigning young soldiers to a fruitless hunt for a securely entrenched dictator and condemning them to fight in what would be an un-winnable urban guerilla war. It could only plunge that part of the world into even greater instability."
-- George H.W. Bush



Date: 2006-11-07 05:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
You don't actually believe that the Iraqi people are now saying, "What took you so long to save us", do you? if you think that, where do you get your information?

K. [because, you know, I'm going to go read whatever sources you point me to]

Date: 2006-11-07 06:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jrittenhouse.livejournal.com
Amen to that.

Date: 2006-11-07 06:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
Um, B.'s reply was to [livejournal.com profile] tanac, not you.

K.

Date: 2006-11-07 06:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
I'm sorry that the irony of his remark was not apparent, but he replied to [livejournal.com profile] tanac comment about detention camps, not to anything you said.

K.

Date: 2006-11-07 06:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
I'd like to look at your sources of information on this.

K.

Date: 2006-11-07 06:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jrittenhouse.livejournal.com
My reaction to the events at Manzanar and likewise - is unspeakable.

We have a mutual friend whose family was picked up in all of that; his dad fought in the war in the Nisei Regiment that got the hell shot out of it in Italy, and it burns the hell out of me that any of that had to happen.

I have no use for any of that kind of crap. I remember the Shoe Room in the National Holocaust museum, where the dead smell of the long-unused huge pile of shoes from the camps hits you with the realization that All. Those. People. Died. Because. Of. Their Ethnicity.

I have a Chinese daughter, and I sometimes worry as to what would happen if there was some sort of conflict in the future with the Chinese, and she were (as a young woman) taken out and beat and raped by some jerks who want to 'nail a slant' in revenge.

Or the Sikhs who were beaten because they looked ay-rab. Stupid takes a long time to breed out of the human race.

The real problem is - how do we, ourselves, fix everything?

The answer is that we can't. Tried and failed in Somalia, and we never did much in Darfur or the Congo or Rwanda. Go check out the south Sudan for some real nightmares, and that's been going on since you and I were in grade school.

Oh, yeah - there's the various messes in West Africa, like the horrors in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Senegal, and Nigeria, starting with the slaughter of the Ibo in Biafra in the late 1960s.

Sometimes our screwups bring on the slaughter - ask the Sunnis in Iraq, the Marsh Arabs, the Kurds, or the Khmer who died at the hands of Pol Pot. Sometimes, you just have no way to do anything, like the millions who have died in China from 1935 to 1976 in wars, purges and mass starvation as murder.

The United States has done many good things in the world, and saved many from a horrible life. But not all things have an easy solution, and Dubya's dad was aware that callous as it was, the alternative to Saddam was - this. Or something much like it. It wasn't rocket science to figure that out.

The trick is to work things out the smart way. That is something that I have yet to see Bush do.

Date: 2006-11-07 06:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jrittenhouse.livejournal.com
The Kurds are a lot more secure and prosperous - and a set of one-party dictatorships. And the north is still a mess in the Big Cities.

Date: 2006-11-07 07:38 am (UTC)
patoadam: Photo of me playing guitar in the woods (Default)
From: [personal profile] patoadam
The 650,000 figure comes from a study that many people believe has exaggerated the numbers.

Yes, the 650,000 figure surprised me, and it has a large margin of error, but after reading both their reports, I think that they may have underestimated the number of deaths. See my post on the subject for more details. I was also surprised to find out that the air in my office weighs more than 100 pounds, but it does.

I've pointed out to you before that Bush said... before the invasion of Iraq that one of the major goals was establishing a free, democratic society in that country.

Yes, I remember that, but it was not the primary justification.

I understand that we could have done a better job of it.

Rumsfeld threatened to fire anyone who did post-war planning, by which he meant post-overthrow-of-Saddam-Hussein. The State Department did careful post-war planning, all of which was ignored when Bush put the Defense Department in charge of the occupation. The de-Baathification program was a disaster; it sounded plausible, but it put tens of thousands of unemployed, angry, armed Sunnis on the streets.

quoting Bush I on the situation then doesn't have a lot of applicability to the later situation.

Don't you think that Bush I would have had more justification for overthrowing Saddam Hussein than Bush II did?

By the way, I note that -- according to the New York Times! -- Saddam had a number of documents that provided a lot of information useful in building an atomic bomb.

You mean the documents that the Republican administration put up on the web, where anyone with a knowledge of Arabic could read them?

Date: 2006-11-07 10:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] smallship1.livejournal.com
This entry came in my flist right after this one. It was interesting, reading the two in succession.

I honestly believe that you are mistaken, and I expect you believe the same of me. I hope that, if the side you support wins, your faith in them turns out to be justified.

Date: 2006-11-07 01:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
My comment was not directed towards you, it was directed towards [livejournal.com profile] tanac, who I assumed would get the joke.

I agree that we should be able to discuss issues in a rational fashion, but also with humor and warmth.

I apologize if I offended you but...please...relax.

B

Date: 2006-11-07 01:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] demoneyes.livejournal.com
Be fair - that quote from George senior (from 1998) refers to his belief at the time of the 1991 war, not to the political situation prevailing over a decade later. Indeed, I note it carefully omits the "I firmly believed..." which might otherwise place the quote more in historical context.

I'll admit it reads well as a sound-bite if read out of context, but that very fact only makes it the more dishonest to quote it as if it were.

I'm no great fan of the hypocrisy and lies used to justify the invasion (on both sides of the Atlantic). But that's no reason to stoop towards their level.

Date: 2006-11-07 02:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
"By the way, I note that -- according to the New York Times! -- Saddam had a number of documents that provided a lot of information useful in building an atomic bomb."

That's a Republican talking point, not a truism. The documents --- the ones the Administration posted on a public website -- were from the first Iraqi invasion. We know about his weapons programs back then. That's what were dismantled between the wars. There's no news there, and no "ah ha" WMD evidence either.

All the documents prove is that the Bush Administration was extremely careless when they decided to allow the Republican blogs -- oddly, that was the reason -- to be able to look over the documents for a smoking gun. I get the value of open source intelligence, but not in this way.

The open question is whether any terrorist organizations downloaded the documents. Sometimes I think it's unlikely, other times I think it likely.

But...wow...what a dumb thing to do.

B

Date: 2006-11-07 02:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com
"I've pointed out to you before that Bush said in his speeches immediately before the invasion of Iraq that one of the major goals was establishing a free, democratic society in that country."

Can you help me understand this. It seems obvious to me that the overwhelmingly primary justification for the Iraqi invasion was WMD: in Bush's speeches, in Powell's U.N. visit, in Rumsfeld's speeches, in the press conferences, in the neocon writings. Again and again: "Saddam has WMD!!!" I find the blatant rewriting of history offensive, because...well...because it's untrue.

Do you think I am 1) lying about the recent history, or 2) misremembering the recent history? Or something else?

This is not meant to be a baiting question. I really do want to understand what I view as a group delusion.

B

Date: 2006-11-07 02:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kestrels-nest.livejournal.com
It's true. Governments are made up of imperfect men. I've never been an apologist for FDR. He brought a terrified, demoralized country out of the Great Depression, something that marked not only those who lived through it but their children. But it's not his efforts to get us into WWII that I decry; it's that he ignored clear evidence of genocide in progress and did nothing to even slow it down.

No one now argues whether it was necessary to destroy Hitler, and I think the primary difference between him and Saddam Hussein is only one of scale. So no, it is not the act of taking us into war I decry. It is the utter lack of plan as to how to rebuild after the destruction was complete. It is the race to dismantle all our civil rights - and neither Bush nor FDR managed that alone; the legislators of their respective times helped them. It is the utter father-knows-best hubris the man displays. FDR had most of the rest of Europe not only with him, but begging for help from the U.S. Most of the citizens of this country supported FDR and what he was doing as well. Bush, on the other hand, has most of the rest of the world against him, along with a large percentage of his own constituency, and still insists that means nothing and that he knows best. There is the failure to provide enough resources in either Iraq or Afghanistan for the troops sent to actually accomplish the stated mission...though truly I am not sure there are enough resources in the world for it, and I question the wisdom of undertaking what was arguably a Sysephian task to begin with. Alexander could clean the Aegean Stables by diverting a river. The scale now is much larger, and there is no river great enough. There is a great deal more - the efforts to combine Church and State, the denouncement of those who dare to disagree with him publicly almost as traitors. There is the sophistry of Guantanamo Bay, and the holding of foreign nationals for years without charge, or contact, or counsel. To me, the U.S. should not be a country in which people disappear at the behest of the government, but Bush has made it so.

So those are the things I hold against him, and against the current Congress, and the reasons my vote goes where and as it will. But overthrowing a genocidal maniac? Having the very personal perspective on genocide that my family history gives me - no. Doing that was right.

Date: 2006-11-07 02:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kestrels-nest.livejournal.com
I have to say, the jest was not apparent to me, either.

Date: 2006-11-07 02:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chris-gerrib.livejournal.com
I'm not a Bush fan, and just voted for a Democrat in Congress, but I have to take a bit of an issue with the "Bush Lied" implication. AT THE TIME, we simply didn't know if Saddam had WMD or not. He had kicked the inspectors out 5 years previously, after 7 years of obstructionism. Since he had used WMD repeatedly prior to the 1991 war, these actions only made sense if he was either hiding stockpiles or trying to reconstitute them.

I truly think Saddam wanted his people to believe he had WMD. During the 2003 invasion, US troops kept finding NEW stockpiles of gas masks and CBR suits that had been issued to his troops. Regular Army soldiers, up to Brigade commander level, were captured and said "we don't have WMD, but there are units in our area that do."

If Saddam wanted his troops to believe he had WMD (avoiding mutiny?) and acted like he did (kicking out inspectors) how in the world could we know for sure he was bluffing?

I do distinctly remember Bush saying a goal was to establish democracy. Others, including Powell, argued WMD. Besides the fact that everybody at the time thought WMD existed, the only "legal" excuse to invade was WMD. (After the 1991 war, as part of the ceasefire, Saddam was given 90 days to get rid of WMD).
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