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#11
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#12
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![]() "Mark Test" wrote in message ... "Your Name Here" wrote in message ... On Sun, 9 Nov 2003 15:07:18 -0600, "Mark Test" wrote: (Snip) Hmmm IIRC, in 1973 Nixon had brought the N. Vietnamese to the table, (Paris peace accords), so victory was close. Then the democrats used watergate to get Nixon out of office and then they cut and run. My answer: we should have stayed and won the war, not cut and run. Your chronology is a little faulty. The war ended for us in March of 1973, and the Congressional investigation of Watergate didn't even start until May of that year. You need to remember that Kennedy and Johnson, both Democrats, started and expanded the war and that in spite of it escalating, Johnson couldn't find a way to get out of it short of turning it into a nuclear war. Johnson tried his best to get it won but, although we had continued to win battle after battle, they just kept coming and kept throwing people at us regardless of how many of them we wiped out. Anyway, having lived through it, I don't recall that the decision to negotiate the end of the war was one of those Democrat v. Republican political things that seem to be so common today. Even if it was, it would have been a case of the Republicans wanting to bail out of a Democratic war.....they were the ones who did the cutting and running, if that's what you want to call it. BTW, when Kissinger went to Paris to negotiate the end of the war, it was hardly going to be a victory. In fact, what actually happened was that we pulled out and left the South Vietnamese to continue the fight on their own. I think they only lasted a couple of months after our last troops left. George Z. |
#14
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I'm not really bent out of shape over what's in the Afghanistan constitution. I
look at TV pictures coming out of Kabul and see women walking around without those god-awful head-to-toe robes on, and I see girl children in school being educated, and that's enough of an improvement for me to not worry too much about how they're going to pray. That's their choice anyway. George Z. " wrote in message om... Well, yeah, Karzai (sp) is the mayor of Kabul, not the president of Afghanistan. However, my point is still valid in that American's died so that they can have a constitution in Afghanistan that says Islam is the Afghanistan religion. I don't think that was one of the goals of the war. "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... wrote: Let's use Afghanistan as an example. In theory, the war is over there, even though the president didn't hitch a ride onto a carrier deck. Look at this phrase in the Afghanistan constitution: 'It says Islam is Afghanistan's religion and "no law will be made which will oppose the principles of Islam".' http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanista...076321,00.html Yeah, some democracy. However, a certain party is declaring (cough cough) "Mission Accomplished." I think you're confusing the two conflicts.....I don't believe anybody claimed the war in Afghanistan was over. OBL is still running around loose and, according to 60 Minutes, the only part of Afghanistan that's reasonably safe is the area around Kabul. The rest of the country is apparently still no-man's land, with the Taliban and war lords fighting over some parts, and opium (and heroin) producing poppies growing everywhere. Do we pick our wars, or what!!! George Z. |
#15
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BUFDRVR wrote:
The Democrats or the GOP? At the rate we are going, the post war death toll will be about 3x the war death toll. What a waste of life. A waste of life? You sir, not suprisingly, are the lowest form of life I've seen on these boards. Those young men who have died have only wasted their lives if Iraq is not established as a stable, peaceful nation and its far to early to make that determination. I'm looking forward to you political commercials next year in the run-up to the election, how low can you go? Even if these guys were against the idea of war in Iraq, it *has happened*! Now they should move on to dealing with it, rather than fight the "whether we should" battle all over! I get the impression that some of these folks are so deep in their anti-Bush hatreds that they would happily recreate a new domestic political climate similar to Vietnam War circa 1970 if they could. Let the US take a huge defeat in Iraq if it will further their anti-Bush agendas. Really disgusting! SMH |
#16
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"George Z. Bush" wrote:
BUFDRVR wrote: I would have loved to hear your comments during Okinawa, or Gettysburg. Some things are worth figthing and dying for, Peace in the Mid-East (by way of Democracy) surely is worth it, isn't it? Only if your political party is the one making the policy. This goes for Republicans (guilty of such actions in '99) as well as Democrats. We've come to a point in this nation when political parties take presedence over the nation as a whole. There are Democrats that celebrate every time a US solider is killed in Iraq. Care to provide a name to go with your accusation? I don't know of any, and I'm a Democrat. How come you know who they are and I don't? I'm sure that there are as many Republicans who celebrate our casualties as there are Democrats who do the same. Don't know that any Dem is going to "celebrate" the death of another soldier, but it surely plays into their political plans for capturing the White House. They do seem to be hyping up every death and my belief is it is for political purposes. Surely you won't deny that being bogged down in Iraq is good for Democratic Presidential hopes next year especially if the economy keeps moving towards improvement (another "dang!" from the Dems although not explicitly stated). SMH |
#17
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"George Z. Bush" writes:
BTW, when Kissinger went to Paris to negotiate the end of the war, it was hardly going to be a victory. In fact, what actually happened was that we pulled out and left the South Vietnamese to continue the fight on their own. I think they only lasted a couple of months after our last troops left. While a Dem personally, I'll point out a flaw in Z's description. Ford was POTUS, and concluded he could not fly air support for RVN in '75 because the Democratically controlled congress would not provide funding for further involvement. Lack of US material and air support were among the reasons for the RVN's collapse, but their own handling and behaviour at Ban Me Thuot didn't help. My opinion is that the country was not prepared to continue, so it mattered little which party controlled Congress. I admit that is conjecture. The point is, Nixon slipped the US out by promising support he couldn't really be sure would be provided if needed. It was needed, and it wasn't provided. Thieu rightly believed at the time that he'd been sold out for empty promises, but there was nothing he could do about it. (Comparisons to Afghanistan and Iraq left as exercises.) -dB -- Butterflies tell me to say: "The statements and opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily represent those of Oracle Corporation." |
#18
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Stephen Harding writes:
"George Z. Bush" wrote: Surely you won't deny that being bogged down in Iraq is good for Democratic Presidential hopes next year especially if the economy keeps moving towards improvement (another "dang!" from the Dems although not explicitly stated). Pot, kettle; it didn't hurt Nixon that Johnson was stuck in Vietnam either. Depressing as this is, it is business as usual. -dB -- Butterflies tell me to say: "The statements and opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily represent those of Oracle Corporation." |
#19
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Nobody can argue that the people of Afghanistan aren't better off
without the Taliban. Still, I would like to think Christian minorities could live there without oppression. "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... I'm not really bent out of shape over what's in the Afghanistan constitution. I look at TV pictures coming out of Kabul and see women walking around without those god-awful head-to-toe robes on, and I see girl children in school being educated, and that's enough of an improvement for me to not worry too much about how they're going to pray. That's their choice anyway. George Z. " wrote in message om... Well, yeah, Karzai (sp) is the mayor of Kabul, not the president of Afghanistan. However, my point is still valid in that American's died so that they can have a constitution in Afghanistan that says Islam is the Afghanistan religion. I don't think that was one of the goals of the war. "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... wrote: Let's use Afghanistan as an example. In theory, the war is over there, even though the president didn't hitch a ride onto a carrier deck. Look at this phrase in the Afghanistan constitution: 'It says Islam is Afghanistan's religion and "no law will be made which will oppose the principles of Islam".' http://www.guardian.co.uk/afghanista...076321,00.html Yeah, some democracy. However, a certain party is declaring (cough cough) "Mission Accomplished." I think you're confusing the two conflicts.....I don't believe anybody claimed the war in Afghanistan was over. OBL is still running around loose and, according to 60 Minutes, the only part of Afghanistan that's reasonably safe is the area around Kabul. The rest of the country is apparently still no-man's land, with the Taliban and war lords fighting over some parts, and opium (and heroin) producing poppies growing everywhere. Do we pick our wars, or what!!! George Z. |
#20
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Stephen Harding wrote:
"George Z. Bush" wrote: BUFDRVR wrote: ......... There are Democrats that celebrate every time a US solider is killed in Iraq. Care to provide a name to go with your accusation? I don't know of any, and I'm a Democrat. How come you know who they are and I don't? I'm sure that there are as many Republicans who celebrate our casualties as there are Democrats who do the same. Don't know that any Dem is going to "celebrate" the death of another soldier, but it surely plays into their political plans for capturing the White House. They do seem to be hyping up every death and my belief is it is for political purposes. Surely you won't deny that being bogged down in Iraq is good for Democratic Presidential hopes next year especially if the economy keeps moving towards improvement (another "dang!" from the Dems although not explicitly stated). Certainly I'll categorically deny that being bogged down in Iraq is good for any American, candidate or not. Many Americans, lately including members of the Republican Party as well as Democrats, are starting to regret that our nation allowed itself to get involved in this military adventure for non-existent reasons in the first place. In hindsight, we may someday conclude that we would have been better off letting the UN handle the mess their way, instead of going it alone. George Z. |
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