BURNING QUESTION: BEGINNING OF THE END FOR THE NEO CON? - Page 2


p. 49: [this occurs on the day after 9/11/01] "Rumsfeld
raised the question of Iraq. Why shouldn't we go against Iraq, not just
al Qaeda? ... Rumsfeld was raising the possibility that they could take
advantage of the of the opportunity offered by the terrorist attacks to
go after Saddam immediately."


p. 60: [9/13/01] "Rumsfeld had raised Iraq during the
previous day's national security meetings with the president. Now Wolfowitz
wanted to issue a public warning to terrorist states. It was another effort
to prod the president to include Iraq in his first round of targets."


pp. 82-83: [9/15/01] "Another risk they faced was getting
bogged down in Afghanistan, the nemesis of the British in the 19th century
and the Soviets in the 20th. Rice was wondering whether it might be the
same for the United States in the 21st.

" Her fears were shared by others, which led to a different discussion:
Should they think about launching military action elsewhere as an insurance policy
in case things in Afghanistan went bad? ...

" Rice asked whether they could envision a successful campaign beyond Afghanistan,
which put Iraq back on the table."


(More excerpts on my site)


Since I've only included excerpts subject to a charge of being "taken
out of context" I strongly recommend that you drop by your local library
and read the book then come to your own conclusions


And it wouldn't hurt to read the 03/06/03
resignation letter of former-diplomat John Brady Kiesling
,


 

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  • 1 - mike

    Sep 22, 2003 at 9:54 pm

    William Lind has suggested that all neoconservatives be rounded up and sent to Baghdad to clean up the mess they made, with instructions not to come back until we send the last plane. And then we should forget to send that last plane.

    SEND A NEOCONSERVATIVE TO BAGHDAD. It'll make a nice bumper sticker. Order yours today.

  • 2 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 22, 2003 at 11:34 pm

    Hmm. Your unsupported assertion: neocons were hoping for a chance to remove a brutal tyrant from power. Those bastards.

    "somebody said it"

    Relatively self-impeaching, I'm afraid.

    The passages you cite also support inferences that long term planning was at work. For example, a tough go in Afghanistan might have required another action elsewhere because withdrawing at the first sign of adversity would project the kind of weakness that provoked 9/11 (as would have a non-response in Afghanistan as well).

    Also, Islamo-fascism is not going to disappear overnight, and failing to plan beyond Afghanistan would have criminally irresponsible. the lackadaisacal approach is not an option.

    If you pay my way and my hydration, incidentally, I'll happily go to Iraq and lend what help I can.

    Send a neoconservative to Baghdad? So Mike must have supported the love it or leave it crowd.

  • 3 - Brian Flemming

    Sep 22, 2003 at 11:51 pm

    It is surprising how many pro-warriors claimed to be motivated by humanitarian concern for Iraqis (and, retroactively, many have decided this was in fact their primary concern), yet so few are jumping on a plane for Baghdad to pitch in, or selling their houses to donate the money to relief organizations, or advocating for a tax hike to pay for the rebuilding. Or anything.

    They sure were excited about that kick-ass military operation in March, though. I'm sure many pro-warriors bought new widescreen TVs so they could watch the war in all its glory, so I suppose we should give them credit for that sacrifice. Those things cost a lot of money.

    A war led by chickenhawks, cheered by chickenhawks.

    Max Cleland is right.

  • 4 - Brian Flemming

    Sep 22, 2003 at 11:55 pm

    Chris,

    I didn't see your comment (2) when I posted mine (3).

    You say...

    If you pay my way and my hydration, incidentally, I'll happily go to Iraq and lend what help I can.


    Do you have a proposed budget? Because I think it might be possible to raise the cash if you're really serious. I'll start spreading the word.

    How much are you willing to spend yourself?

  • 5 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 12:10 am

    Brian, true or false: anyone who disagrees with Brian Flemming on certain issues to be named by Brian Flemming is by definition a bad person and/or a stupid person and is deserving of personal attacks and name-calling.

    True or false: failure to address an argument is indicative of a strong position if Brian Flemming is the one failing to address the argument.

    True or false: opinion pieces can be cited as fact if Brian Flemming is doing the citing.

    Stop the hate, Brian. And I don't mean by posting a shrill denial of hate or posting more personal and/or bigoted attacks. Such hostility to strangers is decidedly unbecoming.

  • 6 - Brian Flemming

    Sep 23, 2003 at 12:40 am

    Chris,

    False.

    False.

    False.

    There's 3 questions of yours directly answered. Now, how about the ones I asked? In case you missed it, here is my comment #4 in its entirety:


    Chris,

    I didn't see your comment (2) when I posted mine (3).

    You say...

    If you pay my way and my hydration, incidentally, I'll happily go to Iraq and lend what help I can.


    Do you have a proposed budget? Because I think it might be possible to raise the cash if you're really serious. I'll start spreading the word.

    How much are you willing to spend yourself?



    Or did you not really mean what you said?

    Waiting...

  • 7 - jp

    Sep 23, 2003 at 9:29 am

    Chris Arabia,

    I'll chip in $500 to send you to Baghdad. Anyone else want to contribute to this noble cause ?

  • 8 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 9:45 am

    1) I'll have to do some research. It's not like going to Kalamazoo.

    2) I will not spend my own $. The opportunity cost is a sufficient loss.

    3) It would be quite a story--ANTIWAR PEOPLE EXPORT PROWAR PERSON TO HELP IN IRAQ.

    more later...

  • 9 - John Isbell

    Sep 23, 2003 at 10:39 am

    I'm delighted to hear that Chris Arabia has volunteered to go to Iraq and help out if we pay for him. He can join my cousin Mark in Special Forces, though I'm not sure he has a 10-month-old son. Atrios at Eschaton has got to work raising the money, he has about 15,000 readers daily. I expect you'll want to start a funding drive too. Best of luck!

  • 10 - daniel

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:01 am

    I'll chip in.

  • 11 - daniel

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:04 am

    By the way: how long does it take to be shipped to Iraq after signing up at www.goarmy.com ? I'd rather Chris look like a soldier than a tourist.

    I'll still chip in though.

  • 12 - Eric Olsen

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:15 am

    This whole "you can't comment on something unless you are willing to do it yourself" is disingenuous, changing the subject, attention diverting, and among the least appealing of the anti-war ploys: you can't formulate policy for the good of the country, the people as a whole, the entire freaking world, unless you have either engaged in the activity required to carry out this policy yourself, or are willing to drop everything and carry out the duty yourself.

    This has nothing to do with the merits of the policy, nothing to do with the integrity of the ppolicy formulator or advocate, and is petulant nonsense.

    If everyone who supports the war were to go to Iraq, say about 200 million Americans, the Iraqis would have to come here.

  • 13 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:16 am

    Lest confusion reign:

    "If you pay my way and my hydration, incidentally, I'll happily go to Iraq and lend what help I can."

    That's what I wrote.

    No substitutions, Daniel. By the way, is
    no@spam.com
    your real e-mail address?


  • 14 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:19 am

    By the way, your implication that anyone who is not a solider is a tourist is pretty insulting to humanitarian workers, etc.

  • 15 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:20 am

    Same question to jp--is

    jp@jp.com

    your real e-mail address?

  • 16 - Hal Pawluk

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:26 am

    Sorry, Chris, but I asserted what I asserted, not what you asserted I asserted.

    As for Afghanistan, there's no need for inferences when the facts are plain. The Administration clearly stated they did not want to get bogged down there and looked for an out. Conveniently, some in the group had been trying to get the US to attack Iraq for at least a decade.

    They took the out and abandoned Afghanistan, although few in this country seem to have noticed. The 8-10,000 troops and the "Afghan government" are almost exclusively restricted to Kabul, while Afghanistan itself now produces 75% of the world's opium.

    > Also, Islamo-fascism is not going to disappear overnight...

    The same could be said about neos, but that's called a "non-sequitur" argument and I'm not playing.

    > Send a neoconservative to Baghdad?

    Let me edit the bumper sticker:

    SEND A NEO TO NAJAF!

    Doesn't that sing?

  • 17 - daniel

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:29 am

    Chris,

    That's fine; I wasn't wondering if we could have the government pay instead. I'll check prices at Orbitz later.

    As for the address, no, it is not my real e-mail address. I get enough spam as it is. Remove the '-removethis-' parts: dsilva-removethis-@ccs.-removethis-.neu.edu

  • 18 - daniel

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:31 am

    Chris,

    I didn't say they _are_ tourists. I said they _look_ more like tourists than like soldiers.

  • 19 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:36 am

    Thank you for the publicity, Brian.

    Don't forget to tell people to visit my blog, mcfrank.blogspot.com

    And thanks for the relentless personal insults. I know it's your best substitution for actual argument.

    Why don't you worry about holding up your end of the bargain, or can't you refrain from spewing hatred long enough to do so?

    Hal: Send a Neo to Najaf? It's not bad. But you did assert without support that the "neos" were bursting to hit Iraq for years. Reread your first sentence.

  • 20 - mike

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:37 am

    The issue here is that prowars gloat about how patriotic they are, how we must all come together, how antiwars are undermining the country, blah blah blah, but over and over again, THEY DON'T WALK THEIR TALK.

    Several neoconservatives said before the war they were going to Baghdad to help out after the war and no doubt gloat again over their great victory. But now that the situation has become dire, and their help is really needed, they are nowhere to be seen. IF THINGS ARE SLOWLY GETTING BETTER LIKE THEY SAY, BLAH, BLAH, BLAH, WHY AREN'T THEY OVER THERE LIKE THEY SAID THEY WOULD BE?!!!

  • 21 - Monkey

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:41 am

    I'm in for $25 bucks if you actually do it.

    Monkey

  • 22 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:48 am

    Well, I'm at the Red Cross site as we speak on another screen.

    I am discouraged by some of the phony e-mailers (not Dan) and by Brian's uncontrolled viciousness, but I am going to find out what it will cost, and then see if, um, people cough up.

    (one of Brian's pals calls me an "um, person." Perish the thought that an actual human disagree with them)

    I, for one, never said anything about going to Iraq, until now...

    CA

  • 23 - Hal Pawluk

    Sep 23, 2003 at 11:59 am

    > But you did assert without support that the
    > "neos" were bursting to hit Iraq for years.

    I had mentioned that I'd be posting supporting citations on my site but deleted the parenthetical comment for Blogcritics.

    So while I haven't put that piece together yet, here's one background link for you to start with

    http://www.israeleconomy.org/strat1.htm

    That's a link to a 1996 paper that Richard Perle was the lead writer on (others included James Colbert, Charles Fairbanks, Jr., Douglas Feith, Robert Loewenberg and David Wurmser, well known in the neo community) for The Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies in Jerusalem.

    The link takes you to a page with the speech and speaker's notes where you'll find "... This effort can focus on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq ... ".

    The paper was a briefing for Netanyahu, who presented it as a speech to the US Congress a few days later.

    They turned him down.

  • 24 - Chris Arabia

    Sep 23, 2003 at 12:03 pm

    Fair enough.

    I would only add to that that neos were not the only ones thinking of regime change in Iraq.

    Regardless, thank you for answering my question.

  • 25 - johnx

    Sep 23, 2003 at 12:03 pm

    > "If you pay my way and my hydration, incidentally,
    > I'll happily go to Iraq and lend what help I can." - Chris Arabia.


    Is this "Chris Arabia" guy honest or lying?
    I think is is lying.

    Can he live by his word, or is his word worthless?
    I think his word is worthless.

    I don't think he is able to live up to his own words.

    I will donate $ to sending him to Iraq.

    I dont think Chris should get a drop more water than a ground soldier.

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