Category Archives: Iraq

Lieberman doesn’t get it at all

Our junior senator’s speech to the Jewish Republican Association on May 16th: 

Thank you so much for that kind introduction. It is a pleasure to be
here among so many friends.

Now, I know there are some who are probably wondering — what is a nice
Independent Democrat from Connecticut doing at a Republican event like
this?

Well, a funny thing happened on the way to reelection last year… And
as Rabbi Hillel said, the rest is commentary.

In all seriousness, many of you in this room stood with me last year
through the long journey up a winding road that was my 2006 reelection
campaign. You came to my side without regard for party affiliation,
and you stayed there even after I ran as an Independent but said I
would caucus with the Democrats. Your non-partisanship in my race is a
model for what our politics should be. I thank you personally and
deeply for it. I could not have won without it.

And I pledge to you that I will do everything I can to vindicate your
confidence.

We gather at a critical time for the future of our country. The war in
Iraq has now become the defining issue for this Congress and for this
presidency — although the decisions we will make in the weeks and
months ahead about Iraq will have consequences that reach far beyond
the terms of anyone now in office.

Part of the disagreement we face over Iraq comes down to a genuine
difference of opinion.

On the one hand, there are those who believe, as I do, that the
struggle against Islamist extremism really is the central challenge of
our time, and that, as General David Petraeus — our commander in Iraq
— recently said, Iraq is now the central front of the war against
Islamist extremism.

On the other hand, there are those who reject this view — who
genuinely believe that the threat of Islamist extremism is overstated,
or that Iraq is a distraction from the “real” war on terror, or that
the war there is lost, or not worth fighting to win.

It is my deeply held conviction that these people are not only wrong,
they are disastrously wrong — and that the withdrawal they demand
would be a moral and security catastrophe for the United States, for
Iraq, and for the entire Middle East, including Israel and our
moderate Arab allies.

Let there be no doubt — an American defeat in Iraq would be a victory
for Al Qaeda and Iran… the two most threatening enemies we face in the
world today. It would vindicate the hope of our enemies that America
is weak and that we can be driven to retreat by terrorism, and it
would confirm the fear of our friends — not only in Iraq, but
throughout the world — that we are unreliable allies who will abandon
them in the face of danger.

The fact of the matter is, you cannot claim to be tough on terrorism
while demanding that our military withdraw from Iraq, because it is
the terrorists — particular Al Qaeda — that our military is fighting
in Iraq.

You cannot claim to be committed to defeating Al Qaeda, while
demanding that we abandon the heart of the Middle East to Al Qaeda.

And you cannot claim to be tough on Iran, while demanding the very
thing that the mullahs want most of all — the retreat of the American
military from the Middle East in defeat, leaving a vacuum that Iran
will rush to fill.

I recognize that this war has been controversial, and there are those
who oppose it on principle. I respect that.

But too much of the debate we are having today about withdrawal from
Iraq has little or nothing to do with principle, or with reality in
Iraq.

It is about politics and partisanship here in Washington.

For many Democrats, if President Bush is for it, they must be against
it. If the war is going badly, it is bad for Republicans and it is
good for Democrats. It is as simple as that, and it is as wrong as
that.

For many Republicans, the unpopularity of this war and this President
has begun to shake their will. They say that they have no choice but
to abandon General Petraeus and his strategy because the American
people tell the pollsters they want out. If previous generations of
American leaders had allowed their conduct of war to be shaped by
partisanship or public opinion polls, we would not be the strong and
free nation we are blessed to be today.

Republicans in Congress delude themselves if they think they will be
helping either themselves, their party, or their country if they now
attempt to wash their hands of Iraq, out of a sudden sense of
political anxiety.

Democrats in Congress delude themselves if they think they will not be
held accountable for the bloody consequences of the retreat from Iraq
they seek.

The fact is, a loss to Al Qaeda and Iran in Iraq would be devastating
to our security. These are fateful days and critical decisions we are
making about Iraq. We must make them with our eye on the safety of
America’s next generation, not the outcome of America’s next election.

It is to the everlasting credit of President Bush that in the war
against Islamist extremism he has shown the courage and steadfastness
to stand against the political passions of the moment.

I have never hesitated to express disagreement with the President on
any issue when I felt he was wrong — and I have criticized his
administration many times for the serious mistakes I believe it made
in prosecuting the war in Iraq.

But let me tell you this: I believe that each of us should be grateful
that we have a commander-in-chief who does not believe that decisions
about war should be driven by poll numbers. And each of us should be
grateful that we have a commander-in-chief who does not confuse what
is popular with what is right for our security as a nation. The public
opinion polls may not reflect this today, but I believe history will
tomorrow.

My friends, as Ronald Reagan once said, now is the time for choosing.

If we stand united through the months ahead, if we stand firm against
the terrorists who want to drive us to retreat, the war in Iraq can be
won and the lives of millions of people can be saved.

But if we surrender to the barbarism of suicide bombers and abandon
the heart of the Middle East to fanatics and killers, to Al Qaeda and
Iran, then all that our men and women in uniform have fought, and died
for, will be lost, and we will be left a much less secure and free
nation.

That is the choice we in Washington will make this summer and this
fall. It is a choice not just about our foreign policy and our
national security and our interests in the Middle East. It is about
what our political leaders in both parties are prepared to stand for.
It is about our very soul as a nation. It is about who we are, and who
we want to be.

Will this be the moment in history when America gives up — when Al
Qaeda breaks our will, when our enemies surge forward, when we turn
our backs on our friends and begin a long retreat from our principles
and promise as a nation?

Or will this be the moment when America steps forward, when we pull
together, when we hold fast to the courage of our convictions, when —
with a new strategy, and a new commander on the ground — we begin to
turn the tide toward victory in this long and difficult war?

I know that we can rise above the anger and smallness of our politics.
I know we can rise to the greatness that this moment demands of us.

The question is — will we choose to do so?

I would like to close today by sharing with you a story from my last
visit to Iraq a few months ago. It was in Anbar province in western
Iraq — the center of the insurgency — a part of the country that
conventional wisdom last year dismissed as hopeless.

In fact, on September 11, 2006, the Washington Post ran a front-page
story reporting that even the chief of Marine Corps intelligence in
Iraq had concluded that Anbar was “lost,” and our position there was
“beyond repair.”

I was in Anbar last December, on a forward operating base just outside
Ramadi, the capital of the province. As one of the briefings with our
military commanders ended, a colonel who had been sitting in the back
of the room came up to me. He said something that I carry with me to
this day — something that I hope you will carry with you as well.

He said: “Sir, I want you to know on behalf of the soldiers in my unit
and myself that we believe in why we are fighting here, we want to
finish this fight. And we know we can win it.”

Today, five months later, Anbar has been dramatically transformed.
Thanks to the bravery, ingenuity, and commitment of our men and women
in uniform, shops and schools have reopened, Al Qaeda is on the run,
thousands of Iraqis have joined the local police, and — yes — no less
than the New York Times reports that we have turned the corner there.

My friends, now is not the time for despair. Now is the time for
resolve.

Now is not the time for reflexive partisanship and pandering to public
opinion. Now is the time for the kind of patriotism and principle
America’s voters have always honored.

I ask you to plead with every member of Congress you can in the days
and weeks ahead —

Do not surrender to hopelessness.

Do not succumb to defeat.

Do not give in to fear.

Rise above the political pressures of the moment to do what is right
for America.

Believe, like that colonel, in why we are fighting in Iraq, and know,
as he and his soldiers know, that we can and must win there.”

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Filed under Iraq, Lieberman, war

Larson: Strip Bush of his war power to wage war

REP. LARSON REAFFIRMS REVOKING PRESIDENT’S AUTHORITY TO WAGE WAR 

WASHINGTON- Today, Congressman John B. Larson (CT-1) issued the following statement regarding legislation introduced by Senator Hillary Rodham-Clinton and Senator Robert Byrd yesterday that would revoke the President’s authority to wage war:

“I am pleased that my colleagues in the Senate have raised the issue of revoking President Bush’s authority to wage war.  The President callously and carelessly entered this war.  Clearly, things have gotten worse and not better. We cannot afford to have a President that continues to abuse his authority and not listen to the Congress or the will of the American people.  Taking this action would be another important step to keep the pressure on the President.   Congress also needs to look to address the Congressional War Powers Act to ensure that this kind of an abuse of power never occurs again.  In March, I introduced similar legislation in the House and hope that we can work together to take this critical step that can aid in ending this war.”

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Filed under Congress, Hillary Clinton, Iraq, John Larson, Politics, President Bush, Robert Byrd, war, war powers

Newsweek’s stunning new issue

Scrawled across the cover of the April 2 issue of Newsweek are a soldier’s words, in his own writing: “Any day I’m here could be the day I die.”

What follows inside is an extraordinary, deeply sad and wonderful look into the lives of our fallen troop — in their own words. It’s full of excerpts from letters, emails, instant messages, audio recordings and more that our warriors left behind after war took them from us forever.

Every reminder that so many of our soldiers are dying daily is a good thing, but this issue is a gift from Newsweek to America. It’s not particularly political in the narrow sense of bashing or bolstering President Bush, but it leaves an unmistakable impression that we’ve lost far too much.

Just looking at the pictures of men cuddling their babies breaks your heart, over and over and over.

I know the war is hell, that soldiers who perish leave gaping wounds at home, that battles grind up more than bodies. They blow up dreams. They shatter families. They leave a wreckage that goes far beyond the pieces of metal on a distant ground.

But what I realized as I read the words of these slain soldiers is that this war’s price is far too high for whatever it is that we’re getting out of it. After four years of conflict, it’s increasingly hard to see beyond the death toll, to see any vision at all for a future that isn’t just soaked in more patriots’ blood.

Bring ’em home.

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Filed under Foreign policy, Iraq, Iraq war, military, Newsweek, veterans

War poetry

Leave it to someone from the West Hartford-based 143rd Military Police unit to write a book of poetry about his experiences in Iraq. Though Captain Gregory Robert Samuels lives in Mansfield, it might be worth checking out his War Poems from Iraq.

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Filed under 143rd Military Police, Iraq, literature, poetry, veterans, war