to Robert, steves
Barack Obama gave a great speech at Depaul University
We come together at a time of renewal for DePaul. A new academic year has begun. Professors are learning the names of new students, and students are reminded that you actually do have to attend class. That cold is beginning to creep into the Chicago air. The season is changing. DePaul is now filled with students who have not spent a single day on campus without the reality of a war in Iraq. Four classes have matriculated and four classes have graduated since this war began. And we are reminded that America's sons and daughters in uniform, and their families, bear the heavy burden. The wife of one soldier from Illinois wrote to me and said that her husband "feels like he's stationed in Iraq and deploys home." That's a tragic statement. And it could be echoed by families across our country who have seen loved ones deployed to tour after tour of duty.\n\u003cbr\>\u003cbr\>You are students. And the great responsibility of students is to question the world around you, to question things that don't add up. With Iraq, we must ask the question: how did we go so wrong?
There are those who offer up easy answers. They will assert that Iraq is George Bush's war, it's all his fault. Or that Iraq was botched by the arrogance and incompetence of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Or that we would have gotten Iraq right if we went in with more troops, or if we had a different proconsul instead of Paul Bremer, or if only there were a stronger Iraqi Prime Minister.
These are the easy answers. And like most easy answers, they are partially true. But they don't tell the whole truth, because they overlook a harder and more fundamental truth. The hard truth is that the war in Iraq is not about a catalog of many mistakes - it is about one big mistake. The war in Iraq should never have been fought.
..........There are those who offer up easy answers. They will assert that Iraq is George Bush's war, it's all his fault. Or that Iraq was botched by the arrogance and incompetence of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Or that we would have gotten Iraq right if we went in with more troops, or if we had a different proconsul instead of Paul Bremer, or if only there were a stronger Iraqi Prime Minister. These are the easy answers. And like most easy answers, they are partially true. But they don't tell the whole truth, because they overlook a harder and more fundamental truth. The hard truth is that the war in Iraq is not about a catalog of many mistakes - it is about one big mistake. The war in Iraq should never have been fought.
Five years ago today, I was asked to speak at a rally against going to war in Iraq. The vote to authorize the war in Congress was less than ten days away and I was a candidate for the United States Senate. Some friends of mine advised me to keep quiet. Going to war in Iraq, they pointed out, was popular. All the other major candidates were supporting the war at the time. If the war goes well, they said, you'll have thrown your political career away.
But I didn't see how Saddam Hussein posed an imminent threat. I was convinced that a war would distract us from Afghanistan and the real threat from al Qaeda. I worried that Iraq's history of sectarian rivalry could leave us bogged down in a bloody conflict. And I believed the war would fan the flames of extremism and lead to new terrorism. So I went to the rally. And I argued against a "rash war" - a "war based not on reason, but on politics" - "an occupation of undetermined length, with undetermined costs, and undetermined consequences."
I was not alone. Though not a majority, millions of Americans opposed giving the President the authority to wage war in Iraq. Twenty-three Senators, including the leader of the Senate Intelligence Committee, shared my concerns and resisted the march to war. For us, the war defied common sense. After all, the people who hit us on 9/11 were in Afghanistan, not Iraq.
But the conventional thinking in Washington has a way of buying into stories that make political sense even if they don't make practical sense. ..........As Ted Sorensen's old boss President Kennedy once said "the pursuit of peace is not as dramatic as the pursuit of war" and frequently the words of the pursuer fall on deaf ears." In the fall of 2002, those deaf ears were in Washington. They belonged to a President who didn't tell the whole truth to the American people; who disdained diplomacy and bullied allies; and who squandered our unity and the support of the world after 9/11.
But it doesn't end there. Because the American people weren't just failed by a President - they were failed by much of Washington.
3 comments:
Great speach? indeed, because all great speach has a lot of demagogy, a half truth and a simplicist view. The mistake of Iraq war was not that "The war in Iraq should never have been fought"but because any war that you start or you must fight,you have to win. The Iraq was unfortunate chosen; Iran and Saudia were better targets in the Bush doctrine of Pax Americana. (BTW a US politics for many years of democratic and republican administrations) The preparation for post-war Iraq were practically inexistent inexistent and made by dangerous ignorants. If the war was in Iran,the results were the same.
But please read this: http://www.antiwar.com/cole/?articleid=2357
a quote:
"The biggest US failure in Iraq to date lay in American inability to understand the workings of Iraqi society. Many US administrators and military commanders appeared to believe that once the Baathist state of Saddam Hussein was overthrown, they would be dealing with an Iraqi society that was docile, grateful and virtually a blank slate on which US goals could be imprinted."
A war is judged by results not by mistakes; if you win, your generals are genious and your troops are heroic; if you loose, there are people that say:"The war in .... should never have been fought".
They are the specialists of "post factum".
Mirel,
Of course i agree, BUT what Mr. Obama is trying to tell us is that WE, noit Bush, now need to follow on and solve th problem.
Unfortunately, there is another loss here. Many of the mechanics who built Bush;s strategy were Jews. The failure hurts our credibility.
In any good and bad thing in this world you'll find a f jew;this don't hurt our credibility because we never had one excepting for our IQ and I tell you from Israel, heart of the nation, we may loose even this as our leaders are worse than yours...
And our red tukches of Lebanon may tell you there are some problems that you can't solve.
And I 'm angry with you ;-)
as hooking me with "Jews sans frontieres", this very sad bunch of Jews that teached me why we, Jews, may hate ourself. But I break when they started to censor and delete my polite (realy!) posts, so may they dissapear as a curiosity of our jewish periple.
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