In response to Senate Republicans considering scuttling the non-binding resolution against the troop surge in Iraq, Dianne Feinstein said, "It's obstructionism," said Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), "This is not tolerable in a situation where it's the number one topic in the nation, and the Republican party prevents the Senate of the United States from debating."
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For his part, Arizona Sen. John McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said proponents of the nonbinding, bipartisan resolution were undermining national security. "This is a vote of no confidence in both the mission and the troops," he said.
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Republicans like McCain and John Warner (R-VA) are right that this non-binding resolution is a hypocritical attempt by some in the Senate to have it both ways. For those who approved Lt General David Petraeus and his nomination passed 81 – 0, they are especially hypocritical – you can’t approve a General who supports and intends to lead a troop surge and then vote “no confidence” against your own previous vote, approving Petraeus.
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No, what those truly opposed to this war should be forced to so is to cut the funding for the troops in Iraq. That’s the only move that those of conscience, but that requires putting their political careers on the line and most of those who claim to oppose the war in the Senate would apparently rather not do that.
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On Sunday, Feinstein called on Republicans to reconsider their procedural move.
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"I think it's a terrible mistake to prevent this debate," she said. "If we can't get this done, you can be sure, a month or so down the pike, there's going to be much stronger legislation."
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The Senate, where Democrats hold a 51-49 working majority, has tentatively set an early test vote for Monday.
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In a bid to attract more GOP support, Warner added a provision pledging to protect money for troops in combat, but even that compromise drew the ire of some Democrats who said it leaned too far in endorsing the status quo. They want to see binding legislation to cap troop levels, force a new vote to authorize the war or begin bringing troops home.
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Not going to happen.
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For his part, Arizona Sen. John McCain, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said proponents of the nonbinding, bipartisan resolution were undermining national security. "This is a vote of no confidence in both the mission and the troops," he said.
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Republicans like McCain and John Warner (R-VA) are right that this non-binding resolution is a hypocritical attempt by some in the Senate to have it both ways. For those who approved Lt General David Petraeus and his nomination passed 81 – 0, they are especially hypocritical – you can’t approve a General who supports and intends to lead a troop surge and then vote “no confidence” against your own previous vote, approving Petraeus.
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No, what those truly opposed to this war should be forced to so is to cut the funding for the troops in Iraq. That’s the only move that those of conscience, but that requires putting their political careers on the line and most of those who claim to oppose the war in the Senate would apparently rather not do that.
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On Sunday, Feinstein called on Republicans to reconsider their procedural move.
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"I think it's a terrible mistake to prevent this debate," she said. "If we can't get this done, you can be sure, a month or so down the pike, there's going to be much stronger legislation."
<
The Senate, where Democrats hold a 51-49 working majority, has tentatively set an early test vote for Monday.
<
In a bid to attract more GOP support, Warner added a provision pledging to protect money for troops in combat, but even that compromise drew the ire of some Democrats who said it leaned too far in endorsing the status quo. They want to see binding legislation to cap troop levels, force a new vote to authorize the war or begin bringing troops home.
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Not going to happen.
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The tightrope that many Senate Dems are trying to walk is that between their professed "support for the troops" and their professed "opposition to the war."
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Just as trying to get cops to stand down when confronted with crime, so that they don't risk injury and death would NOT be supporting the police, in any meaningful way, as going after felons is what they DO and what they want to do.
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Just as keeping firefighters from making "an aggressive interior attack," holding them back to fight the fire from the outside, would NOT be supporting firefighters.
Same with soldiers, seeking to keep them from fighting an enemy is NOT supporting the troops.
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Prior to the Coalition invasion of Iraq, virtually all the world's intelligence agencies ALL believed Saddam's Iraq had WMDs., thus there were no "lies" that led up to the invasion, just a megalomaniacal dictator determined to maintain the facade that he did have WMDs to create a "deterrence by doubt."
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Now that we've invaded, Iraq has become a magnet for jihadists being supported and sponsored by the likes of Syria and Iran and other rogue states - THAT'S A FIGHT WE NEED TO MAKE!
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Again, there is no "peace option."
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The other side (the jihadists) seems to believe it can win, and quite frankly, looking at the Left in this country, I can't imagine that that would give them any reason to doubt that conviction.
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If you're going to sign onto a resolution voicing a "no-confidence" in the war, then make it clear you also have "no-confidence" in the tropps either and vote to defund the war in Iraq.
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Trying to "have it both ways" is just plain cowardly.
they didn't worry about having it both ways when the war was popular. These moves are so craven I will most likely write in Lieberman/Giuliani for '08 (I'm sooo tempted to put a Jeb '08 sticker on my car just to piss off (fellow)libs, but it's the only car I have ;)
ReplyDeleteYes, caution is well advised right now, given how emotional many people are over politics. A "Jeb" sticker could be seen as "provocative" and by "provocative," of course I mean an excuse for any deranged moonbat to take out their hostilities on that vehicle.
ReplyDeleteI don't have anything against people taking a stand for or against the war in Iraq or even the broader WoT.
All I expect is that they back up their opinions with some reasonable rationale and for those politicians who take a stand to follow through on their supposedly cherished beliefs.
For those in Congress who oppose the war in Iraq, the choice is clear, stop the pretense of "supporting the troops" and just cut the funding and let the chips...and their political careers fall where they may.
I'm not expecting all that much.
Well, I think that the democrats should vote to cut funding. They are hessitant to do it now. But, remember me, in 2-3 months it will happen. There is no other way. We need to get out of there as soon as possible.
ReplyDeleteIraq was "the right war," those opposed just haven't thought things through.
ReplyDeleteNo one can imagine that we don't face a well organized, well financed enemy with at least 300 - 500 million adherants worldwide, in radicalized Sharia-based Islam.
I know that some of those who didn't pay attention to the relentless war waged against America and American interests from January 1993 thru summer 2001 feel that "We overreacted to a criminal organization (al Qaeda) and in the process tried to use the Military to deal with a criminal problem."
Of course, nothing could be further from the truth.
Afghanistan & Iraq are just the beginning of what will become a much broader and deeper global war.
Like I said, I'd like to see the Democrats cut the funding to Iraq, then gut the Patriot Act and the NSA surveillance program (which is still going on)...and see how their fotune fare in the wake of the next attack on American soil.
I'd rather not see that second attack, but the idiotic course outlined above (out of Iraq, curtail the Patriot Act & the NSA surveillance) is a direct pathway to that.
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ReplyDeleteSorry for offtopic (anonymous)
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Thank you very much for stopping by.
Your kind words made my day!
There's never been a more important time to support America's traditional values and its more (economically) free and open way of life.