Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Blog The Vote- McCain on Iraq

“Democrats, who deny our soldiers the means to prevent an American defeat, have chosen another road,” McCain says in prepared remarks. “It may appear to be the easier course of action but it is a much more reckless one, and it earns them no credit even if it gives them an advantage in the next election. This is an historic choice, with ramifications for Americans not yet born.”

The Politico has the full story here.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

There is no militrary solution to the crisi in Iraq. American troops are stuck in the middle of a Civil War, and the best thing we can do for our military and interests in the region is to pull our ocmbat troops out of Iraq, give them rest, and re-deploy them back home to the United States, Lebanon, Jordan, and Kuwait to allow the Iraqi's to handle themselves, while ensuring that Iran and Saudi Arabia dont get pulled into a regional war.

Opponents to what i have said argue that to pull out American troops would allow Iraq to fall into the hands of terrorists. I contest this argument strongly. Already, Iraqis are starting to resent the presence of Al Qaeda in their country, they are more concerned with fighting eachother than fighting Americans. They simply view us as an occupier to their land. If we leave their land, they will not follow us to the United States, they will focus on being able to fight their own war that has been going on for the better part of a thousand years.

We may be hit, however, by angry muslims of other nations that have become enflamed at the fact that the United States now occupies a muslim country and has waged a war that has knocked the coutry back, ecnomically, socially, and politically, 100 years.

I find it disconcerting that while McCain was giving his speech proclaiming that the sruge "is working" that the cameras scrolled back to expose that he was being guarded by scores of armed and armoured soldiers, and that the following day, those Iraqi civilians that appeared with McCain were rounded up and executed.

It is true that violence, abductions, and murder have gone down in Baghdad, but the levels of these violent crimes have skyrocketed in the neighboring cities from which over 30,000 american soldiers were taken to feed this "surge."

Each day, I become more and more worried about the future of this nation, and its power to take upon its leadership role around the world, and how this is being thwarted by teh debacle of Iraq