Let’s Start the Week Off with Death, Destruction and Bad Management
This week, President George W. Bush will dust off his veto power for only the second time during his presidency and by doing so endorse the status quo. His “stay the course” mentality in the face of a disastrously mismanaged war and a crumbling foreign policy illustrates, once again, his inability or desire to manage our business effectively.
The President and his people suggest that if he accepts the Democratic plan for holding the Iraqi government accountable we will lose the war. Let’s assume that their definition of winning is to have one, unified government in Iraq (although he has never given us a clear definition of what it means to win nor have he ever given us a clear strategy of waging or exiting this war). The Sunnis and the Shias are also fighting to win. But their definition of winning is at cross-purposes to ours. They’re not fighting for unity. Rather, they are fighting for complete control of their government and their country. How will we “win” against that? We win by following the Democratic plan for holding the Iraqi government accountable. And if Malaki and the Iraqi parliament can’t unify his country with a political solution, then we leave.
Iraqi television showed one man carrying the charred body of a small girl above his head as he ran down the street while ambulances rushed to retrieve the wounded and firefighters sprayed water at fires in the wreckage, leaving pools of bloody water.
This post was written by Mary Mancini
This entry was posted on Monday, April 30th, 2007 at 11:35 am and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
April 30th, 2007 at 4:58 pm
[…] Mary of Liberadio: The President and his people suggest that if he accepts the Democratic plan for holding the Iraqi government accountable we will lose the war. Let’s assume that they’re definition of winning is to have one, unified government in Iraq (although he has never given us a clear definition of what it means to win nor have he ever given us a clear strategy of waging or exiting this war). The Sunnis and the Shias are also fighting to win. But their definition of winning is at cross-purposes to ours. They’re not fighting for unity. Rather, they are fighting for complete control of their government and their country. How will we “win” against that? We win by following the Democratic plan for holding the Iraqi government accountable. And if Malaki and the Iraqi parliament can’t unify his country with a political solution, then we leave. […]
April 17th, 2008 at 2:27 am
Good site. Thank you:-)