To wait or not to wait

Robert Tracinski's excellent article: Five Minutes to Midnight.
Observing the events of today—the hesitation and uncertainty, the stubborn clinging to the fantasy that the enemy can be appeased if we just keep talking and find the right diplomatic solution—I now feel that, for the first time, I really understand the leaders of the 1930s. Their illusion that Hitler could be appeased has always seemed, in historical hindsight, to be such a willful evasion of the facts that I have never grasped how it was possible for those men to deceive themselves. But I can now see how they clung to their evasions because they could not imagine anything worse than a return to the mass slaughter of the First World War. They wanted to believe that something, anything could prevent a return to war. What they refused to imagine is that, in trying to avoid the horrors of the previous war, they were allowing Hitler to unleash the much greater horrors of a new war.Today's leaders and commentators have less excuse. The "horror" they are afraid of repeating is the insurgency we're fighting in Iraq—a war whose cost in lives, dollars, and resolve is among the smallest America has ever had to pay. And it takes no great feat of imagination to project how much more horrible the coming conflict will be if we wait on events long enough for Iran to arm itself with nuclear technology. Among the horrific consequences is the specter of a new Holocaust, courtesy of an Iranian nuclear bomb.






6 Comments:
What a bunch of hooie! We should just annex a desert somewhere, and let all of you fundamentalist-ideologs kill each other off, and let the rest of us peace loving citizens of the world, live in peace. It's always the ideologs that want to kill each other.
I hear Bush supporters rail on Iran's President for calling for Israel to be wipped off the face of the earth. How should they feel when you have Americans calling for the total destruction of Iran with nuclear weapons?
There should be a way, to let all war loving people to get their wish, while letting the rest of us living in the real world, and make it a better place for the sake of all peoples of all countries.
There's no eveidence that Iran has broken any treaties, or international laws. Sure they've conducted their nuclear program in secret, only because America wouldn't have let them conduct a nuclear program in the open.
I just don't understand, why it is that, neo-cons, can't see how brash, and arogant the Bush administration is.
Let's not forget that America is the "new" world, and how insulting it must seem to the countries that have been in existence for thousands of years, to be dictated to by a country that's less than 300 years old.
For god sakes, our country is being run by a bunch of bully, frat boys.
I hate frat boys.
I'm starting to rant, I'll get off my soap box, time to make my kids laugh...
Peace
"Iraq —a war whose cost in lives, dollars, and resolve is among the smallest America has ever had to pay."
Really?
During the first four years of the Vietnam war, from 1961 to 1965, 1,864 US troops were killed in action. The death toll grew with another 5,008 killed in action in 1966 and continued to grow each year peaking with the deaths of 16,511 US troops in 1968 alone.
My boyfriend was among those killed in the 1968 Tet Offensive.
As of today 9/2/06 U.S. troops killed in Iraq is 2,462; Wounded is 19,773 with 8,991 not returned to duty. The death rate would be much higher, but due to the speed with which they are able to transport the wounded to a medical facility, many lives are saved that would otherwise be lost.
The cost in dollars: $200 million per day.
And it ain't over yet.
Your minimization of the Iraq conflict betrays those who fought, died, or have been maimed for life.
Refer to my December 2005 post named
tall "Tall tales and split hairs" its my standard response to people trying to compare vietnam to GWOT Iraq
From Dec 05: "I was reading over some of the comments from a previous post and one stuck out and made me laugh more so than the rest."
Made you laugh? This is funny to you?
Have you been to Iraq?
Yes Marty the comment did make me laugh. Sorry I am not on the same moral high-ground you are
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