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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: i-node who wrote (558808)4/5/2010 4:22:27 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) of 1576574
 
GOP Reps: Now "Everyone" Agrees Iraq was a Mistake

by mcjoan
Mon Apr 05, 2010 at 10:56:04 AM PDT

Huh. Maybe they should have been listening to that focus group of millions of people from the very beginning. Well over $715 billion, 4,705 coalition forces and who knows how many thousands of Iraqi lives later, the new conventional wisdom--among Republican congressmen is that the Iraq war was a mistake. From a Cato Institute panel discussion moderated by Grover Norquist:

Norquist then asked Rohrabacher to provide a “guesstimate percentage of Republicans in Congress who would share that view — not that they opposed the President at the time, but today looking back.” Rohrabacher replied that “everybody I know thinks it was a mistake to go in now”:

ROHRABACHER: Well, now that we know that it cost a trillion dollars and all of these years and all of these lives and all of this blood, uh, I don’t know many...

NORQUIST: Looking for a number. Two-thirds? One-third?

ROHRABACHER: I, I can’t. All I can say is the people, everybody I know thinks it was a mistake to go in now.

NORQUIST: That’s 100 percent.

Norquist then turned to McClintock, asking “what percentage”:

NORQUIST: Of Republicans in Congress, who would agree with the general analysis here that it was a mistake and/or we should go in.

MCCLINTOCK: I think everyone would agree Iraq was a mistake.

NORQUIST: Two hundred percents. Ok, we’re going to average these.

MCCLINTOCK: And, you know, again, I think virtually everyone would agree going into Afghanistan the way we did was a mistake. How many share my, my cynicism over this idea of a resolution of force, which I can’t find anywhere in the Constitution. And how many believe that in those rare cases where we go in, we put all of our resources behind our soldiers, I would say certainly more than half of the Republican caucus probably believe that.


Of course, if there was a President McCain sitting in the Oval Office and Iraq and Afghanistan were his "noble" inheritance, there might have been less candor from these guys.
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