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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Doug R who wrote (468586)10/1/2003 1:10:18 PM
From: Kevin Rose  Respond to of 769670
 
Well, other than that, it's going ok, right?

:)



To: Doug R who wrote (468586)10/1/2003 1:12:30 PM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"On the heels of spectacular victories in Iraq and Afghanistan, with boots on the ground in those countries and others unnamed, armed with unprecedented military might and an unequaled economic engine, America is poised to change the course of history in the Middle East - and beyond.

This is not an optional war, regardless of the rhetoric.

America didn't start it, except in the sense that America's unparalleled personal freedom and virtually limitless opportunity silently rebuke the despotism and despair that informs much of the Islamic world."



To: Doug R who wrote (468586)10/1/2003 1:15:45 PM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
BTW, how many terrorist attacks in the U.S. since 9/11?



To: Doug R who wrote (468586)10/1/2003 1:32:31 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Losing the Troops
Mother Jones | Editorial

Monday 29 September 2003

The military is stretched thin. Troops are staying in Iraq longer than expected. Reservists are being
kept away from jobs and families longer than expected. Halliburton can't provide troops with adequate
water and food. The Pentagon proposed a paycut for troops, and retracted in response to pubic
pressure. Foreign help doesn't seem on it's way. Morale is low.

Wasn't President Bush supposed to be the pro-military President? Is this the same guy that wore a
flight suit? Knight Ridder's senior military correspondent says the Bush Pentagon is bad for the army.
It's stretched very thin:

"Under Rumsfeld, by next spring 30 of the Army's 33 combat brigades will either be in Iraq or on
their way home from Iraq...More than 20,000 Army Reservists and National Guardsmen will be finishing
one-year tours in Iraq, and thousands more will be called up to do their year. How many will be willing
to re-enlist if they're faced with endless deployments on thankless missions in the far reaches of
empire?"

It's politicized:

"Where once the Army would send up its nominee for a vacant billet, now it must send
up two or three candidates who must run the gantlet of personal interviews in the Office
of the Secretary of Defense. Not just Rumsfeld, but all of his civilian experts who never
wore a uniform. What hoops must the successful one jump through? Will it be the tough,
bright candidate who's unafraid to speak when he sees mistakes being made? Or will it
be the buttoned-down, willow-in-the-wind, can-do yes-man? Your basic Oliver North?"

And its strategy and planning is based on a flawed theory:

"Rumsfeld and company have embraced, on the basis of a fleeting success in
Afghanistan and a flawed success in Iraq, a theory that all that's needed to win our wars
is air power and small bands of Special Operations troops. Stealth bombers and
snake-eaters."

There's no rosy outlook either. The Bush administration continues to urge countries to join the
occupation in Iraq, but help is far from assured. In any case, General Pace said last week, "hope is not
a plan." If other countries continue to hold out, the Pentagon says, more reservists will have to be
called up. And tours of duty will be yearlong. Reservist Mark Kimmey wrote last week in the New York
Times:

"...the message to reservists is unmistakable: the Army no longer takes into account
sacrifices made to maintain two careers and lives. Many reservists will watch the regular
soldiers with whom they came to Iraq go home before they do. The Army may not care
about the disparity between the way the forces are treated, but those of us in the
Reserve do.

Everyone knows that the regular and Reserve units of the Army are not equal. Regulars
are better trained, better equipped and expected to execute their missions more
professionally. That's the way it should be: it's their job ÷ their only job."

In an attempt to make up for longer tours, the Pentagon is giving active-dury and Reserve troops in
Iraq two weeks of vacation midway through the 12-month tours. Under the plan, the military will pay for
troops to be flown to certain airports in the United States, but from those points, travel will be at
personal expense. And, oddly enough, hospitalized soldiers have to pay for their own food.

Veterans don't seem to faring much better under Bush. The department of Veteran's Affairs has
ignored requests of thousands of veterans of the first Gulf War, and denied blood testing to troops
departing for Iraq this year. By testing blood before and after Iraq tours of duty, veterans groups were
hoping to establish a link between exposure to biological and chemical weapons agents and the
illnesses troops suffer after war.

Bush has addressed military audiences perhaps more than any other president. But sooner or later,
the claps and cheers he receives will be fake courtesies to a Commander in Chief whose been a fake
friend of the military.

CC