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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (1358946)5/16/2022 9:27:44 PM
From: Broken_Clock1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Winfastorlose

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1572838
 
Name the D President that didn't get us into a war....is the question. Define what "casualties" you speak of.

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historynewsnetwork.org
Below I review chronologically seven of Clinton’s acts of war, ending with his NATO-aided bombing campaign against Yugoslavia,which concluded twenty years ago in June.



Iraq



Clinton’s first bombing of Baghdad, on June 26, 1993—killing eight civilians—was supposedly punishment for an attempt by Saddam Hussein to kill George H. W. Bush. Kuwaiti police had arrested seventeen men, claimed to find a bomb in a car from Iraq, and said an Iraqi “confessed” to an assassination plot. On the witness stand, he declared he was innocent and signed a paper because police beat him.



Seymour Hersh wrote in The New Yorker (Nov. 1, 1993) that Clinton had been mired in controversy over his cautious Bosnia policy and White House staffers advised that “bombing Baghdad would improve Clinton’s political standing at home and his diplomatic standing in the Middle East.” Past and present intelligence officials told Hersh the acceptance of the Kuwaiti allegation was based on “conflicting and dubious evidence.”



Bosnia



Amid a civil war among Bosnian Serbs, Croats, and Muslims, came two gory explosions in Sarajevo’s main market, in 1994 and 1995. Supposedly in response to the latter blast, Clinton and NATO promptly launched a heavy bombing campaign against Serbs—without considering the evidence. (It was ambiguous and did not point to any party as culpable, Professors Steven Burg and Paul Shoup wrote in The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina,1999.) Clinton later sent 20,000 U.S. troops to Bosnia to join NATO “peacekeepers.”



By showing toughness, he could further his re-election after being called wishy-washy and anti-military. One writer believed that Clinton, in expectation of cheap oil and huge aircraft sales, intentionally advanced Saudis’ desire for an Islamic country in Europe.



Iraq again



Clinton bombed Iraqi air defenses—and some civilians—on September 3 and 4, 1996, to make Saddam Hussein “pay a price” for sending troops to Kurdish Iraq. (Hussein said he was quelling strife between factions.) U.S. presidential voting was two months off.



Afghanistan & Sudan



The media covered Clinton’s sex scandal heavily. Widely suspected of lying by denying his association with the intern Monica Lewinsky, he was advised to come clean to get the public on his side. On August 17, 1998, in grand jury testimony and a television address, he abandoned months of denial and admitted “inappropriate” contact with her and having misled the public and his own wife. A poll taken immediately after the speech showed that a favorable rating of 60 percent five days earlier had dropped to 40 percent.



On August 20 Clinton bombed Afghanistan and the Sudan. The news upstaged the Lewinsky scandal. Clinton claimed he was fighting “terrorists.” But it soon transpired that one of his supposed terrorist targets was the Sudan’s only medicinal factory, indicating haste in planning the raids.



Two senators and two representatives questioned Clinton’s timing and credibility, and the Los Angeles Times asked whether the movieWag the Dog had come to life. In the movie, a Hollywood producer was hired to fabricate a war to distract the public from a presidential sex scandal. But Clinton’s acts of war were real.



Iraq once more



In early December 1998, the biggest news concerned impending congressional proceedings on the impeachment of Clinton. The question was scheduled for House floor debate on Thursday, the 17th. Voting appeared likely the next day.



On Wednesday, the 16th, Clinton again bombed Iraq, falsely claiming it was not cooperating with UN inspectors. Consequently the House postponed the impeachment matter for a day and Iraq took over the headlines. Killing a couple of hundred Iraqis, the bombings continued until impeachment was voted December 19.



Yugoslavia



For three months, peace talks went on in Rambouillet, France, over strife between Yugoslavia and ethnic Albanians in the Serbian province of Kosovo. Other nations, including the U.S., participated.



What brought matters to a head, in March 1999, perhaps had less to do with European troubles than with two news stories troubling Bill Clinton. One dealt with an Arkansas woman’s allegation that he raped her twenty-one years earlier when he was attorney general of Arkansas. Another concerned allegations in the Republican Congress of Chinese theft of U.S. nuclear weapons secrets and inaction by Clinton, alleged recipient of campaign donations from China. A House committee had prepared a classified report on the matter and a Senate panel planned an investigation.



In Belgrade, Yugoslavia, Clinton’s envoy, Richard Holbrooke, delivered an ultimatum to the president, Slobodan Milosevic. To avoid war, the latter had to sign an agreement letting NATO troops occupy all Yugoslavia, then comprising Serbia and Montenegro. A day or two later, on March 23, Holbrooke forwarded the go-ahead for war to NATO’s secretary general in Brussels.



The attack came March 24, wiping the allegations about Clinton off the TV news and newspaper front pages. U.S. and other NATO forces spent the next eleven weeks hitting Yugoslavs with air-launched missiles, bombs, and bullets. Hillary Clinton may have influenced Bill’s decision. On March 21, when he was undecided about attacking Yugoslavia, she phoned and “urged him to bomb” (as quoted by biographer Gail Sheehy in Hillary’s Choice, p. 345).



Yugoslav officials placed civilian bombing casualties at 2,000 killed, 10,000 wounded. Official estimates of civilian war deaths from all causes went as high as 18,000. Eighteen U.S. deaths were reported (Wikipedia). Why the mass killing by the U.S.-NATO forces? Bill Clinton said they were to stop mass killing in Kosovo, which had been going on for a long time. But if they were such an old story, why did he choose the time he did to start a war? Could this attack and the previous three attacks all have served as distractions from scandal?



President Clinton not only usurped Congress’s authority under the Constitution to decide whether to go to war (Article I, Section 8) but continued bombing even after two rebuffs by the House of Representatives on April 28, 1999: a 427–2 vote against declaring war and a 213 tie vote rejecting the bombing.