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Saturday, January 13, 2007
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
The courage of his convictions
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- If President Bush's decision to send 21,500 troops to Iraq tells us anything about him, it is this: He isn't someone who bases his policies on the polls or the results of the last election.

He is acting on his deepest conviction that, as he said in his address to the nation, we are engaged in "the decisive ideological struggle of our time" against Islamic extremists who have declared war against the West and the United States, in particular.

Abraham Lincoln, beset by a series of defeats and setbacks in the Civil War, told the nation "we must think anew so that we may act anew." Bush, facing a long guerrilla war that his new secretary of defense said we are losing, essentially told Americans that failure was not an option and that we must readjust our military strategy so that "We can and we will prevail."

It was a gutsy, sober decision that he knows will hardly make him more popular with the American people. Polls show that nearly two-thirds of all Americans oppose the war and think it was a mistake. His party lost the House and Senate in an election that turned into a referendum on the war. But Bush has long ago made peace with fact that he is not going to win any popularity contests for the remainder of his presidency as long as the war continues and casualties mount.

Sending more troops to secure the Iraqi capital against a stronger and far more lethal insurgency is clearly in the long-term security interests of our country, and he is willing to leave office two years from now with low-approval polls but secure in the knowledge that he fought the terrorists as hard as he could and kept America safer than it was before he came into office. Only now Bush faces two wars, one in Iraq and the other on Capitol Hill, where Democrats were gearing up to challenge him on two fronts: 1) A nonbinding resolution that declares Congress' disapproval of increased combat forces and calls for troop withdrawal by this year. 2) Withholding funding for any additional forces being sent there or other provisions that would further restrict appropriations for the war.

But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid should be careful about overplaying their hand on both scores. Thus far, as most polls show, a majority of Americans oppose an immediate or precipitous pullout of all forces in Iraq that would result in a bloodbath for the Iraqi people. Indeed, a number of Democrats would not support a speedy withdrawal if it would endanger our remaining forces there.

A congressional funding cutoff, which would have to clear a 60-vote hurdle in the Senate and then overcome a presidential veto, would be a political disaster for the Pelosi Democrats. It would threaten needed funds for our troops in the midst of war. How many Democrats would want to vote for that? Bush explained the stakes in Iraq last week without sugarcoating what the future holds, even if his plan succeeds in pacifying Baghdad and the terrorist-infested Anbar province. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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would I support bush knowing what I know
My question to you remains: If you knew then what you know now, would you still support the actions President Bush has taken? Tr@ce

Trace, your question certainly provides some good food for thought.

When the coalition invaded Iraq, I had no idea of how long it would take to militarily defeat the Iraqis. I assumed our involvement there
would extend beyond any military victory. I assumed that our commitment would be similar to that in Japan and Germany after WW2, that we would remain and assist in the rebuilding of Iraq as Iraqis faced the daunting task of learning how to govern, how to FUNCTION, in the absence of a dictatorship. I did not see that happening quickly. I assumed there would be opposition from members of the Hussein regime and their supporters. I also THOUGHT that our national officials who authorized the invasion were also committed to supporting Iraq in its transition to democracy.

I still firmly believe the invasion of Iraq was just. That belief is based on information found by reading:

1. The cease-fire agreement ending hostilities in the first Gulf war.
2. UNSCOM WMD inspections reports 1991-1998.
3. UN resolutions condeming and threatening Iraq for being in breach of its obligations vis a vis WMD.
4. PL105-235(Iraqi Breach of International Obligations Act) of 1998 in which Congress asked President Clinton to take action against Iraq because of its continued violation of the 1991 cease fire conditions.
5. PL105-338(Iraqi Liberation Act 1998)in which it became US law to support the removal of the Hussein regime and replace it with a democratic form of government.
6. the Joint Congressional Authorization for the Use of Military Force in Iraq and its summary of the case against Iraq dating from the first Gulf war.
7. multiple and continuing statements from our elected and appointed leaders between 1998 and 2003 that repeatedly told us that Iraq posed a threat to US, mid-east and world security.
8. repeated individual statements by many leaders in the international community echoing our concerns about the Hussein regime and the theat it posed to world security.
9. the history of the Hussein regime, its suppression of the Iraqi people and the barbaric methods it used in that suppression.
10.commentary in blogs from outside the US: Australia, Canada, France, Spain, Italy, the UK, Germany, Belgium ...
Added post-invasion
11. the Iraqi Survey Group report.
12. documents seized in Iraq post-invasion.
13. articles from MEMRI
14. Iraq the Model

However, in 2003:

I NEVER anticipated how quickly the many arguments for the invasion would be forgotten, abandoned, swept into oblivion by a chorus of naysayers.

I could not envision the "amnesia" that would, within a YEAR, SILENCE so many of the most pursuasive voices who told us that Iraq was a threat, that the Hussein regime must be removed.

In 2003, I would never have believed that, within a little more than a year, so many of the SAME architects of the Iraqi Liberation Act and the Authorization to Invade would perform hypocritical 180 degree turns on their position on Iraq in the grab for political power. I never dreamed those architects had merely supported the "invasion" but not helping Iraq in the transition to another form of government.

I NEVER imagined that those voices who told us about the savagery of the "Butcher of Bagdad" would barely whisper when Saddam was caught, when elections were held, when the madman received his just due.

I had NO IDEA how angry and disgusted I would become with the hypocrits at the UN who cried "illegal war" and "War for oil" while being bought off by fat payments generated from the OFF program, while selling banned arms to Iraq, while oppposing an invasion so they wouldn't lose lucrative trade agreements with Iraq.

I would not have believed that the fiery rhetoric of so many of our elected officials would soon resemble that of those very same hypocrits at the UN and our worst enemies. (As I hear John Kerry, speaking in Switzerland, calling the US an "international pariah" followed by Jane Fonda droning on in a flashback to the 1970s.)

I would never have believed that the information reported on Iraq in both US and international media would, in great part, ignore the progress and successes achieved by the sacrifice and dedication of coalition troops and the Iraqi people.

And I had no idea how many of our troops we would lose.

In spite of all that, and looking at the circumstances on which the decision to invade was based, I still support President Bush's actions.

Would I wish that some things had been done differently? Yes. I wish there had been a larger invasion force. I wish all the countries that routinely CONDEMNED Iraq with their WORDS had backed up their rhetoric with FORCES. I wish the UN would actually ENFORCE their resolutions and when they warn of "serious consequences" actually ENACT "serious consequences".(Has anyone heard anything about those Israeli soldiers who were supposed to be returned after last summer's cease-fire?)I wish those who supported the invasion had remained steadfast for at LEAST two or three years instead of joining forces with those who wanted us out of Iraq barely a year after the invasion.I wish world leaders were more forthcoming in condemning the terrorists from outside Iraq intent on preventing Iraq from stabelizing.

In the weeks preceding the invasion, Iraqi TV played tapes of the US leaving Vietnam. It was Saddam's message to the Iraqis not to count on the US. With "peace marchers" gathering in Washington, I hope that Saddma Hussein, in death, will not have the last laugh and be proven right.

Besides Iraq there is Immigration
Bush wants us to cut the amount of gas we use. The best way to stop using so much gas is to deport 11 million illegal immigrants! That would be 11 million less people using our gas. The price of gas would come down.

Bring some of our troops home from Iraq to guard the border. When they catch an illegal immigrant crossing the border, hand him a canteen, rifle and some ammo and ship him to Iraq . Tell him if he wants to come to America then he must serve a tour in the military. Give him a soldier's pay while he's there and tax him on it!

After his tour, he will be allowed to become a citizen since he defended this country. He will also be registered to be taxed and be a legal patriot. This option will probably deter illegal immigration and provide a solution for the troops in Iraq and the aliens trying to make a better life for themselves.

If they refuse to serve, ship them to Iraq anyway, without the canteen, rifle or ammo. Problem solved!

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