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Thursday, October 09, 2008
Dr. Paul  Kengor :: Townhall.com Columnist
Message to Obama: We Were Greeted As Liberators
by Dr. Paul Kengor
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I spent two hours with about 50 students on the morning of April 9, 2003 watching CNN coverage of Iraqis and U.S. Marines in Firdos Square tearing down a statue of Saddam Hussein, which was then desecrated, spat upon, smacked with shoes, and ridden like a donkey through the streets of Baghdad. As Howard Fineman wrote in Newsweek, affirming what no one doubted, it was George W. Bush “who toppled that statue.”

Doesn’t anyone remember this? Are the biases of liberals so personally crippling that they purge their own memory banks?

Every president has a “finest hour.” For JFK, it was the Cuban Missile Crisis. For Jimmy Carter, it was Camp David. For George W. Bush, it was April 9, 2003.

Of course, shame on President Bush and his administration for not constantly reminding us of this. Certainly, the press hasn’t bothered. And now, yet again, because of the Bush administration’s failure to communicate to the larger public, the president’s enraged opponents have been able to inaccurately portray another highlight from the Iraq war. The left has been so successful in eviscerating George W. Bush that even this amazing day of freedom in his presidency has been somehow turned upside down.

The fall of that statue in Baghdad on that day should be the visual equivalent of the fall of the Berlin Wall for this president and his presidency. It is not. It is now a negative used by the Democratic presidential nominee!

Now, all that said, here’s a critical rest-of-the-story: George W. Bush eventually became unpopular in Iraq, as did the occupation/reconstruction, especially in the 2005-6 timeframe. No question. The situation deteriorated. But that’s a different argument. The fact is that we were indeed greeted as liberators.

Here again, we have another exhibit in the Hall of Hatred erected to George W. Bush. The left has become so anti-Bush that it can’t make simple distinctions between fact and fiction. And now, worse of all, this latest false charge has become a talking point for the left’s presidential nominee, where, yet again, it is uncontested.

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About The Author
Dr. Paul Kengor, author of spiritual biographies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, has just published God and Hillary Clinton and The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand. He is a professor of political science and executive director of the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

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Liberators
As someone who was in the initial attack into Iraq and got an up close and personal view of our reception I'd say we were definitely greeted as liberators by the general population. I remember well the crowds of people gathering around and celebrating.

As Baghdad fell we were assigned to occupy Al Kut. Marine forces had skirted the city on the approach to Baghdad but none of our forces had gone inside. We moved in and occupied the airfield on the outskirts of the city and then made our way across a bridge into the city proper. People gathered in a giant crowd as we approached and yelled and waived. A delegation of the leading men of the city met us on the bridge and welcomed us. Our Operations officer was hoisted onto the shoulders of the crowd and carried all around. Everybody was being kissed (by men) and it was a big party. Not long afterwards we had set up soccer games and basketball games against the locals (they abused us in soccer and we destroyed them in basketball) and were moving forward on restoring schools and utilities.

The problems in Al Kut began weeks later as Iraqi expatriots that had been sheltering in Iran returned to the area and began operating like a mafia. They strong-armed people, seized control of assets such as the natural gas plant (All Iraqis cook with natural gas) and generally acted as the power brokers. Most prominent among these guys were the thugs from SCIRI, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq. We should have come down hard on these thugs immediately. Instead, we thought the war was over and everybody wanted to get along and rebuild the country. Big mistake. By restraining ourselves and trying to cooperate and negotiate we allowed our enemies to establish a defacto control of the city and the populace.

In many respects our fight since then has been to regain that control we gave away when we first got there.

It was amusing
in the debate to hear obama wax on about using military (which he has said before he'd vastly reduce) in situations that involve genocide.
I was sorry McCain didn't folloiw up and asking him about saddam's genocide.

It's also amusing to hear him say how much money he's going to save by pulling out of Iraq and into afghanistan. Are the soldiers going to go to afghanistan without pay or something?

What's NOT amusing: obama's attempt to try to get al_Maliki not to make a deal with the Bush administration. To wait til after the election.
Self above country as usual. And maybe a hint of his style of diplomacy. At worst, that's treason. At best, it's stupid. Take your pick.
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