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Tuesday, January 16, 2007
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Another Vietnam?: Part II
by Thomas Sowell
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Critics of the Bush administration's conduct of the war in Iraq have long demanded that he admit his mistakes. But they have not admitted their own past mistakes, much less admit the potentially catastrophic mistake they will make in the future if they make it impossible to sustain military operations there.

Critics have been proved wrong repeatedly in their claims that elections could not be held in Iraq or a government formed there. Iraqi voter turnout, even in the face of terrorist threats, has exceeded voter turnout in the United States.

During the 2004 presidential election campaign, John Kerry warned that the Bush administration had plans to impose a military draft immediately after being re-elected.

Two years later, there is no sign of a military draft on the horizon. The only people who have been advocating a military draft have been Democrats like Charles Rangel -- transparently as part of their class warfare political strategy of claiming that "the poor" are fighting and dying while "the rich" stay home and enjoy life. No facts back up this claim.

Miscalculations have been the rule, not the exception, in wars going back through the centuries. The miscalculations in the Iraq war have not been military but political.

Saddam Hussein's army was defeated quickly, decisively, and with far lower American casualty rates than in previous wars. Clearly there were ample numbers of American troops to accomplish that mission.

President Bush was right to listen to the military as regards the conduct of the war. But perhaps he should have sought the advice of police chiefs as regards maintaining law and order.

For that we did not have enough troops in Iraq and -- more important -- the troops we did have were under too many politically imposed restrictions. Put bluntly, they needed to tell the many private militias in Iraq to drop their guns or get killed.

Far fewer people would have died if they had. Of course, hand-wringers around the world, beginning with the American media, would have denounced such "brutality" and claimed that "negotiations" could have prevented such bloodshed.

The Iraqi government has negotiated, if not collaborated, with some of these domestic terrorists -- and the net result has been escalating violence and mounting death tolls. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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Milo Is
Milo-

I appreciate your thoughtful reply to my post. I wish I knew of a forum where more of this type of reasoned discussion could be had between left and right.

Your point about name calling is also taken. I should not have left the name calling of Mr Sowell in. It was an error and I'd like to apologize to him and thank him for keeping the post up in the name of open discourse. I wrote the post in reply to a right-winger who emailed me a link to this article and figured, since I took the time to write a 'rebuttal', I might as well post it here, too. I should have edited my email to take out personal attacks before posting it in a public forum.

I finally made it back to see if anyone had rebutted my points, and was shocked to see an intelligent reply. The reply from the person I originally wrote the post for was not quite so thoughtful:

"a good argument could be made that you lack the intellectual height to kiss my a**, even if you were standing on tip-toe."


Sanctimonious egalitarianism.
UncaAlby: "When a liberal disagrees with a conservative, he says, 'You're Evil!' When a conservative disagrees with a liberal, he says, 'You're Stupid!'"

On the contrary, I think that the leftists are far and away the main wielders of the "stupid" and "evil" sticks.

But let's pretend that your observation is accurate. So what? Maybe most of the leftists here *are* stupid ("stupid" meaning egregiously incorrect, usually willfully so). That the proclamation offends your egalitarian sensibilities would hardly make it false.

UncaAlby: "I try to tell people, 'You're Mistaken,' but sometimes you just hasta take the gloves off. Some of the morons criticizing Sowell have gone *WAY* over the line."

Sometimes? This "way over the line" attitude is the leftist *norm*, in my experience. If you think this is bad, you haven't been reading enough of the left-wing blogs, where people more typically express their unadulterated opinions. Speaking of which:

UncaAlby: "Everybody should use the 'To Your Face' method of criticism. I.e., if you wouldn't say something to somebody's face, coz they'd bloody your nose for it, then don't say it on the Internet either."

I think that's a terrible, terrible idea. I say that if you've got a forum where you can be completely honest, then take advantage of it. I would much rather hear someone's *real* opinion on an issue, instead of some version watered-down by etiquette or political shrewdness. That it offers the psychological comfort of speaking one's mind is one of the Internet's greatest assets; why take that away from everyone because some people don't know how to articulate their positions without resorting to name-calling?


-- Milo
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