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Edwards: No Terror "War" | |
2007-04-28 | |
![]() To come to that sort of conclusion takes either a total lack of attention, a willing suspension of disbelief, or a black belt in stoopid. Having heard part of his Two Americas speech, I'm going with the black belt idea. This is something a lot of Democrats say privately -- and something mainstream pols everywhere else in the world say publicly -- but it contests a Bush administration premise in a way very few American politicians have been comfortable in the last five and a half years. ![]() His stance -- though it doesn't seem to have been all that deliberate -- matches the recent comments of a prominent British politician. It's the most direct challenge to the Bush administration's whole worldview that I can recall from a leading Democrat. ![]() Edwards aide David Ginsberg confirmed that the former North Carolina senator had not raised his hand in response to Brian Williams' question,"Do you believe there is such a thing as a global war on terror?" He also noted that Edwards elaborated later in the debate. "I believe -- and this goes to the question you asked earlier, just a few minutes ago -- global war on terror. I think there are dangerous people and dangerous leaders in the world that America must deal with and deal with strongly, but we have more tools available to us than bombs. And America needs to use the tools that are available to them so that these people who are sitting on the fence, who terrorists are trying to recruit, the next generation, get pushed to our side, not to the other side. We've had no long-term strategy, and we need one, and I will provide one." ![]() I'll reiterate: The original goals were correct and the original approach was effective. The Taliban were tossed out. Al-Qaeda hard boyz were chased down and captured or killed. Terror networks were dismantled. Funding lines were dried up. Qaddafi went out of the terrorism business. The Oil-for-Food crooks were chased down, and there have actually been some convictions -- though George Galloway, Kofi, and Kojo aren't among them. The AQ Khan network was dismantled. There were the Rose and the Orange revolutions. Syria was forced out of Lebanon after 30 years of occupation in the Cedar Revolution. Our Ethiopian proxies have thrown the Powerful Islamic Courts out of Somalia. And Sammy was bounced from bloody-handed power in Iraq. Those are all successes and they are successes precisely because the Bush administration was a prickly and pushy partner for a torpid, self-satisfied, and basically corrupt International Community to work with. The areas where success hasn't come have been in those areas where we haven't been pushy bastards. We've been letting the EU take the liesurely diplomatic approach with Iran. Solana and Larijani just shared a cliche 5-star meal the other day. North Korea's been another six-party approach that's produced just ducky results. Darfur's been a UN project with the UN's usual spectacular success. The only place where the multilateral approach is showing any success at all is in the manner in which the Euro courts have been willing to extradite bad guyz back and forth across their borders. And you can bet that Carla del Ponte'd just love to get in on that action. Our weak spot has always been the Democrats' deteermination to keep on fighting Vietnam, to keep on singing Alice's Restaurant whether it makes sense or not. Binny's been counting on that from the first. Sammy was, too, though it didn't work well for him. The Paks are counting on us giving up in Afghanistan and going home so the Talibs and the ISI can retake control. Al-Qaeda in Iraq and its Syrian and Iranian backers are not only counting on us leaving, but on us telling them when we're going to do it. All of them think the tide's turned against Bush and against the United States. All they've got to do is wait us out. They're counting on the weakness, the yellow stripe, the fascination with who's Dannilyn's daddy to overcome our determination to give the Muslim world a chance to live like decent human beings for a change. They're counting on lightweights like John Edwards to come through for them. | |
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