(10 am – promoted by ek hornbeck)
McGovern: “The game is over with Iraq and so the question is how does this strategic change affect the real players in the area. The Israeli right wants a confrontation with Iran to keep US forces in the region. The US military leadership is against a “third front” but has to contend with Cheney.
Raymond McGovern is a retired CIA officer. McGovern was a Federal employee under seven US presidents for over 27 years, presenting the morning intelligence briefings at the White House for many of them. McGovern was born and raised in Bronx, graduated summa cum laude from Fordham University, received an M.A. in Russian Studies from Fordham, a certificate in Theological Studies from Georgetown University, and graduated from Harvard Business School’s Advanced Management Program.
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Sorry. No Soma here.
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to fight al-Qaeda.
For anyone interested in fully informing themselves, I recommend Andrew Tilghman’a October 2007 article from The Washington Monthly…
The Myth of AQI
Fighting al-Qaeda in Iraq is the last big argument for keeping U.S. troops in the country. But the military’s estimation of the threat is alarmingly wrong.
By Andrew Tilghman
.. he says that the game has changed in Iraq. The oil companies are going to be out because the Iraqis don’t want them there. What’s this guy smoking? When have the powerful ever cared about what the people (esp. Iraqi people) think ?
He seems to have swallowed the Obama kool-aid
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protecting our service members?
What? Is his “residual force” not going to be composed of service members?
so long as the Iraqis make political progress?
What right does Obama or anyone else in Washington have to determine what is Iraqi “political progress”?
A relevant quote from Armando at Talkleft this morning:
Why Should The Iraqi Gov’t Need Leverage To Have US Troops Leave?
Neither, for that matter, does it seem to matter to Barack Obama what the Iraqi government or the American people want.
last night I dealt with my fear and watched Generation Kill part one on HBO a series by the makers of The Wire, I was hooked immediately. It ended with this strange visual of Iraqis on the horizon dragging a corpse? across the horizon line and the natural born killers, Marines, who are the main characters wondering what this is. Wow so powerful the difference in perceptions all cultures are suffering. We are all too busy sorting out our own beliefs, embedded to deal with the monsters who know no culture, other then killing.
I’ve always thought that one of the reasons we’ve so staunchly supported Israel is that we need a whipping boy over there to take the brunt of the Arab angst.
Having an active, and strong Israel gives all the Arabs and Muslims someone to hate that is not us.
It seems to me that McGovern’s assessment, and I do like and trust McGovern, is kind of flipping that on it’s head.
The Israeli’s like the idea of the US being there because it takes some pressure off of them, it’s as if we’re now the whipping boy that’s taking the heat in the region.
I find that very interesting.
Is there anything to this idea of mine?
Is there any way to leverage this concept to alter our foreign policy?
edger~
are you the one who gave me a link on how to make nifty symbols on computer? like hearts & greek letters & stuff?
i’ve lost it 🙁
do you have one you can share?
tyvm
we now return to your regularly scheduled essay…..