Last combat troops leave Iraq - another Obama promise kept

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The only reason that withdrawal of troops is feasible now is due to the success of the Bush-Petraeus Surge, which Senator Obama opposed.

NYT HEADLINE:

Sun Rises in East: ANOTHER OBAMA PROMISE KEPT!!!

:clap2::clap2::clap2:


rdean, you ******* robot.:lol:

Remember the "good old days" of "you broke it, you own it?"

That's turned in to, "Republicans went and "broke it", the Democrats have to "own it".

.....AND, fix it......AGAIN.....AS USUAL!!!!!
 
BREAKING: Last U.S. Combat Troops Leaving Iraq | The Political Carnival

the last of the troops will finally be departing.

Thank. God.

UPDATING as news comes in.

Richard Engel is now reporting live that the combat mission in Iraq will be over.

---------------------------

Thanks Obama. Another promise kept.

Since you all blame Bush for everything,I now expect you to thank Bush for putting the date
for this withdrawal in place,President Obama is meeting the date that the prior administration set forth.:eusa_pray:

Thank Bush for being the leader in starting this **** up to begin with ....not a chance.
actually, Saddam started it
and you already KNOW that
 
Since you all blame Bush for everything,I now expect you to thank Bush for putting the date
for this withdrawal in place,President Obama is meeting the date that the prior administration set forth.:eusa_pray:

Thank Bush for being the leader in starting this **** up to begin with ....not a chance.
actually, Saddam started it
and you already KNOW that

No I don't Dive, after thirty years with Saddam at the helm, he did not cost America as much as 7 years of the Iraq War has.

It was a **** up to ever go in, that's what I'm convinced of.
 
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Even his Daddy had enough sense to know that invading "I Wreck" would be ******* up with no exit strategy.

Reasons Not to Invade Iraq, By George Bush Sr.
The end of effective Iraqi resistance came with a rapidity which surprised us all, and we were perhaps psychologically unprepared for the sudden transition from fighting to peacemaking. True to the guidelines we had established, when we had achieved our strategic objectives (ejecting Iraqi forces from Kuwait and eroding Saddam's threat to the region) we stopped the fighting. But the necessary limitations placed on our objectives, the fog of war, and the lack of "battleship Missouri" surrender unfortunately left unresolved problems, and new ones arose.

We were disappointed that Saddam's defeat did not break his hold on power, as many of our Arab allies had predicted and we had come to expect. President Bush repeatedly declared that the fate of Saddam Hussein was up to the Iraqi people. Occasionally, he indicated that removal of Saddam would be welcome, but for very practical reasons there was never a promise to aid an uprising. While we hoped that popular revolt or coup would topple Saddam, neither the U.S. nor the countries of the region wished to see the breakup of the Iraqi state. We were concerned about the long-term balance of power at the head of the Gulf. Trying to eliminate Saddam, extending the ground war into an occupation of Iraq, would have violated our guideline about not changing objectives in midstream, engaging in "mission creep," and would have incurred incalculable human and political costs. Apprehending him was probably impossible. We had been unable to find Noriega in Panama, which we knew intimately. We would have been forced to occupy Baghdad and, in effect, rule Iraq. The coalition would instantly have collapsed, the Arabs deserting it in anger and other allies pulling out as well. Under those circumstances, furthermore, we had been self-consciously trying to set a pattern for handling aggression in the post-cold war world. Going in and occupying Iraq, thus unilaterally exceeding the U.N.'s mandate, would have destroyed the precedent of international response to aggression we hoped to establish. Had we gone the invasion route, the U.S. could conceivably still be an occupying power in a bitterly hostile land. It would have been a dramatically different--and perhaps barren--outcome.

We discussed at length forcing Saddam himself to accept the terms of Iraqi defeat at Safwan--just north of the Kuwait-Iraq border--and thus the responsibility and political consequences for the humiliation of such a devastating defeat. In the end, we asked ourselves what we would do if he refused. We concluded that we would be left with two options: continue the conflict until he backed down, or retreat from our demands. The latter would have sent a disastrous signal. The former would have split our Arab colleagues from the coalition and, de facto, forced us to change our objectives. Given those unpalatable choices, we allowed Saddam to avoid personal surrender and permitted him to send one of his generals. Perhaps we could have devised a system of selected punishment, such as air strikes on different military units, which would have proved a viable third option, but we had fulfilled our well-defined mission; Safwan was waiting.

As the conflict wound down, we felt a sense of urgency on the part of the coalition Arabs to get it over with and return to normal. This meant quickly withdrawing U.S. forces to an absolute minimum. Earlier there had been some concern in Arab ranks that once they allowed U.S. forces into the Middle East, we would be there to stay. Saddam's propaganda machine fanned these worries. Our prompt withdrawal helped cement our position with our Arab allies, who now trusted us far more than they ever had. We had come to their assistance in their time of need, asked nothing for ourselves, and left again when the job was done. Despite some criticism of our conduct of the war, the Israelis too had their faith in us solidified. We had shown our ability--and willingness--to intervene in the Middle East in a decisive way when our interests were challenged. We had also crippled the military capability of one of their most bitter enemies in the region. Our new credibility (coupled with Yasser Arafat's need to redeem his image after backing the wrong side in the war) had a quick and substantial payoff in the form of a Middle East peace conference in Madrid.

The Gulf War had far greater significance to the emerging post-cold war world than simply reversing Iraqi aggression and restoring Kuwait. Its magnitude and significance impelled us from the outset to extend our strategic vision beyond the crisis to the kind of precedent we should lay down for the future. From an American foreign-policymaking perspective, we sought to respond in a manner which would win broad domestic support and which could be applied universally to other crises. In international terms, we tried to establish a model for the use of force. First and foremost was the principle that aggression cannot pay. If we dealt properly with Iraq, that should go a long way toward dissuading future would-be aggressors. We also believed that the U.S. should not go it alone, that a multilateral approach was better. This was, in part, a practical matter. Mounting an effective military counter to Iraq's invasion required the backing and bases of Saudi Arabia and other Arab states.
Reasons Not to Invade Iraq, By George Bush Sr.
 
I love this country and our troops , this is news worth reporting and the entire country should be glad.

what makes you think the whole country isn't? aside from the fact that we WILL have troops stationed there for 100 years, as McCain predicted.
Yeah....that's how he won the Presidency.....'cause he's soooooo-well-informed!!

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Since you all blame Bush for everything,I now expect you to thank Bush for putting the date
for this withdrawal in place,President Obama is meeting the date that the prior administration set forth.:eusa_pray:

Thank Bush for being the leader in starting this **** up to begin with ....not a chance.
actually, Saddam started it
and you already KNOW that

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

you probably actually beleive that lie.
 
We're not leaving Iraq & Afghanistan any more than we have left South Korea. Just more lies. The Sheep gotta be fed. This latest feeding will please the Sheep for a while. We're not leaving Afghanistan & Iraq.
 
Even his Daddy had enough sense to know that invading "I Wreck" would be ******* up with no exit strategy.
Don't forget about Uncle DICK!!!!!

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YENbElb5-xY&feature=search]YouTube - Cheney in 1994 on Iraq[/ame]​
 
BREAKING: Last U.S. Combat Troops Leaving Iraq | The Political Carnival

the last of the troops will finally be departing.

Thank. God.

UPDATING as news comes in.

Richard Engel is now reporting live that the combat mission in Iraq will be over.

---------------------------

Thanks Obama. Another promise kept.

Actually, I think President Bush set the withdrawal date before he left office, but it was a nice try anyway. :lol::lol::lol: I am grateful though that they are coming home.

If Bush were in office this wouldn't be happening.

Bush was all about "no timetables" and the flaming hypocrite didn't come up with the "time horizon" until the summer of 2008 AFTER it was obvious that the Dems were winning the White House and AFTER the Hillary and Obama had layed out their Iraq policy.

 
We are not leaving Afghanistan or Iraq. The sheep are just too ignorant to understand this. That's why they're called sheep.
 
We are not leaving Afghanistan or Iraq. The sheep are just too ignorant to understand this. That's why they're called sheep.

No, you're too ignorant to understand that the News wasn't that we even ARE totally leaving, to begin with, dumbass.
 
15th post
We are not leaving Afghanistan or Iraq. The sheep are just too ignorant to understand this. That's why they're called sheep.
No. Sheep are blind, people are willing participants. Let's break it even and call most people dogs, but you are a sheep for certain if you vote for Obama.
 
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Let's see what the withdrawal from Afghanistan looks like because that is Obama's war.
Actually, it's gonna be another DEM, cleanin'-up after another BUSH......AGAIN!!!!

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmtPBTybQ9k&feature=search]YouTube - The Hunt For Bin Laden[/ame]​
 
:lol: lawd....you are an idiot....if bush created a vaccine for aids you would give credit to the democrats because they were "talking" about creating it....

moron

Actually, I would give credit to Bush but your personal attack is noted. Maybe you should start a thread about it.

really...thats it? no other back up of your silly claims? and "personal attack is noted".....:lol:.....says the guy who would LOVE to see my death....

tissues1.jpg
 
Thank Bush for being the leader in starting this **** up to begin with ....not a chance.
actually, Saddam started it
and you already KNOW that

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

you probably actually beleive that lie.
it not a lie you ******* moron
the war was started when HE invaded Kuwait
and it ended when he was removed from power
that there was a 10 year gap doesnt change the fact it was still a war that was only in a cease fire
 
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