"We will be welcomed as liberators..."

I already HAVE. It is YOU that needs to defend your ******* position HACK.:eusa_hand:

I don't have to defend anything. I post videos of these people I have mentioned after the fact, speaking from their own mouths, not tabloid shit from The Daily Mail or blogs.
You probably get The Enquirer, too.
Just like your thread about GUN CONTROL, and FAILED to give a ******* source.

Spare us you ******* HACK.:eusa_hand:

Well, you haven't provided a source to you stupid ass lie and claim that a released Taliban was the mastermind of 9/11 and you've been asked for it over and over.
 
Time for Cheney, Bush, Rice, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz to be rounded up and prosecuted for lying and spending our treasures both human and currency.

Ding-a-Ling alert! The information Cheney, Bush, Rice, Rumsfeldand Wolfowitz had came from the Clinton White House!!!

ding-a-ling_truck_1367503759073_409618_ver1.0_320_240.jpg

You know, the stuff Sandi Berger was going to steal from the National Archives so you could make this bogus claim forever and ever without involving the CLINTONS, who received, believed, and filed it?

:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

well thats not totally true.

Oh, no, there's a lot more lies being told about Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the lot that should be refuted. That's enough for you for now. ;)

You guys should have taken Sandy Berger out to the shed and quietly deposited Hill and Bill back in Arkansas. But you didn't, and you do nothing to stop your politicians from engaging in gross corruption, piggy trough expense accounts, and megabonus campaign dowrys at the end of the line.

We have too many laws now. If the ones we had were upheld by law enforcement, we'd never need to pass another law, except to get rid of some of those that allow so much double dipping and hiding behind the 5th Amendment instead of making honest accountings to the press and to the people.
 
Ding-a-Ling alert! The information Cheney, Bush, Rice, Rumsfeldand Wolfowitz had came from the Clinton White House!!!


ding-a-ling_truck_1367503759073_409618_ver1.0_320_240.jpg


You know, the stuff Sandi Berger was going to steal from the National Archives so you could make this bogus claim forever and ever without involving the CLINTONS, who received, believed, and filed it?

:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

well thats not totally true.

Oh, no, there's a lot more lies being told about Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the lot that should be refuted. That's enough for you for now. ;)

You guys should have taken Sandy Berger out to the shed and quietly deposited Hill and Bill back in Arkansas. But you didn't, and you do nothing to stop your politicians from engaging in gross corruption, piggy trough expense accounts, and megabonus campaign dowrys at the end of the line.

We have too many laws now. If the ones we had were upheld by law enforcement, we'd never need to pass another law, except to get rid of some of those that allow so much double dipping and hiding behind the 5th Amendment instead of making honest accountings to the press and to the people.
Hill And BILL left the WHITEHOUSE...poor don't you know? The Hildebeast said as much...

Sunday Cartoon By Clayton Liotta - DickMorris.com at DickMorris.com

$130M since they left the Whitehouse...I bleed Purple Pelican Piss for them...
 
The prime minister and his ruling party have behaved like thugs, excluding the Sunnis from power, using the army, police forces and militias to terrorize their opponents. The insurgency the Maliki government faces today was utterly predictable because, in fact, it happened before. From 2003 onward, Iraq faced a Sunni insurgency that was finally tamped down by Gen. David Petraeus, who said explicitly at the time that the core element of his strategy was political, bringing Sunni tribes and militias into the fold. The surgeÂ’s success, he often noted, bought time for a real power-sharing deal in Iraq that would bring the Sunnis into the structure of the government.

A senior official closely involved with Iraq in the Bush administration told me, “Not only did Maliki not try to do broad power-sharing, he reneged on all the deals that had been made, stopped paying the Sunni tribes and militias, and started persecuting key Sunni officials.” Among those targeted were the vice president of Iraq and its finance minister.

But how did Maliki come to be prime minister of Iraq? He was the product of a series of momentous decisions made by the Bush administration. Having invaded Iraq with a small force — what the expert Tom Ricks called “the worst war plan in American history” — the administration needed to find local allies. It quickly decided to destroy Iraq’s Sunni ruling establishment and empower the hard-line Shiite religious parties that had opposed Saddam Hussein. This meant that a structure of Sunni power that had been in the area for centuries collapsed. These moves — to disband the army, dismantle the bureaucracy and purge Sunnis in general — might have been more consequential than the invasion itself.

The turmoil in the Middle East is often called a sectarian war. But really it is better described as “the Sunni revolt.” Across the region, from Iraq to Syria, one sees armed Sunni gangs that have decided to take on the non-Sunni forces that, in their view, oppress them. The Bush administration often justified its actions by pointing out that the Shiites are the majority in Iraq and so they had to rule. But the truth is that the borders of these lands are porous, and while the Shiites are numerous in Iraq — Maliki’s party actually won a plurality, not a majority — they are a tiny minority in the Middle East as a whole. It is outside support — from places as varied as Saudi Arabia and Turkey — that sustains the Sunni revolt.

If the Bush administration deserves a fair share of blame for “losing Iraq,” what about the Obama administration and its decision to withdraw American forces from the country by the end of 2011? I would have preferred to see a small American force in Iraq to try to prevent the country’s collapse. But let’s remember why this force is not there. Maliki refused to provide the guarantees that every other country in the world that hosts U.S. forces offers. Some commentators have blamed the Obama administration for negotiating badly or halfheartedly and perhaps this is true. But here’s what a senior Iraqi politician told me in the days when the U.S. withdrawal was being discussed: “It will not happen. Maliki cannot allow American troops to stay on. Iran has made very clear to Maliki that its No. 1 demand is that there be no American troops remaining in Iraq. And Maliki owes them.” He reminded me that Maliki spent 24 years in exile, most of them in Tehran and Damascus, and his party was funded by Iran for most of its existence. And in fact, Maliki’s government has followed policies that have been pro-Iranian and pro-Syrian.

MORE: Fareed Zakaria: Who lost Iraq? The Iraqis did, with an assist from George W. Bush - The Washington Post

Some good food for thought...
 
God!, these Democrats are stupid!!

I don't discriminate, I hate all Democrats equally.
 
I was on OIF One; the first phase of the Iraq War.

We WERE welcomed as liberators; though I doubt a loser like the OP every spent a day in uniform; let alone everyspoke to an Iraqi Shiite whose family members were tortured and killed by Saddam Hussein; or who was tortured himself by Saddam's Governmen

libs are loser who lie to themselves
 
The prime minister and his ruling party have behaved like thugs, excluding the Sunnis from power, using the army, police forces and militias to terrorize their opponents. The insurgency the Maliki government faces today was utterly predictable because, in fact, it happened before. From 2003 onward, Iraq faced a Sunni insurgency that was finally tamped down by Gen. David Petraeus, who said explicitly at the time that the core element of his strategy was political, bringing Sunni tribes and militias into the fold. The surgeÂ’s success, he often noted, bought time for a real power-sharing deal in Iraq that would bring the Sunnis into the structure of the government.

A senior official closely involved with Iraq in the Bush administration told me, “Not only did Maliki not try to do broad power-sharing, he reneged on all the deals that had been made, stopped paying the Sunni tribes and militias, and started persecuting key Sunni officials.” Among those targeted were the vice president of Iraq and its finance minister.

But how did Maliki come to be prime minister of Iraq? He was the product of a series of momentous decisions made by the Bush administration. Having invaded Iraq with a small force — what the expert Tom Ricks called “the worst war plan in American history” — the administration needed to find local allies. It quickly decided to destroy Iraq’s Sunni ruling establishment and empower the hard-line Shiite religious parties that had opposed Saddam Hussein. This meant that a structure of Sunni power that had been in the area for centuries collapsed. These moves — to disband the army, dismantle the bureaucracy and purge Sunnis in general — might have been more consequential than the invasion itself.

The turmoil in the Middle East is often called a sectarian war. But really it is better described as “the Sunni revolt.” Across the region, from Iraq to Syria, one sees armed Sunni gangs that have decided to take on the non-Sunni forces that, in their view, oppress them. The Bush administration often justified its actions by pointing out that the Shiites are the majority in Iraq and so they had to rule. But the truth is that the borders of these lands are porous, and while the Shiites are numerous in Iraq — Maliki’s party actually won a plurality, not a majority — they are a tiny minority in the Middle East as a whole. It is outside support — from places as varied as Saudi Arabia and Turkey — that sustains the Sunni revolt.

If the Bush administration deserves a fair share of blame for “losing Iraq,” what about the Obama administration and its decision to withdraw American forces from the country by the end of 2011? I would have preferred to see a small American force in Iraq to try to prevent the country’s collapse. But let’s remember why this force is not there. Maliki refused to provide the guarantees that every other country in the world that hosts U.S. forces offers. Some commentators have blamed the Obama administration for negotiating badly or halfheartedly and perhaps this is true. But here’s what a senior Iraqi politician told me in the days when the U.S. withdrawal was being discussed: “It will not happen. Maliki cannot allow American troops to stay on. Iran has made very clear to Maliki that its No. 1 demand is that there be no American troops remaining in Iraq. And Maliki owes them.” He reminded me that Maliki spent 24 years in exile, most of them in Tehran and Damascus, and his party was funded by Iran for most of its existence. And in fact, Maliki’s government has followed policies that have been pro-Iranian and pro-Syrian.

MORE: Fareed Zakaria: Who lost Iraq? The Iraqis did, with an assist from George W. Bush - The Washington Post

Some good food for thought...

No one has lost Iraq. Yet. And we can go back to the League of Nations you idiotic twit.

But this crew has nothing to do with politics and the garbage that you spew. This has everything to do with a psychokiller ques qe c'est maniac that Obama let loose in 2009 and is more radical than bin Laden.
 
The prime minister and his ruling party have behaved like thugs, excluding the Sunnis from power, using the army, police forces and militias to terrorize their opponents. The insurgency the Maliki government faces today was utterly predictable because, in fact, it happened before. From 2003 onward, Iraq faced a Sunni insurgency that was finally tamped down by Gen. David Petraeus, who said explicitly at the time that the core element of his strategy was political, bringing Sunni tribes and militias into the fold. The surgeÂ’s success, he often noted, bought time for a real power-sharing deal in Iraq that would bring the Sunnis into the structure of the government.

A senior official closely involved with Iraq in the Bush administration told me, “Not only did Maliki not try to do broad power-sharing, he reneged on all the deals that had been made, stopped paying the Sunni tribes and militias, and started persecuting key Sunni officials.” Among those targeted were the vice president of Iraq and its finance minister.

But how did Maliki come to be prime minister of Iraq? He was the product of a series of momentous decisions made by the Bush administration. Having invaded Iraq with a small force — what the expert Tom Ricks called “the worst war plan in American history” — the administration needed to find local allies. It quickly decided to destroy Iraq’s Sunni ruling establishment and empower the hard-line Shiite religious parties that had opposed Saddam Hussein. This meant that a structure of Sunni power that had been in the area for centuries collapsed. These moves — to disband the army, dismantle the bureaucracy and purge Sunnis in general — might have been more consequential than the invasion itself.

The turmoil in the Middle East is often called a sectarian war. But really it is better described as “the Sunni revolt.” Across the region, from Iraq to Syria, one sees armed Sunni gangs that have decided to take on the non-Sunni forces that, in their view, oppress them. The Bush administration often justified its actions by pointing out that the Shiites are the majority in Iraq and so they had to rule. But the truth is that the borders of these lands are porous, and while the Shiites are numerous in Iraq — Maliki’s party actually won a plurality, not a majority — they are a tiny minority in the Middle East as a whole. It is outside support — from places as varied as Saudi Arabia and Turkey — that sustains the Sunni revolt.

If the Bush administration deserves a fair share of blame for “losing Iraq,” what about the Obama administration and its decision to withdraw American forces from the country by the end of 2011? I would have preferred to see a small American force in Iraq to try to prevent the country’s collapse. But let’s remember why this force is not there. Maliki refused to provide the guarantees that every other country in the world that hosts U.S. forces offers. Some commentators have blamed the Obama administration for negotiating badly or halfheartedly and perhaps this is true. But here’s what a senior Iraqi politician told me in the days when the U.S. withdrawal was being discussed: “It will not happen. Maliki cannot allow American troops to stay on. Iran has made very clear to Maliki that its No. 1 demand is that there be no American troops remaining in Iraq. And Maliki owes them.” He reminded me that Maliki spent 24 years in exile, most of them in Tehran and Damascus, and his party was funded by Iran for most of its existence. And in fact, Maliki’s government has followed policies that have been pro-Iranian and pro-Syrian.

MORE: Fareed Zakaria: Who lost Iraq? The Iraqis did, with an assist from George W. Bush - The Washington Post

Some good food for thought...

No one has lost Iraq. Yet. And we can go back to the League of Nations you idiotic twit.

But this crew has nothing to do with politics and the garbage that you spew. This has everything to do with a psychokiller ques qe c'est maniac that Obama let loose in 2009 and is more radical than bin Laden.
LaDorka just won't give it a rest, will he? How stupid can one person be? WAIT! Don't answer that.
:eusa_hand:
 
Some good food for thought...

No one has lost Iraq. Yet. And we can go back to the League of Nations you idiotic twit.

But this crew has nothing to do with politics and the garbage that you spew. This has everything to do with a psychokiller ques qe c'est maniac that Obama let loose in 2009 and is more radical than bin Laden.
LaDorka just won't give it a rest, will he? How stupid can one person be? WAIT! Don't answer that.
:eusa_hand:

:lol:

I know. And I'm truly on a number of websites where Shias are freaking out that anyone in the US could be posting against them. We are talking wild times here.

All because the left can suck Obama's errrr appendage big time Shias can't believe Obama is willing to let all of them die.

Most interesting. You should check out their websites. They are pissed off.
 
15th post
No one has lost Iraq. Yet. And we can go back to the League of Nations you idiotic twit.

But this crew has nothing to do with politics and the garbage that you spew. This has everything to do with a psychokiller ques qe c'est maniac that Obama let loose in 2009 and is more radical than bin Laden.
LaDorka just won't give it a rest, will he? How stupid can one person be? WAIT! Don't answer that.
:eusa_hand:

:lol:

I know. And I'm truly on a number of websites where Shias are freaking out that anyone in the US could be posting against them. We are talking wild times here.

All because the left can suck Obama's errrr appendage big time Shias can't believe Obama is willing to let all of them die.

Most interesting. You should check out their websites. They are pissed off.
I am sure they are...and I will. Thanks for the heads-up...Hat Tip of the Fedora.
 
Bush got us in this mess, Obama wasn't forced to take the job; his job is to clean it up. He followed Bush's timeline, many in the US did not foresee ISIS. If anyone did I have not seen their name. Now, Obama better get off fence ASAP.
 
Back
Top Bottom