Showing posts with label Bill kristol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill kristol. Show all posts

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Something To Brighten Your Day

Ode to Erica Payne, Robert Gibbs and Paul Krugman:

When you’re feeling sad & blue

And have no clue what to do

Sit down and have a cup of tea

And a hug or two or maybe three.

Feel those troubles melt away

And start you on a better day.

- Bill Kristol, would-be Conservative Poet Laureate

Heh. Do read Bill Kristol's take on the current state of the left - Collapse. He sees the left as having collapsed on every meaningful level, including public support. He notes their intellectual bankruptcy, the loss of their "Lenist discipline," the collapse of their "democratic legitimacy," and the disappearance of the left's "good humor."

All of this has Mr. Kristol in a state of giddiness about on par with that experienced by Ebenezer Scrooge when he awoke from his night of ghostly visitations still alive and with a new outlook on life. It is a fun read.

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Friday, January 1, 2010

Bill Kristol On Obama and Iran


From Bill Kristol writing in the Washington Post, imploring President Obama to do more than a one off, one minute vignette to support the revolution percolating in Iran:

. . . Doesn't the history of the 20th century, with its wars and genocides and terrorism, teach that "the side of those who seek justice" doesn't easily prevail? That justice needs all the energetic support it can get? That the help of the United States is crucial?

The United States has not even begun to do what it could -- rhetorically and concretely, diplomatically and economically, publicly and covertly, multilaterally and unilaterally -- to try to help the Iranian people change the regime of fear and tyranny that denies them justice.

Regime change in Iran in 2010 -- now that would be change to believe in.

I fully concur and have said so repeatedly.

One could reasonably argue that Obama should have thrown his support to the protestors in the immediate aftermath of the Iranian government's brutal repression of protests in June. He chose not to. But there can be no reasonable argument that now, with the revolution in Iran moving into a new phase, it is very much in the interests of the U.S. to extend decisive support to the revolution on every level possible. If Obama fails to do all he can to help this revolution succeed - and concomitantly bring an end to the most evil regime on this earth before it fully metasticizes in the manner of Nazi Germany by 1938 - than Obama will have committed the mother of all foreign policy blunders. It would be a blunder that dwarfs even the decision by France and Britain in 1937 not to stand up to Hitler and thus avert WWII. Chamberlain and his counterparts in France of the era, Léon Blum and later Camille Chautemps, were weak men, but they had not the clear example of history to inform them. Obama is a weak man, but he has the example of Chamberlain and his contemporaries. Obama cannot plead ignorance. Now is the time to act.

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Sunday, August 24, 2008

Sowing The Seeds Of Discord

Obama has done little to make amends with the Hillary camp, and his latest moves - not vetting her for V.P., not consulting her for advice on V.P. candidates, choosing to send out 3 A.M. "phone calls" to announce Biden as VP, refusing to help her retire campaign debt - are driving the PUMA (Party Unity My Ass) wing of Hillary supporters into a frothing rage. As Allahpundit puts it: "The only way this could be more awesomely awesome is if it involved robots."

Obama has sown the seeds of discord himself. McCain, for his part, has decided to provide some water and fertilizer, aiming for a bumper crop.



Bill Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, has spent some time pondering the "glass ceiling" for women in the Democratic Party. He also chimed in with helpful suggestions for the PUMA folk, including that that put her name into nomination for Vice President at the DNC Convention next week. He does so in the name of party unity.

Heh.

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Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Kristol and an NYT Iraq Fairy Tale

There were two opinion pieces in the NYT of note yesterday. One was by the Time's newest columnist, Bill Kristol, discussing the current situation in Iraq and the success of the surge. The other was by the mendacious editors of the NYT, discussing Iraq in far less honest terms. The two make an interesting juxtaposition.

I will not quote the NYT editorial, "Unfinished Debate on Iraq" in full beyond mention of a few points that are so outlandish as to cry out for commentary.

. . . [T]he war has receded as a major topic on the campaign trail, much to the relief of the Republican candidates, who never stray far from the party line but know that Americans overwhelmingly want the troops home.

Talk about your disingenous sleight of hand. The leftist MSM has a news blackout on Iraq because we are succeeding and the Democratic candidates have yet to have their feet held to the fire on Iraq in a debate. Obviously the NYT hasn't been reading the conservative press or watching the Republican debates. The NYT and their ilk are praying that the war will "recede" between now and November if they only close their eyes and put their fingers in their ears.

One year after Mr. Bush announced that he would try to salvage his misadventure by rushing in 30,000 more troops, casualties are down. Yet 2007 was the most violent year in Iraq since the 2003 invasion. Mr. Bush has nothing to show in the way of political progress, which is even more important for ending the war.

The surge has brought normalcy back to Iraq, crushed al Qaeda, blunted Iranian adventurism, and brought casualties down to the lowest monthly total since the initial invasion. I did not think it possible to characterize it as anything other than a military success of epic proportions. But, leave it to the NYT to find a way. And apparently, they are ignoring the passage of the de-Baathification law - one of the major benchmarks of political progress. Its the three Democratic monkeys - Hear No Success, See No Success, Speak No Success.

I could go on, but you get the idea. You can read the entire editorial here. Of far more interest - and in touch with reality - is Bill Kristol's column. As he notes, the Democratic position on Iraq has taken on the surreal notes of a "fairy tale."

. . . Obama’s view of the current situation in Iraq is out of touch with reality. In this, however, Obama is at one with Hillary Clinton and the entire leadership of the Democratic Party.

When President Bush announced the surge of troops in support of a new counterinsurgency strategy a year ago, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Democratic Congressional leaders predicted failure. Obama, for example, told Larry King that he didn’t believe additional U.S. troops would “make a significant dent in the sectarian violence that’s taking place there.” Then in April, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, asserted that “this war is lost, and this surge is not accomplishing anything.” In September, Clinton told Gen. David Petraeus that his claims of progress in Iraq required a “willing suspension of disbelief.”

The Democrats were wrong in their assessments of the surge. Attacks per week on American troops are now down about 60 percent from June. Civilian deaths are down approximately 75 percent from a year ago. December 2007 saw the second-lowest number of U.S. troops killed in action since March 2003. And according to Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, commander of day-to-day military operations in Iraq, last month’s overall number of deaths, which includes Iraqi security forces and civilian casualties as well as U.S. and coalition losses, may well have been the lowest since the war began.

Do Obama and Clinton and Reid now acknowledge that they were wrong? Are they willing to say the surge worked?

No. It’s apparently impermissible for leading Democrats to acknowledge — let alone celebrate — progress in Iraq. When asked recently whether she stood behind her “willing suspension of disbelief” insult to General Petraeus, Clinton said, “That’s right.”

When Obama was asked in the most recent Democratic presidential debate, “Would you have seen this kind of greater security in Iraq if we had followed your recommendations to pull the troops out last year?” he didn’t directly address the question. But he volunteered that “much of that violence has been reduced because there was an agreement with tribes in Anbar Province, Sunni tribes, who started to see, after the Democrats were elected in 2006, you know what? — the Americans may be leaving soon. And we are going to be left very vulnerable to the Shias. We should start negotiating now.”

But Sunni tribes in Anbar announced in September 2006 that they would join to fight Al Qaeda. That was two months before the Democrats won control of Congress. The Sunni tribes turned not primarily because of fear of the Shiites, but because of their horror at Al Qaeda’s atrocities in Anbar. And the improvements in Anbar could never have been sustained without aggressive American military efforts — efforts that were more effective in 2007 than they had been in 2006, due in part to the addition of the surge forces.

Last year’s success, in Anbar and elsewhere, was made possible by confidence among Iraqis that U.S. troops would stay and help protect them, that the U.S. would not abandon them to their enemies. Because the U.S. sent more troops instead of withdrawing — because, in other words, President Bush won his battles in 2007 with the Democratic Congress — we have been able to turn around the situation in Iraq.

And now Iraq’s Parliament has passed a de-Baathification law — one of the so-called benchmarks Congress established for political reconciliation. For much of 2007, Democrats were able to deprecate the military progress and political reconciliation taking place on the ground by harping on the failure of the Iraqi government to pass the benchmark legislation. They are being deprived of even that talking point.

Yesterday, on “Meet the Press,” Hillary Clinton claimed that the Iraqis are changing their ways in part because of the Democratic candidates’ “commitment to begin withdrawing our troops in January of 2009.” So the Democratic Party, having proclaimed that the war is lost and having sought to withdraw U.S. troops, deserves credit for any progress that may have been achieved in Iraq.

That is truly a fairy tale. And it is driven by a refusal to admit real success because that success has been achieved under the leadership of ... George W. Bush. The horror!

Read the whole article here. No, NYT, the issue of Iraq has not receded from the political scene. I imagine it will be brought forcibly into the consciousness of all Americans between now and November. I think you will see a few ads in which the picture below gets prominent play.




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