Sen. Clinton Wants Troops in Iraq for at Least 10 Years
By David Swanson
On Monday, Ted Koppel offered a report / commentary on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" which can be found online with this headline: "A Duty to Mislead: Politics and the Iraq War," and this introductory text: "Democrats are telling voters that if they are elected, all U.S. troops will be pulled out of Iraq. But as Sen. Hillary Clinton privately told a senor military adviser, she knows there will be some troops there for decades. It's an example of how in some cases, politics can force dishonesty."
Well, someone is trying to force dishonesty. I'm not sure it's politics.
In the audio report, Koppel points out that in a recent debate Senator Hillary Clinton said that her first priority if elected would be to "bring our troops home." She did not say ALL our troops, Koppel points out, and she does not mean ALL our troops. She told the New York Times three months ago that some forces would have to remain. And Koppel adds that he spoke with someone from the Pentagon who briefs Clinton, and that she had told this person that if she is elected and reelected, she expects to have troops in Iraq at the end of her second term. Koppel notes that that's 10 years away. He adds that he thinks she's "right" and that the other Democratic candidates agree with her. When, oh when, he laments, will we get the truth instead of applause lines.
But let's back up a minute here. The question of how long U.S. troops remain in Iraq is not an immutable fact for Clinton and Koppel to get right, as scientists observing the natural world. It's a question to be determined by either the U.S. Congress or the U.S. President or both. Koppel, in fact, has no say in the matter, and I for one am profoundly uninterested in his opinion. Clinton's opinion, on the other hand, is of the highest importance. Koppel is to be applauded for exposing it to the light of day.
Koppel, it appears, however, did not learn his lesson in 2003 at that New Hampshire debate where Congressman Dennis Kucinich received such thunderous applause for taking Koppel to task. Koppel does not have the right to determine which candidates are "real" candidates or to put words in their mouths. Neither Kucinich nor former Senator Mike Gravel intends, if elected, to keep troops in Iraq for a year, much less a decade. In fact, these candidates are trying their hardest to fully end the occupation of Iraq prior to 2008. My distinct impression is that Republican candidate Ron Paul shares this position.
Some of the other Democratic candidates, as well, may not share the Clinton-Koppel position in favor of a decade or more of occupation. In fact, that may be exactly why Koppel has exposed Clinton's position and described it not as a position at all, but as an observation of facts that any serious candidate would recognize. Koppel may be concerned that some of the other Democrats whom the corporate media considers viable do not share Clinton's position. He is instructing them on what position to take if they want to be in the center of the stage and treated respectfully by the media.
Something is, indeed, trying to force dishonesty.
Each candidate needs to be asked, and the answer reported: Will they work now for the complete withdrawal of all troops, mercenaries, and contractors?
In fact, there are a lot of questions they should be asked.
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www.VelvetRevolution.us
Old Clinton Joke
Have you heard the news?
Kentucky Fried Chicken is coming out with the Hillary Clinton meal. It consists of two large thighs, two small breasts, and two left wings!
Transcript
A Duty to Mislead: Politics and the Iraq War
June 11, 2007 from All Things Considered
ROBERT SIEGEL, host: The fate of Iraq and U.S. troops there is a
centerpiece of the Democratic presidential campaign.
But listen very closely, suggests NPR senior news analyst Ted Koppel.
TED KOPPEL: At the most recent Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton was
presented with an open-ended question by moderator Wolf Blitzer. What,
she was asked, would be her top priority during the first 100 days if
she was elected president? Well, she said, if President Bush has not
ended the war in Iraq, to bring our troops home. That would be the very
first thing I would do.
She won resounding applause. And therein lies a lesson. It takes a
cynical former diplomatic correspondent to take note of the fact that
Senator Clinton said only that she would bring our troops home. She did
not say, all our troops.
Would the audience have been quite as enthusiastic if it had known that
this is not what she means at all? Go back over the record and you will
never find Senator Clinton being so incautious as to promise that she
will withdraw all U.S. forces from Iraq.
Indeed, less than three months ago, in an interview with the New York
Times, Senator Clinton emphasized that there are remaining vital
national security interests in Iraq and that these would require a
continuing deployment of the American troops. She didn't, in that
interview, give any sense of how long U.S. forces might remain in Iraq
during a new Clinton administration.
But I ran into an old source the other day who held a senior position at
the Pentagon until his retirement. He occasionally briefs Senator
Clinton on the situation in the Gulf. She told him that if she were
elected president and then reelected four years later, she would still
expect U.S. troops to be in Iraq at the end of her second term.
We're talking about just a shade less than 10 years from now. I happen
to think she's absolutely right, and what's more I'm sure there are
several other Democratic presidential candidates who agree with that
assessment - that U.S. troops will be in Iraq for another decade at
least. Even if every candidate is sounding as though the pullout would
be immediate and total.
When oh when is that deadly serious issue ever going to become the topic
of an equally serious and candid discussion? When, in other words, will
we get the brutal truth in place of vapid and misleading campaign
applause lines?
This is Ted Koppel.
Hillary needs to change her party affiliation to REPUBE-LICKAN
her and Liebermauschwantz can form their own party, called the "FASCIST FAUX DEMOCRAT AIPAC LOBBY CORPORATIST ELITIST STOOGE FOR THE GOP PARTY"
a whole lot of dinocrats need to change their party affiliations to that party, for that's how the fuck they all vote, and conduct themselves, it's time for the people to see them for who the hell they really are!
add Carl Levin to that list, too!
Hillary needs to change her party affiliation to REPUBE-LICKAN
Yes, I entirely agree with that statement. So many of the "Democrats" are Republicans in Dems clothing. I'll vote for Kucinich for president and Mike Gravel for VP.