The reason why this could not have been your "call" is the Iraqis were NOT producing physical evidence and documents in defiance to U.N. resolutions that were agreed upon at the end of the first intrusion into Iraq during Bush I's invasion to free Kuwait.
If that were your call ... "we" would still be trying to "investigate" ....
Additionally the flaw in your thinking (and recollection) is that the "inspections" did not mean that "inspectors" had to go out and dig in the sand to find buried WMD's or go from building to building through out the country .... the Iraqi government was REQUIRED to produce the "stuff" and the documents for the "inspectors" to REVIEW AND INSPECT.
Not search for the shit.
Just to clear (may be) the "air" on that issue. You and I have a different philosophy on compliance and enforcement. If I am tasked with the responsibility of searching a house for contraband there will be some minimal "negotiation" for cooperative measures to allow entrance and the search, but that "negotiation" will end quickly, the door gets kicked, and those in harms way will be harmed, including any entering to do the search, as an incident to the "enforcement," so that those inside in control of the contraband do not have the opportunity to "flush the shit" or otherwise destroy it. Your favorite person Clinton wanted to use the "law enforcement model" of fighting international matters ... that IS the LE model of doing business ... No use of force is without risk and casualties, although we all strive to minimize them whenever possible.
You seem to believe (or at least publish that idea) that for some reason I think the loss of life is "acceptable" and not worthy of concern. Nothing could be farther from the truth.
Had your attitude prevailed in WWII .. there would have never been an invasion of Europe. On the other hand had the Japanese conducted themselves as the Iraqis did, there would have been an horrendously costly invasion of the Japanese "mainland"... on both sides.
Unfortunately ( at least in my mind) since WWII we have rapidly developed the reputation of retreating and not finishing ... closing 20 embassies at the report of danger confirms that...and when following so closely behind Benghazi it sends that message to the world.
That is not safe for the U.S............. homeland or those abroad.
How many did we lose on 911 in just a few hours? How many in Iraq over the years?
Now go play your little cutesy games and have fun .. while "rome" burns.
Originally Posted by LexusLover
fuck Benghazi, it was dangerous as hell in the mid east .. why?
American and foreign officials believe that Al Qaeda’s Iraq affiliate orchestrated attacks in late July that freed hundreds of inmates from two prisons in Iraq, including Abu Ghraib. The attackers used mortars to pin down Iraqi forces, employed suicide bombers to punch holes in Iraqi defenses and then sent an assault force to free the inmates, Western officials said at the time.
A few days later, more than 1,000 prisoners escaped under murky circumstances at a prison near Benghazi, Libya. The country’s prime minister blamed local residents for carrying out the jailbreak, an accusation that security officials in Benghazi disputed.
In a separate attack at a century-old prison at Dera Ismail Khan, just outside Pakistan’s tribal belt, as many as 150 fighters blew holes in the perimeter wall and stormed the prison compound. The local authorities said that some of the attackers had been disguised as police officers, and that they had used megaphones to call out the names of specific prisoners. Nearly 250 inmates were freed during the attack.
The Interpol alert added to a climate of heightened concern set off Thursday when State Department officials spoke of possible terror plots in the works against Western facilities overseas.
The next day, the department issued a global travel alert for American citizens that warned of the potential for terror attacks by operatives of Al Qaeda and affiliated groups beginning Sunday through the end of August.
In an interview with the ABC News program “This Week” to be broadcast on Sunday, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, said the intelligence about the possible plots was “more specific” than in the past. “There’s a significant threat stream, and we’re reacting to it,” he said.
go for a visit LL and send us a postcard.. I hear Yemen is really nice right now
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-202_162-...y-immediately/
need a tour guide ? heres a few