Earlier today,
I explored the media malpractice 11 years ago todaywhen U.S. troops "took" Baghdad and helped a few Iraqis topple that statue of Saddam. With that sort of media celebration, war hawks felt emboldened to declare victory--and vindication. Some predicted that the missing WMD would show up soon. The
NYT the next day published the following and more:
Mr. [Kenneth]Adelman said he hoped that ''fearmongers'' would
derive some lessons about leadership from the seizure of Baghdad.
President Bush had not been dissuaded by the criticism, and Prime
Minister Tony Blair of Britain boldly stared down public opinion in his
country, he said. ''I hope it emboldens leaders to drastic, not
measured, approaches,'' Mr. Adelman said. ''That's the only way to make a
difference in the world.''
William Kristol, the editor of the
conservative Weekly Standard and a strong supporter of the war, said he
had been deeply affected by the images of the statue of Mr. Hussein
tumbling in downtown Baghdad, which he compared to the fall of the
Berlin Wall. ''I was moved and relieved,'' he said. A former aide to Vice President Dan Quayle, Mr.
Kristol said the American victory in Iraq could go far to dispel some of
the self-doubt and isolationist impulses brought on by the Vietnam War....This is a little bit of a Vietnam in reverse, I would argue.''
William J. Bennett, another early advocate of the
war, said the United States was on the verge of an extraordinary rout of
a totalitarian system, and close to capturing a nation the size of
California with minimal troops. ''This will go down as one of the great military
efforts of all time,'' said Mr. Bennett, who was education secretary and
drug czar under President Ronald Reagan and the first President Bush.
2 comments:
Thanks, We must never forget.
Thanks, We must never forget.
Post a Comment