I commend to you all J. Peter Mulhern's essay today in The
American Thinker, Finding Wisdom in the Wreckage here.
Mulhern, who first came to my attention during the Clinton
impeachment as caller Peter from Annapolis on Rush's show, argues
that George W. Bush's genuine "compassionate conservatism" doomed
him as a war leader.
"...Blinding compassion is disabl(ed) Bush the war leader.
"In the aftermath of 9/11 any minimally responsible
American government would have had to topple Saddam Hussein. We
were at war with Hussein (yes, a real shooting war) and we were
losing. When the twin towers fell we all knew, at some level, that
the Arab world had challenged us. We couldn't respond to that
challenge by losing a war to our most vocal and visible Arab enemy.
We had to assert our dominance, and Iraq, a major, oil-producing
enemy just above the Arabian Peninsula, was the logical place to do
it.
"George W. Bush was not the man for this job. Instead
of pivoting out of Afghanistan and descending on Iraq like a
biblical plague, he took a long detour through the United Nations
to argue about flouted resolutions and weapons of mass
destruction.
"When we finally got around to an invasion we had to
put a humanitarian gloss on an essential demonstration of our
power. Instead of Operation Arab Smackdown we got Operation Iraqi
Freedom. This was the true blunder that turned Iraq from a
political asset into a liability. This blunder belongs to George W.
Bush and George W. Bush alone, even though Don Rumsfeld has now
paid for it with his job."
topics:
Iraq, United Nations, Conservatism, Oil