Friday, November 18, 2005

If only it were that.

Gerard Baker in the Times of London:
The biggest weapon in the arsenal of America’s critics is carefully selective amnesia.
The problems is that this isn't amnesia which is a medical condtion. This is cynical demagoguery, blatant dishonesty, lying to the American people through a pliant press. Harry "Milquetoast" Reid is the Grimmer Wormtongue of our time.

Baker points out the pattern that tells you this is not about principle:
most of those now recanting made a straight political calculation in voting to authorise force in the first place.

These were the ambitious Democrats who thought they had learnt the lessons of 1991. Then you may recall, the vast majority of the party’s senators voted against the first Iraq war. The arguments then were not about right but might, or America’s perceived lack of it. There was talk of hundreds of thousands of body bags. Most of the Democrats, fearing the country was still in the grip of Vietnam syndrome, wanted nothing to do with it. They wanted to be able to say afterwards “ We told you so”, and to reap the political rewards.

In the event fewer than 200 Americans died, and all those Democrats who had voted against the war were suddenly political carrion. So, confronted with a similar choice in October 2002, they did not want to be on the losing side again. If it was another cakewalk, and they had voted against it, the damage to their credibility as presidential candidates would be irreparable. Best to vote for it to burnish their national security credentials.

But it wasn’t a cakewalk. And now they’re trapped. So they resort to the defence of the coward throughout history: “He made me do it.” Most Americans have better memories.


They can't defend what they really did, so they're trying to persuade us that they were lied to. However, we were paying attention and we have the video and audio tape to show that they had the same intel, if they cared to look at it.

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