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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Apr-04-07 10:22 AM
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Dubya At the Bat
http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/page.php?a=32977

Dubya At the Bat

by Bob Burnett


snip//


Of course, it's not only Saudi King Abdullah who views the US involvement in Iraq as an occupation: it's the entire Arab world including the U.S. sponsored leadership of Iraq. Speaking at the same Arab Summit, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani admitted the "American liberation of Iraq ... has turned into an occupation, with tragic consequences on the country." He said, "The decision to turn the liberation of Iraq into an occupation... was contrary to what Iraqi parties and national forces were planning at the time... without understanding the Iraqi's point of view."

What's clear from this brouhaha is the Bush Administration's Iraq policy has zero support from Arab states, whether they are primarily Shiite or Sunni. In response to the diplomatic debacle, the White House got defensive; claimed that total loss of support for the occupation is not a third strike and "the game" should continue. George Bush and Dick Cheney insisted US forces would stay in Iraq until we win, however long that takes.

The Administration doesn't seem to care that the occupation has lost the support of the original members of "Operation Iraqi Freedom," the Arab states, and the rest of the world-except for Israel. They claim the Iraqi people want us to continue the occupation. But surveys continually indicate the Iraqi people don't want us there. The latest study, conducted by the British Opinion Research Business found that "53% of Iraqis believe that the security situation in Iraq will be better when the U.S. departs. Only 26% feel it will be worse." An earlier poll featured in The Economist found that 78 percent of Iraqis "oppose the presence of coalition forces in Iraq." (Fifty percent said that conditions are worse "compared to how they were before the war.")

Looking back over four years of the Iraq war, there have been many moments when it appeared the tide had turned: the unchecked looting after Baghdad fell, the rise of the Sunni insurgency, the use of sophisticated improvised explosive devices, the bombing of the Al-Askari shrine, and the decision by England to begin withdrawing troops, to mention only a few. None of these was as devastating as the loss of support from Saudi Arabia. This signifies that the US is alone in the Middle East except for the support of Israel.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that this is not a good situation for the U.S. to be in. Unfortunately for America, George Bush is not a rocket scientist; CEO; baseball player; or even a cowboy. He is a politician who likes to dress up in costume and pretend he's a cowboy, baseball player, CEO, President or Commander-in-chief. But he isn't capable of playing any of these roles.

As a result, Bush can't accept that his Administration has totally and absolutely failed in Iraq. He'll continue to stand at the plate and argue that because he's President there's a different set of rules: he gets as many strikes as he wants and the ballgame isn't over until he says it is. But you and I and the rest of the world know the truth: there is no joy in Bushville; Dubya has struck out.
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