OK - so pleazse tell me how a person can say this and then turn around and bash congress for voting against the surge? Makes NO SENSE whatsoever. He says we can't win, so why the hell would he want more troops? Why would he go on a partisan rant, slaming the dems for siding the enemy and helping evil - when he himself has just done that in his own words.
Doesn't sound like a straight shooter - sounds like a flip-flopping inconsistent one.
it`s simple....
January 11, 2007 --"" LAST night, President Bush gave us a candid overview of Iraq and outlined his plan to reverse the bitter course events have taken. The heart of the effort will be a modest surge in American troop strength - to give Iraqis a last chance to save their country.
Will the plan work? Maybe. It's a last-hope effort based on steps that should've been taken in 2003, from providing basic security for the population to getting young Iraqi males off the streets and into jobs.
The added 20,000-plus U.S. troops to be phased in over the coming months will make a tactical difference in Baghdad and Anbar province - but that may not translate into strategic success. Given that we're now committed to a strategy of sending more troops, a larger increase of the sort proposed by Sen. John McCain would make more sense.
Yes, deploying even 20,000 more troops strains our long-neglected ground forces; nonetheless, the number feels like another compromise measure for an administration and country still unwilling to accept that we're really at war.
Given all that, should we support the president's plan? Yes. The stakes are too high to do otherwise - the president's right about that. Iraq deserves one last chance. And I say that as a former soldier well aware of the casualties ahead.
The attempt to reclaim Baghdad from the terrorists, insurgents and militiamen - to occupy the city, neighborhood by neighborhood - will lead to serious combat. And combat means dead and wounded Americans.
All of this would have been far easier in 2003 or 2004. But we are where we are. And walking away from this fight prematurely isn't a solution.
That doesn't mean our commitment should be open-ended - and the president admits that now. As I've long argued, the Iraqis have to make significant strides in healing and defending their own country by the closing months of 2007. Or we should leave.
Encouragingly, the plan the president outlined was developed in cooperation with the Iraqi government and places far more responsibility on the Iraqis than in the past. If they live up to their part of this compact, we should stand by them no matter how long it takes. But if Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Iraq's security forces behave as ethnic partisans, we'll need to leave them to their fate.
Ultimately, it's the Iraqis, not the additional American soldiers and Marines, who'll decide Iraq's future. And the acid test will be their government's handling of Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army.
Paradoxically, a burst of fighting would be a positive sign, indicating that Maliki meant > yesterday's disarmament ultimatum to Muqtada's militia. But if the Mahdi Army just goes to ground and the prime minister claims that - poof! - it's no longer a threat, it will mean that he cut another deal with Muqtada.
The crackdown in Baghdad truly has to be non-partisan, comprehensive and uncompromising. And the big test isn't going to be the current struggle for Haifa Street - defended by Sunni insurgents and foreign terrorists - but the occupation, disarmament and ideological disinfection of Sadr City. If we and the Iraqis try to avoid Sadr City's challenges, you'll know the entire effort's a hollow sham.
And there's going to be another major problem that will require great fortitude on the president's part: Destructive fighting lies ahead in Baghdad, and the international media is going to blame us for every broken window and every Iraqi with photogenic wounds. We'll be accused of atrocities and wanton destruction, and the press corps will trot out the Vietnam-era clich? about "destroying the village in order to save it."
Our troops can stand up to any enemy. But I'm not as certain President Bush can withstand the onslaught of an enraged media - and any prospect that we might be turning the situation around will certainly enrage them. Media pressure will work through our allies, too.
Our troops will never surrender - but I'm afraid the White House might fold.
To a soldier, the most encouraging thing the president said last night was that there had been "too many restrictions" on our troops in the past. Rules of engagement must be loosened. We have to stop playing Barney Fife and fight. And the president has to stand behind our troops when the game gets rough.
As for the Democrats in Congress, they can't continue whining that they support our troops while threatening to cut off funding for those in uniform in wartime. They should be ashamed of themselves for even hinting at such a course of action.
What does the president's plan have going for it? A sound tactical concept for security in Baghdad; significant Iraqi commitments (we'll see what they're worth); an overdue integration of Provincial Reconstruction Teams - the moneybags guys - into our combat units; a core of genuine Iraqi patriots; a refreshingly tough stance with Iran and Syria, and an extremely capable American commander en route to Baghdad, Gen. Dave Petraeus.
There are no guarantees that this plan will work, but it deserves a chance. Surrender isn't a strategy, and cowardice won't save us from the deadly threats we face.
The president's new plan will have a painful human cost. But the cost of defeat would be incalculably higher.
Our president deserves our support. One last time. """
Ralph Peters is a retired U.S. Army officer .
hope that helps,shane...