Democrats: Let’s Bring the Troops Home Later.


Democrat Hillary Clinton and her 2006 Republican opponent Jeanine Pirro: “Let’s bring the troops home at some unspecified point in the future.”

Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa) caused a media frenzy recently by suggesting that U.S. troops be removed immediately from Iraq. The New York Times summarized the situation as follows: “Questions Long Avoided Now Take Center Stage.”

While it’s true that the New York Times has long avoided these questions, other mainstream Democrats have been strongly taking a position on this issue for quite some time — and their words are loud and clear: “Like, let’s bring the troops home later, ya know?”

Strong proponents of “troops out later” include Senators John Kerry, Hilary Clinton, and rising star Barack Obama. At a speech today, Obama reiterated this ideology, demanding that President Bush admit his mistakes in Iraq, but rejecting a timetable for troop withdrawal, declaring: “We need not a time-table….”

This “troops out later” position has often infuriated Vice President Dick Cheney, who calls for “troops out never.” But the intensity of Murtha’s “troops out now” outcry has caused Cheney to reluctantly acknowledge the withdrawal discussion as “entirely legitimate.”

Alongside Murtha on extreme left of the mainstream political spectrum is 52 percent of Americans, who think U.S. troops should be pulled out now or within 12 months. Even farther left is the Iraqi population, 82% of whom strongly oppose the presence of foreign troops.

For further reading, see Democrats and the War in The Nation.

Pentagon: U.S. Did Not Use Skin-eating white phosphorus as weapon in Fallujah. OK, we did, but it’s not a chemical weapon. OK, it’s a chemical weapon.

U.S. Did Not Use Skin-eating white phosphorus as weapon in Fallujah.
November 8, 2005: Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Steve Boylan appears on Democracy Now and says: “I do not recall [that white phosphorus] was used as an offensive weapon. White phosphorus is used for marking targets for both air and ground forces.”

OK, we did, but it’s not a chemical weapon.
November 16, 2005: Pentagon spokesman Col Barry Venable appears on BBC and says: “[White phosphorus] was used as an incendiary weapon against enemy combatants.” But, “white phosphorus is an incendiary weapon, not a chemical weapon.”

OK, it’s a chemical weapon.
November 22, 2005: A 1995 Pentagon document emerges, stating: “Iraqi forces loyal to president Saddam may have possibly used white phosphorous chemical weapons against Kurdish rebels.”

By the way, the chemical weapons we used are a grave threat to peace
October 7, 2002 George Bush appears in Cincinnati, Ohio, and says: “Tonight I want to take a few minutes to discuss a grave threat to peace…. The threat comes from Iraq. … It possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons.”