Friday, March 10, 2006

NeoCons Tell Bush : NO


An Ominous Sign!

The last thing you would expect to see...   NeoCons abandoning Fearless Leader...   It is a shock.   Even more of a shock than Repubs that are up for re-election this year bailing out on the little cowboy.   Will wonders never cease...
Hat Tip to fishface at Political Hardball.com   - fc


The Independent.co.uk

NeoCon allies desert Bush over Iraq


These are the right-wing intellectuals who demanded George Bush invade Iraq. Now they admit they got it wrong. Are you listening, Mr President?

Published: 09 March 2006



William Buckley Jnr   (influential conservative columnist and tv pundit)


'One can't doubt the objective in Iraq has failed ... Iraqi animosities have proved uncontainable by an army of 130,000 Americans. Different plans have to be made. And the kernel here is the acknowledgement of defeat.'


Francis Fukuyama   (author and long-term advocate of toppling saddam)


'By invading Iraq, the Bush administration created a self-fulfilling prophecy: Iraq has now replaced Afghanistan as a magnet, a training ground and an operational base for jihadists, with plenty of American targets to shoot at.'


Richard Perle   (arch-warmonger and pivotal republican hawk)


'The military campaign and its political aftermath were both passionately debated within the Bush administration. It got the war right and the aftermath wrong We should have understood that we needed Iraqi partners.'


Andrew Sullivan   (prominent commentator and influential blogger)


'The world has learnt a tough lesson, and it has been a lot tougher for those tens of thousands of dead, innocent Iraqis ... than for a few humiliated pundits. The correct response is not more spin but a sense of shame and sorrow.'


George Will   (right-wing columnist on 'the washington post' and tv pundit)


'Almost three years after the invasion, it is still not certain whether, or in what sense, Iraq is a nation. And after two elections and a referendum on the constitution, Iraq barely has a government.'