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An Egregiously Reckless Resolution

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  • An Egregiously Reckless Resolution

    AN EGREGIOUSLY RECKLESS RESOLUTION
    by David Limbaugh

    Human Events, DC
    Oct 16 2007

    Why now, of all possible critical moments, are congressional Democrats
    insisting on passing a resolution guaranteed to offend Turkey,
    our vital ally in the Iraq War, by denouncing the Ottoman Empire's
    century-old massacre of Armenians as a "genocide"?

    Nancy Pelosi and her cohorts have been warned that Turkey will
    be deeply offended by the move and may even take punitive action
    against us by withdrawing their permission for us to use Incirlik
    Air Base, through which well more than half of our air cargo passes
    in route to supply our troops in Iraq. Human Events editor Jed Babbin
    reports that some 95 percent of the new MRAP (mine-resistant, ambush
    protected) vehicles, designed to save our troops' lives, pass through
    Incirlik. Also as a result, Turkey might decide to attack Kurdish
    terrorist forces against our strong urging not to do so.

    What on earth are Democrats trying to pull here? They are the same
    people that barely blanch when Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
    denies the Holocaust. It's not like we need to worry about offending
    Iran, a charter member of the Axis of Evil and by last count a sworn
    enemy of the United States, actively working to defeat us in Iraq.

    Democrats constantly castigate President Bush for alienating the
    international community by "going it alone." Their presidential
    candidates are united in promising that if their party recaptures the
    White House, they'll restore sound relations with foreign nations. In
    a recent speech, the irrepressibly garrulous Bill Clinton stressed
    that this would be a major theme in the next Clinton co-presidency.

    But are Democratic Party leaders, who claim to be such staunch
    supporters of our troops, concerned about jeopardizing their
    indispensable supply lines? Are they the slightest bit nervous that
    in response to a House committee vote on this resolution, Turkey has
    already recalled its ambassador, Nabi Sensoy, for consultation?

    Apparently not. When a seemingly incredulous Brit Hume questioned
    House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer about the resolution considering
    the high stakes involved, Hoyer cavalierly responded, "Turkey's help
    to us is vital, but more vital is the United States' help to Turkey."

    In other words, Turkey needs us more than we need them -- presumably
    implying Turkey wouldn't dare cut off our supply lines.

    But Turkey has denied our troops access before -- as recently as
    2003. More than that, this idea that other countries need us more
    than we need them could be said about almost any allies Democrats
    complain the Bush administration has alienated. What if President
    Bush had responded to Democratic complaints in the same high-handed
    manner Democrats are exhibiting today, saying, "Our allies need us
    more than we need them?"

    Given that there is nothing to be gained and so much to be lost by
    the proposed congressional resolution, how can we not be suspect,
    as Jed Babbin implies, that congressional Democrats might be trying
    to effect a withdrawal of our troops from Iraq indirectly? Is this
    suspicion really far-fetched?

    They've tried similar ploys, like a "dwell-time" amendment attached
    to the Defense policy bill that would have mandated that troops have
    as much time at home between deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan as
    they had in those countries. This would have virtually guaranteed we
    didn't have enough manpower to complete the mission -- one of several
    "slow bleed" tactics advanced by Democrats to undermine our prosecution
    of the war.

    In that case, they at least have the cover of arguing that they are
    forcing longer stateside missions on behalf of the troops. Their
    motive there was suspicious but at least ambiguous. But there is no
    upside to their proposed resolution designed to offend Turkey. None.

    I can think of only one other possible explanation for the Democrats'
    gratuitous insult of our vital ally during time of war.

    Their worldview often compels them to pursue actions driven by their
    so-called good intentions -- even when those actions are sure to
    result in adverse consequences to their intended beneficiaries, such
    as with promoting expansive welfare, affirmative action, nationalized
    health care, minimum wage laws, gun control and radical environmental
    measures, or opposing tax cuts and school choice.

    But in the unlikely event that the Democrats' motive isn't to undercut
    our mission in Iraq, it might as well be -- and they ought to be
    held accountable just as sternly as if it were. To the extent the
    resolution imperils American troops, it is egregiously reckless and
    indefensible at all levels.

    This must not pass without loud and fierce opposition. President
    Bush and Republican congressional representatives, along with every
    conservative commentator in this nation, should mobilize to expose
    the Democrats' proposed course of action as an outrageous assault
    on our fighting forces -- not to score political points but to deter
    these misguided renegades from endangering our troops.

    This appalling stunt must not be permitted to proceed.

    Mr. Limbaugh is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of
    Bankrupt: The Moral and Intellectual Bankruptcy of Today's Democratic
    Party, Absolute Power and Persecution.

    http://www.humanevents.com/article.p hp?id=22869
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