Sandy Berger Headlines
Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review) August 28, 2008, 2:23 am EDT The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following. |
The wrath of women scorned (Warren Advocate) August 27, 2008, 7:15 pm EDT TO THE end, they made her their winner. "Hill-ary … the nominee", they chanted in the filled underground Manhattan gymnasium where Hillary Clinton held her final victory celebration. Five months of campaigning ended with a win in South ... |
William Klein: Play TV Talking Heads Rope-A-Dope Poker (HuffingtonPost) August 27, 2008, 3:39 pm EDT The networks' convention coverage can be so mind-numbingly tedious that viewers are concocting their own strategies for staying awake. |
Just Over Half of Democrats Say Bill Clinton Likes Obama and Wants Him to Win (Rasmussen Reports via Yahoo! News) August 27, 2008, 11:12 am EDT Bill Clinton is expected to talk about himself at the Democratic National Convention tonight and then leave town before Barack Obama's acceptance speech. But just over half of Democrats believe there is no animosity between the two men and that ... |
Belles in Hell's Kitchen (Santa Fe Reporter) August 27, 2008, 6:31 am EDT My mother, a PhD in Women’s Studies, finds my obsession with food bewildering. “How can anybody care so much about all that?” she groans. As writers Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page say: “Food has become our national ... |
Media bias is in eye of beholder (Herald & Review) August 27, 2008, 1:23 am EDT The presidential campaign is beginning to grow even more heated, with the Democratic National Convention this week and the Republican convention the week following. |
No Nastiness In Springfield? (Brent Bozell III via Yahoo! News) August 27, 2008, 3:00 am EDT For two years now, we've heard Barack Obama's media allies tell us how he was somehow Not a Politician, that he was the pragmatic soul of civility who was "uniquely qualified to nudge the country toward the color purple." (So said Newsweek.) If ... |
Letters (Colorado Springs Independent) August 7, 2008, 6:40 am EDT Out with NASCAR Call me anti-American, but isn't NASCAR (and all other manner of gas-guzzling, eardrum-splitting, quasi-sports) among the biggest examples of waste and stupidity? |
Back Pocket
- The Samuel “Sandy” Berger Scandals
(Feb 03, 2007)
- The Events Leading to the Sandy Berger Scandal
(Jan 30, 2007)
- Twirling the Cognitive Kaleidoscope
(Jan 25, 2006)
- Be Vigilant
(Jan 23, 2006)
- Nuclear Saber Rattling
(Jan 22, 2006)
- John Stossel takes flak over Education Spending
(Jan 18, 2006)
- Kennedy's Children's Book
(Jan 17, 2006)
- Specter Walks the Line
(Jan 15, 2006)
- You say Alito I say Alioto
(Jan 09, 2006)
- 10 Foolish Myths
(Dec 28, 2005)
Past Articles
- Tuesday, December 27
- A Pay Raise for Senator PorkBarrel (0)
- Thursday, December 01
- Iraq Strategy: Executive Summary (13)
- Wednesday, November 09
- The Fair Tax - An Overview (0)
- Monday, September 12
- Take Back the Memorial (37)
- Friday, September 09
- Presidents are not perfect (37)
- Katrina Relief Effort (0)
- Saturday, September 03
- Hillary Clinton: Democrats Are Betting On the Wrong Horse (78)
- Friday, September 02
- Instantly Pinpoint Your Political Identity (38)
- Friday, August 26
- Pat Robertson the Assasinator... (43)
- Thursday, August 25
- You can lead the media to a proud military mom, but you can't make them think. (19)
Older articles
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Posted by: archiveguard on Dec 01, 2005 - 08:03 PM
OUR NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR VICTORY IN IRAQ:
Helping the Iraqi People Defeat the Terrorists and Build an Inclusive
Democratic State
Index |
Summary |
Part I |
Part II |
8 Pillars
- Victory in Iraq is Defined in Stages
- Short term, Iraq is making steady progress in
fighting terrorists, meeting political milestones, building democratic
institutions, and standing up security forces.
- Medium term, Iraq is in the lead defeating
terrorists and providing its own security, with a fully constitutional
government in place, and on its way to achieving its economic potential.
- Longer term, Iraq is peaceful, united, stable, and
secure, well integrated into the international community, and a full
partner in the global war on terrorism.
- Victory in Iraq is a Vital U.S. Interest
- Iraq is the central front in the global war on terror. Failure in
Iraq will embolden terrorists and expand their reach; success in Iraq
will deal them a decisive and crippling blow.
- The fate of the greater Middle East -- which will have a profound
and lasting impact on American security -- hangs in the balance.
- Failure is Not an Option
- Iraq would become a safe haven from which terrorists could plan
attacks against America, American interests abroad, and our allies.
- Middle East reformers would never again fully trust American
assurances of support for democracy and human rights in the region -- a
historic opportunity lost.
- The resultant tribal and sectarian chaos would have major
consequences for American security and interests in the region.
- The Enemy Is Diffuse and Sophisticated
- The enemy is a combination of rejectionists, Saddamists, and
terrorists affiliated with or inspired by Al Qaida. Distinct but
integrated strategies are required to defeat each element.
- Each element shares a common short-term objective -- to intimidate,
terrorize, and tear down -- but has separate and incompatible long-term
goals.
- Exploiting these differences within the enemy is a key element of
our strategy.
- Our Strategy for Victory is Clear
- We will help the Iraqi people build a new Iraq with a
constitutional, representative government that respects civil rights and
has security forces sufficient to maintain domestic order and keep Iraq
from becoming a safe haven for terrorists. To achieve this end, we are
pursuing an integrated strategy along three broad tracks, which together
incorporate the efforts of the Iraqi government, the Coalition,
cooperative countries in the region, the international community, and
the United Nations.
- The Political Track involves working to
forge a broadly supported national compact for democratic governance by
helping the Iraqi government:
- Isolate enemy elements from those who can
be won over to the political process by countering false propaganda and
demonstrating to all Iraqis that they have a stake in a democratic Iraq;
- Engage those outside the political process
and invite in those willing to turn away from violence through
ever-expanding avenues of participation; and
- Build stable, pluralistic, and effective
national institutions that can protect the interests of all Iraqis, and
facilitate Iraq's full integration into the international community.
- The Security Track involves carrying
out a campaign to defeat the terrorists and neutralize the insurgency,
developing Iraqi security forces, and helping the Iraqi government:
- Clear areas of enemy control by remaining
on the offensive, killing and capturing enemy fighters and denying them
safe-haven;
- Hold areas freed from enemy influence by
ensuring that they remain under the control of the Iraqi government with
an adequate Iraqi security force presence; and
- Build Iraqi Security Forces and the
capacity of local institutions to deliver services, advance the rule of
law, and nurture civil society.
- The Economic Track involves setting the
foundation for a sound and self-sustaining economy by helping the Iraqi
government:
- Restore Iraq's infrastructure to meet
increasing demand and the needs of a growing economy;
- Reform Iraq's economy, which in the past
has been shaped by war, dictatorship, and sanctions, so that it can be
self-sustaining in the future; and
- Build the capacity of Iraqi institutions
to maintain infrastructure, rejoin the international economic community,
and improve the general welfare of all Iraqis.
- This Strategy is Integrated and its Elements are Mutually Reinforcing
- Progress in each of the political, security, and economic tracks
reinforces progress in the other tracks.
- For instance, as the political process has
moved forward, terrorists have become more isolated, leading to more
intelligence on security threats from Iraqi citizens, which has led to
better security in previously violent areas, a more stable
infrastructure, the prospect of economic progress,
and expanding political participation.
- Victory Will Take Time
- Our strategy is working: Much has been accomplished
in Iraq, including the removal of Saddam's tyranny, negotiation of an
interim constitution, restoration of full sovereignty, holding of free
national elections, formation of an elected government, drafting of a
permanent constitution, ratification of that constitution, introduction
of a sound currency, gradual restoration of neglected infrastructure,
the ongoing training and equipping of Iraqi security forces, and the
increasing capability of those forces to take on the terrorists and
secure their nation.
- Yet many challenges remain: Iraq is overcoming
decades of a vicious tyranny, where governmental authority stemmed
solely from fear, terror, and brutality.
- It is not realistic to expect a fully functioning democracy,
able to defeat its enemies and peacefully reconcile generational
grievances, to be in place less than three years after Saddam was
finally removed from power.
- Our comprehensive strategy will help Iraqis overcome remaining
challenges, but defeating the multi-headed enemy in Iraq -- and ensuring
that it cannot threaten Iraq's democratic gains once we leave --
requires persistent effort across many fronts.
- Our Victory Strategy Is (and Must Be) Conditions Based
- With resolve, victory will be achieved, although not by a date
certain.
- No war has ever been won on a timetable and neither will this
one.
- But lack of a timetable does not mean our posture in Iraq (both
military and civilian) will remain static over time. As conditions
change, our posture will change.
- We expect, but cannot guarantee, that our force posture will
change over the next year, as the political process advances and
Iraqi security forces grow and gain experience.
- While our military presence may become less visible, it will
remain lethal and decisive, able to confront the enemy wherever it
may organize.
- Our mission in Iraq is to win the war. Our troops will return
home when that mission is complete.
Index |
Summary |
Part I |
Part II |
8 Pillars
|
Pocket Lint
In 1940, teachers were asked what they regarded as the three major problems in American schools. They identified the three major problems as: Littering, noise, and chewing gum. Teachers last year were asked what the three major problems in American schools were, and they defined them as: Rape, assault, and suicide.
-- William Bennett (1993)
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