Thread: Cindy Sheehan
View Single Post
Old 19-08-05, 02:50 PM   #66
daddydirt
even the losers
 
daddydirt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Posts: 1,090
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by theknife
nice list, laddie, but well out of context: the relevant lies, for the purposes of this particular discussion, are those which were used to actively promote and sell the need to invade iraq, as told by the people who were directly in a position to launch said invasion. this eliminates anyone in congress or in the previous administration.
there was no need to actively promote and sell the need to invade Iraq thanks to the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, signed by a president named Clinton. another fact conveniently forgotten tk, shame on you.

On Regime Change in Iraq
Quote:
Believe it or not, the American call for "regime change" in Iraq didn't start with George W. Bush. For that, we must return to the days of the 105th Congress, when Bill Clinton occupied the White House. Recall a piece of legislation dubbed the "Iraq Liberation Act of 1998" (Public Law 105-338). Not only did it call for Saddam Hussein's ouster, it also spelled out the goal of replacing his regime with a democratic Iraq.

Here's what the law says: "It should be the policy of the United States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq and to promote the emergence of a democratic government to replace that regime."

You may think the Iraq Liberation Act was ramrodded down the throats of reluctant Democrats by a House and Senate dominated by conservative Republicans. Consider the final tally: The House passed the bill by a vote of 360 to 38, with 157 Democrats joining 202 Republicans and the House's one independent to back the removal of Saddam Hussein's regime. The act, with bipartisan cosponsorship of two Democrats and six Republicans, also passed the Senate by unanimous consent. And Bill Clinton signed it into law on Oct. 31, 1998, declaring at the time that the evidence was overwhelming that freedom and the rule of law "will not happen under the current Iraq leadership."

Yes, regime change has been articulated by the administration, world without end. Bush did it again during his televised news conference on Thursday night. But that policy, along with support for a defeated Iraq's transition to democracy, was embraced years earlier by Bill Clinton and a bipartisan Congress.
daddydirt is offline   Reply With Quote