About 35% of the American public are committed hawks; about 30% are committed doves; about 20% blow any which way that day's or week's news is blowing: if news is good then they are pro-war; if news is bad, then they are anti-war. And about 15% never care enough to decide what they are.
Any analysis of the SALIENT ups and downs of the first three years of the Iraq War proves this: when Baghdad fell; when Saddam was caught; when good elections were held - then the war went up in overall popularity. This is because the fair-weather hawks decided that because of that week's news the war was okay. When these folks think the war is going badly they become doves.

Our combat troops will be needed in Iraq for between one and two years more - according to most analysts, with a perhaps tens of thousands to remain there, on base in Iraq, in order to assist in a continued training and advisory capacity for as long as needed - JUST LIKE IN WE DID IN SOUTH KOREA. This is a reasonable outcome for Iraq, JUST AS IT WAS FOR SOUTH KOREA.

I for one feel that we can and should make the same opened ended commitment to Iraq as we made for South Korea - and Japan and Western Europe.
Those who claim we don't have the resources are flat pour wrong: we began to fight and eventually won WW2 while mired in a deep DEPRESSION, while unemployment was at its worst. We remain committed to Western Europe from 1946 to 1950 even though our efforts to rebuild it had ALL FAILED UP TO THEN: YUP: The Marshall Plan was not enacted until 1950. There FOUR FULL YEARS OF LACKLUSTER RESULTS UNTIL 1950, BUT AMERICA DID NOT BUG OUT - AS THE LEFT WOULD NOW HAVE US DO!
We can and should do whatever it takes to make sure Iraq doesn't collapse under al Qaeda or Iranian hegemony. It's in in our national interest, the interest of the region, and the free World. Those who decry these goals as unfeasible are wrong, amoral and myopic doves who should be ignored. We must ignore them now; we mustn't repeat the errors of Vietnam.
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