The cowardice of the NY Times
Don Surber does a lengthy analysis of the NY Times' call for surrender and retreat in Iraq. He hits much of the hypocrisy of the Times.
I would like to add that the editorial board of the Times is showing its complete and utter ignorance of the military reality of the situation in Iraq, not only the one that will follow a retreat but the current situation were we are clearly winning.
Jules Crittenden calls his analysis of the Times editorial "Genocide Preferred."
Perhaps this post linking their top war correspondence is what has them so eager for retreat. But, wait, he says we are winning in Anbar. Yes, I think that explains it. This report on top of the Michael Gordon reports in the last two weeks about the success of the operations in Diyala has put a sense of desperation into the proceeding of the NY times Editorial Board. If we don't retreat now, by September, everyone is liable to know we are winning.
I would like to add that the editorial board of the Times is showing its complete and utter ignorance of the military reality of the situation in Iraq, not only the one that will follow a retreat but the current situation were we are clearly winning.
Jules Crittenden calls his analysis of the Times editorial "Genocide Preferred."
...This editorial plumbs new depths of liberal depravity.
Genocide preferred. NYT should be applauded for its honesty. An outcome that is “even bloodier and more chaotic … further ethnic cleansing, even genocide. Potentially destabilizing refugee flows … power grabs” is better than continuing the path of progress toward eliminating al-Qaeda, exposing and hopefully acting against Iran’s influence, training increasingly effective Iraqi troops, working with a nascent democratically elected government in its fits and starts.
...
Perhaps this post linking their top war correspondence is what has them so eager for retreat. But, wait, he says we are winning in Anbar. Yes, I think that explains it. This report on top of the Michael Gordon reports in the last two weeks about the success of the operations in Diyala has put a sense of desperation into the proceeding of the NY times Editorial Board. If we don't retreat now, by September, everyone is liable to know we are winning.
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