There has been much ado lately about Iran’s nuclear program and the possibility of the little dictator, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, developing nuclear weapons.
The trouble is there has been no secret about Iran’s nuclear ambitions to either the international community or, in particular, to the United States. But now, all of a sudden, it has become a problem that must be dealt with.
Funny, Iran wasn’t a priority for neither the mainstream news media nor the liberal progressives in Washington, D.C., during the Bush Administration.
If memory serves me correctly, former President Bush wanted to deal with Iran by imposing sanctions on its nuclear program. But his political opponents opposed this idea, arguing that we had no proof that Iran was using its nuclear program to develop weapons.
However, now that a liberal progressive is in the White House, a nuclear Iran poses a threat.
Excuse me? Where was all of this concern and attention over Iran when Bush was in office and appealing for action against the Hitler of the Middle East?
The answer is that Iran was considered an inconvenient nuisance during the Bush years that the left hoped it could ignore until it got one of its own in the White House. Now that the left again resides at 1600 Pennsylvania, Iran can be addressed as the threat to national security that it has been for several years.
As far as the left-wing progressives were concerned, they didn’t want to give Bush any more war legacies by allowing Iran to grow into an international issue. Bush already had 9/11/01 and America’s response under his watch. The left certainly didn’t want to give him any more chances at being mentioned in the history books—other than as a miserable, failed President.
With its willing accomplices in the press, the left-wing succeeded in sweeping the importance of Iran under the rug until the right time.
Evidently, now that President Obama is in office, and one of their own, there is no time like the present to make Iran the issue that it should have been in the first place. Only this time, whatever happens will be under the liberals’ watch, and they are going to do everything they can now to vilify Ahmedinejad and Iran in order to create the illusion that President Obama is tough on terrorism.
But Iran notwithstanding, this isn’t the first time that international affairs have been manipulated by the left to serve its purposes.
The mainstream news media—dominated and controlled by left-wing, liberal progressives—does not report the Wars On Terror with the same fervor it did under Bush’s watch.
The tone is very different these days; more positive, less negative.
Just the other day, the media reported the deaths of eight servicemen in Afghanistan, but their deaths were swiftly tied to their acts of heroism.
When Bush was in office, there was a death toll count added to every day, and the total emphasized regularly during broadcasts. Very little was mentioned of the heroism of the soldiers who lost their lives; simply that their convoys had been the victims of an RPG attack or roadside bomb.
In fact, the news media went out of its way to dig up whatever dirt it could find and connect the U.S. military to something negative. Whether it was Abu Graib Prison or a U.S. Marine court-martialed for firing on an unarmed civilian, we could count on two negative stories about the U.S. military for every positive one.
But now, after the success of the 2008 troop surge and an improved Iraqi security force—both of which it is never mentioned occurred under Bush’s watch—the new administration is able to enjoy some military successes that it has also been able to claim as its own.
Today, negative military stories may still get reported, but not with the same urgency or frequency they had been under Bush. Instead, positive stories of military success are the focus; especially since Barack Obama is now the Commander-In-Chief. When troop losses are mentioned, their mission and acts of heroism are added to emphasize that they died bravely and for a good cause.
Where was this same spirit during the Bush Administration? A troop death was reported as another senseless loss of life; rarely, if ever, connected with what he or she may have died for and doing his or her duty.
President Obama pledged during the 2008 election that U.S. forces would be withdrawn from Iraq by 2010. By my watch, he has 14 months to achieve this objective before it can be counted as another election year broken promise.
And near as I can tell, troop reductions thus far have been subtle.
It will be interesting to note when the ball drops on Times Square at the end of next year whether or not the Iraq War so loathed by liberals will be a recent memory, or a continuing saga.
My experience following politics, and my instincts, endorse the latter.
It takes more than election-year rhetoric to end a war the right way. It takes victories.
The big question in my mind, though, is whether or not the American people are awake enough to realize that they have been hoodwinked and manipulated by a political machine these past eight years.
Some say ignorance is bliss, and I imagine for most Obama voters, that is more or less the truth.
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