Posted on 02/13/2005 10:17:48 PM PST by F14 Pilot
We need the Post to point out the obvious? Democracy for the Middle East = Secular governments....a real pickle. I say develop an alternative energy to oil and let's bug out of there in the long run.
Boy, the Post is just churning out derrogatory articles 24/7, aren't they?
the poor Post.
Our vision was to let the people of Iraq vote for the government they decided they wanted.
That was really it.
I know they can't believe it's something so simple.
One of the guys at the top of this 'anti-US' list is Chalabi who was accused by these same media morons as being a US puppet for the last few years.
Isn't Robin Wright the Post's fashion editor? Who let her into the news section?
Obviously the Post is hoping for the worst. How awful if Iraq proves Bush right by becoming a regime hostile to the autocrats who run the Arab league!
There they go quoting Juan Cole again. I can spot his name in an article and then tell you what the message of the piece will be. NYTimes, WaPo ... MAN! that guy makes the rounds!
"It'll NEVER work", you say? Yeah, I got that, already. Thanks, Juan. NEXT! [rolleyes]
Bump for later ....
They don't tell you that the mullahcracy in Iran is the exception, not the rule.
You are free to believe the Post, however, if you wish...
Dear, the puppy needs to go--put down some more Washington Post.
I agree. There are many educated folks in Iran that had a good life inder the Shah. Unfortunately a minority gained control and has held fast. If any country can make democracy work in the ME it is Iran. Give them 8-10 years?
exactly!
That is a big difference between secular people of Iran and the silly radicals in the Arab world.
I have a German friend who travelled to Iran 3 years ago and he told me, Iran is like europe of the middle east. People are secular and they are very chic and modern.
I was surprised by his quotes
In the Old Days the CIA would have gone in deposed Saddam and installed a puppet. It may not have been pretty but it would keep the peace in the region.
The Shiite leaders say there is a similar but less formal agreement that clerics will also be excluded from running the government ministries. "There will be no turbans in the government," said Adnan Ali, a senior leader of the Dawa Party, one of the largest Shiite parties. "Everyone agrees on that."Anti-Iraq leftists and paleocons are trying to spin the election results as a defeat for Bush, that is the trendy new thing to do. In fact, the leaders of the main Shi'ite coalition said they intended for secular rule. Their slogan is:
There will be no turbans [clerics] in the governmentI won't believe that the new Shi'ite rulers of Iraq are going to create a theocracy until I see it. Until then, I'll take them at their word.
Author can not understand the basic values of freedom and democracy and freedom to choose.
She should be sent to college again!
Yup. I've seen his name pop up all over. He was the first to discover that the Iraqi elections were actually bad for Bush </sarcasm> He's been saying that the Shi'ites will turn the country into an Islamofascist state (although he wouldn't use that term because it's declasse)
If, on the 1st day of the offical gov't they all wore stetsons, the Post etal woild blow a gasket. It would be so funny. I can hope, can't I?
I'm not sure it is that simple. We don't want the resulting government to be hostile to the U.S.
That said, I also don't buy much of what the Washington Post spins on anything. Also, it is still an unfolding situation. The party with the most power may be a religous islamic sympathetic goverment, but they have not yet become totalitarian.
What the post is doing is predicting the future one day after the results of the election. That is not news. That is opinion. Was the article written as an editorial? I did not look.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.