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  • Jan 28, 2011, 11:58 AM
    excon
    Arabs Revolt
    Hello:

    The Middle East is in revolt. It started in Tunisia. President, Zine el-Abidine Ben Alileader fled... Now, Egypt is under siege, and they're approaching a pivotal moment. Mubarak hasn't fled, and has called out the army - an army equipped and trained by the US.

    We could be looking at another Tienanmen Square moment... If Egypt goes, they're all gone.

    excon
  • Jan 29, 2011, 06:25 AM
    Just_Another_Lemming

    Good morning Ex. Hope all is well with you.

    Yes, this is a situation that is cause for grave concern. I don't believe it will turn out to be another Tiananman Square with the Egyptian government prevailing as China did. Yes, there will be many deaths. They are quickly racking up and if we ever find out the exact death toll, it won't be for a long time to come. But, the circumstances behind Tiananmen Square were far different than what is occurring in Egypt now.

    While watching news reports last night, it appeared to me the police & army fear the masses more than Mubarak's ire. One group was hiding out waiting for the current wave of excited frenzy & anger in the streets to die down a bit before they ventured out again. From comments they made, it appeared their hearts weren't into their jobs. I am not surprised. The Egyptians do not train their children to place their government before all else as the Chinese do.

    As of this morning, it appears Mubarek is now a one man operation. He has mistakenly assumed forcing his cabinet to resign and pledging reforms (without being specific) will appease the people. He has made a serious tactical error in his determination to dig in his heels and stay put. They want him gone. And he will be gone. In my mind this is more in line with the Shah of Iran's ousting than a Tiananman square situation.
  • Jan 29, 2011, 11:23 PM
    paraclete
    Ex are you saying the US has been propping up arab dictators again? And that they are the source of the dictators military power? So when are you going to invade to force democracy upon the Egyptian people? Strange how these countries that have these problems have large reserves of oil.
  • Jan 30, 2011, 06:22 AM
    Just_Another_Lemming

    Clete, we did supply the Egyptian government with military weaponry. Not sure you can call that propping up the dictators but maybe Israel will agree with you on that.

    It appears democracy is exactly what the Egyptians want so there isn't any need for us to invade the country. However, I wouldn't be surprised if we sent in some help to keep Hamas, Hezbollah, or any other extremist group from taking over the country. And yes, doing that would go hand in hand with ensuring our supply of oil isn't disrupted.
  • Jan 30, 2011, 05:54 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Just_Another_Lemming View Post
    Clete, we did supply the Egyptian government with military weaponry. Not sure you can call that propping up the dictators but maybe Israel will agree with you on that.

    It appears democracy is exactly what the Egyptians want so there isn't any need for us to invade the country. However, I wouldn't be surprised if we sent in some help to keep Hamas, Hezbollah, or any other extremist group from taking over the country. And yes, doing that would go hand in hand with ensuring our supply of oil isn't disrupted.

    I'm sure the supply of oil from Egypt to the US will not be disrupted since it isn't exactly important, but there are other issues such as the transit of US ships to and from other places, etc. Any person who has been in power for as long as Mabarak is a dictator and would own his tenue to the favourable patronage of the US, just as Saddam did so long ago. It is the price of empire. Egypt was a client state of USSR and so winning it over would have been a prize. The concern in Egypt is not Hamas or Hezbollah but the Islamic Brotherhood. Each of these places have their home grown versions of Al Qaeda, the US would be very busy if it tried to combat all of them, easier to give a local strongman support and let him kill his own, probably why the US didn't intervene when Saddam took revenge on the Shiia

    You are probably incorrect in thinking the Egyptians want democracy, what they want is an end to tyranny, the two are not the same since arabs have no tradition of democracy. In islamic countries it is normal having one person making decisions whether at government, religious or family level. Debate is not encouraged.
  • Jan 30, 2011, 08:19 PM
    tomder55

    POTUS spend very little time on foreign policy issues in his SOTU Address . He briefly paid lip service to US civilian accomplishments in Iraq and Afghanistan... Which fell in well with his general theme of 'soft power' and engagement .

    "This year, our civilians have come down, and a new government has been formed,” “This year, our civilians will forge a lasting partnership with the Iraqi people, while we finish the job of bringing our troops out of Iraq."

    "Thanks to our heroic troops and civilians, fewer Afghans are under the control of the insurgency."

    Iran :
    “Because of a diplomatic effort to insist that Iran meet its obligations, the Iranian government now faces tougher and tighter sanctions than ever before,”

    Sudan:
    “Recent events have shown us that what sets us apart must not just be our power – it must be the purpose behind it. In South Sudan – with our assistance – the people were finally able to vote for independence after years of war. "

    You get the idea .You've heard this from him before speak long and loud... carry small stick.

    Then there was Tunisia .There he supported the people who have succeeded in overthrowing a strongman corrupt despot.
    We saw that same desire to be free in Tunisia, where the will of the people proved more powerful than the writ of a dictator. And tonight, let us be clear: the United States of America stands with the people of Tunisia, and supports the democratic aspirations of all people,”

    What is happening in Tunisia is having a ripple effect throughout the Maghreb and has reached Egypt. Cairo is the place where POTUS made his infamous outreach speech to the Muslim world at Al-Azhar University . President Hosni Mubarak's family has fled the country.

    While it's all well and good to speak of the democratic aspirations of the people . He falls way short of the JFK "We shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty."

    OBL is famously quoted as saying “when people see a strong horse and a weak horse, by nature, they will like the strong horse”.

    POTUS consistently demonstrates that he prefers to be the weak horse. By backing engagement ,dialogue ,rapproachment ,and soft power ABOVE all else. He also demonstrates that he is the wrong horse.

    Jihadistan is on the march . I see a Muslim Brotherhood dominated North Africa in our future.
    The Bush doctrine was premised as offering a 3rd way... but you call it imposition even though the people have more than once went to the polls and voted in secular leadership .
  • Jan 31, 2011, 06:53 AM
    Just_Another_Lemming
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    I'm sure the supply of oil from Egypt to the US will not be disrupted since it isn't exactly important.

    I wasn't speaking about the supply of oil from Egypt. I was referring to a disruption of the flow of oil out of that region.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    You are probably incorrect in thinking the Egyptians want democracy, what they want is an end to tyranny, the two are not the same since arabs have no tradition of democracy. In islamic countries it is normal having one person making decisions whether at government, religious or family level. Debate is not encouraged.

    You are making a blanket generalization regarding the world's islamic community. I believe the Egyptian people are not that far out of touch with what is going on in the rest of the world.

    This morning, I have heard that Mubarek is listening to many other countries and is attempting to set up a more democratic style operation to appease his people. I still think they won't be happy until he is completely ousted. I guess we will just have to wait and see what ultimately happens.
  • Jan 31, 2011, 02:29 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Just_Another_Lemming View Post
    IYou are making a blanket generalization regarding the world's islamic community. I believe the Egyptian people are not that far out of touch with what is going on in the rest of the world.

    This morning, I have heard that Mubarek is listening to many other countries and is attempting to set up a more democratic style operation to appease his people. I still think they won't be happy until he is completely ousted. I guess we will just have to wait and see what ultimately happens.

    It is a generalisation to say arabs want democracy, they want change and this fueled by what they observe in other places through the media. Many countries in the islamic world have repressive governments, even those that might be democratically elected. Mubarek has sacked a number of ministers and appointed others to the posts, certainly not a democratic style of operation. It may be that Egypt will need a different constitution before a more democratic regime could take over without revolution. There apparently is no opposition and therefore few who could take over without the taint of the current regime
  • Jan 31, 2011, 06:42 PM
    tomder55

    What may have started as a legit positive profreedom protest is increasingly being coopted by the Muslim Brotherhood and other jihadists . As is too often the case ,the alternative the people will have is authoritarian military rule or radical jihadist takeover .

    You can tell the general point when the Muslim Brotherhood coopted the revolt . What started as an intense but peaceful protest became riots ,gangs of thugs who attack police and fellow protesters ,car and building fires and looting and sacking of ancient artifacts .8000 Muslim Brotherhood prisoners escaped and have joined the death squads resulting in more civilian deaths.

    Mubarak deserves whatever he gets . But what will result from this will not be better for the Egyptian people.

    I know POTUS et al is talking like they sort of support the democratic asperations . If he is sincere then where was he last year ,when the only thugs on the streets where the minions of the Mahdi hatter murdering Neda Agha-Soltan, sparking a genuine people's revolt ?

    Back then it was the Obots who thought it better to deal with the despots.
  • Jan 31, 2011, 07:09 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    it was the Obots who thought it better to deal with the despots.

    Obots, despots, is there really any difference? When a government panders to a despotic regime they make themselves the same. Obama will have no answers for this because he doesn't want to intervene in another Muslim country, one at a time is more than enough. Let a popular revolt run its course, sometimes it works, and something's get better, An assassination here, an exile there and everything goes back to being the same
  • Feb 1, 2011, 02:34 AM
    tomder55

    Quote:

    Let a popular revolt run its course, sometimes it works, and something's get better, An assassination here, an exile there and everything goes back to being the same
    Most revolutions follow the French Revolution model.. Popular revoltfirst ,then the extremists take over ,and a reign of terror and anarchy ensues... followed by the takeover by a military strongman.
  • Feb 1, 2011, 06:07 AM
    Just_Another_Lemming
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    It is a generalisation to say arabs want democracy, they want change and this fueled by what they observe in other places through the media.

    You are right. That is a generalization. One I did not make. I was specifically discussing the Egyptian people.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    Many countries in the islamic world have repressive governments, even those that might be democratically elected. Mubarek has sacked a number of ministers and appointed others to the posts, certainly not a democratic style of operation. It may be that Egypt will need a different constitution before a more democratic regime could take over without revolution. There apparently is no opposition and therefore few who could take over without the taint of the current regime

    I believe you are right about this current situation with Mubarek.

    I stand by what I said. I do believe he will be ousted as the Shah of Iran was ousted. However, I am not so quick to assume the Brotherhood will be able to take over as completely as both you and Tom do. I am taking a wait and see approach on all of this. I do recognize the Brotherhood have quickly mobilized their followers. But, many countries have diplomatic relations with Egypt for various reasons. The most important from this perspective is Israel. They will do everything they must do to ensure their interests remain a priority with the Egyptian government.

    This morning I have heard the Egyptian people who have spoken with reporters have stated they want Mubarak and his puppets out, very much want to maintain their relationships with the U.S. and Israel, and want a democratic government set up. They are naming Mohamed ElBaradei as the most practical choice to take over until a stable government is set up.
  • Feb 1, 2011, 06:36 AM
    excon

    Hello again:

    I wish I had something intelligent to say... But, I'm going to say it anyway...

    While our dependence on strong men MIGHT have worked out in the short run, it's been a failure in the long run. Iran is a good example... Did that stop us? Nope. Now, 30 years later, here we are again. We don't know whether to support the bastard we KNOW, for fear of the bastard we don't know... Which, of course, makes our claim that we support democracy a BIG LIE.

    So, who are we, after all? We're becoming MORE like the world, than the world is becoming MORE like us. I believe that our little flicker of freedom is coming to an end.

    excon
  • Feb 1, 2011, 06:45 AM
    RickJ
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Hello:

    The Middle East is in revolt. It started in Tunisia. President, Zine el-Abidine Ben Alileader fled... Now, Egypt is under siege, and they're approaching a pivotal moment. Mubarak hasn't fled, and has called out the army - an army equipped and trained by the US.

    We could be looking at another Tienanmen Square moment... If Egypt goes, they're all gone.

    excon

    Every time I think I have an opinion about what's going on and what it might mean for the future, I change my mind.

    I've come to the conclusion that I'm so far from it - and know so little - that it would be impossible for me to come to any conclusions, or make any reasonable guesses about what it could come to.

    I do, though, wonder about what's going on in Egypt particularly...

    * Why all of the sudden, with (apparently) no hint that it was coming? Was there any hint that masses were against Mubarak 6-months or a year ago?

    * With no apparent organizational leadership of the protesters, what are they thinking can happen? Even if Mubarak is a despot, what can he do now? Surely he couldn't just "step down"... or say "ok you protesters, what do you want?"

    * If Mubarak stepped down or died today, who would become leader of the country? Might s/he be "worse" than Mubarak?

    * A friend of mine proposes that there is some unknown entity who is orchestrating both the Tunisia uprising and the events in Egypt. I just cannot buy that conspiracy theory... but admittedly I have no alternative theory.

    * As for references to Tienanmen Square: If this was another "Tienanmen Square" type of thing, then wouldn't it mean that nothing comes of it? Am I wrong in remembering that the government in China basically just quashed that uprising - and made little to no significant changes as a result of it?
  • Feb 1, 2011, 06:55 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by RickJ View Post
    Am I wrong in remembering that the government in China basically just quashed that uprising - and made little to no significant changes as a result of it?

    Hello again, Rick:

    You are NOT wrong... The Chinese military massacred a bunch of demonstrators, and that "quashed" it. THAT, apparently, isn't going to happen this time... IF the Chinese hadn't done that, we'd be facing a much different China today...

    What I LOVE about this thing, is it appears to be people seeking to be free from the yolk of oppression... How can we NOT like that? That's OUR history? Certainly the Tea Party can relate with all their talk about the "tree of liberty" needing to be refurbished. Or, is that stuff just reserved for us??

    No, Rick. I don't believe this is being guided by anybody...

    excon
  • Feb 1, 2011, 07:05 AM
    RickJ
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    it appears to be people seeking to be free from the yolk of oppression... How can we NOT like that?

    As a lover of freedom and democracy I certainly DO have thoughts of support for the people protesting... but in the back of my mind I am fearful of the potential outcomes since the many questions I have about the situation are yet unanswered.

    It would be a tragedy if this did not result in more freedoms, and a move toward democracy, for Egypt and it's people.

    I wish, hope and pray that it comes to a good, positive and non violent conclusion.
  • Feb 1, 2011, 07:40 AM
    tomder55

    Rick
    Isaiah 19:2
  • Feb 1, 2011, 07:46 AM
    NeedKarma
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    Rick
    Isaiah 19:2

    That could be true of the US as well.
  • Feb 1, 2011, 07:52 AM
    tomder55

    Of course it is .
  • Feb 1, 2011, 08:18 AM
    RickJ
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    Rick
    Isaiah 19:2

    I cannot agree that Isaiah 19:2 is referring specifically to what is going on today.

    When Isaiah was written "Egyptians" meant something different than it does today.

    Generally speaking, "Egyptian against Egyptian" has, methinks, happened many times since Isaiah was written - and may very well happen many times more in the future...

    ... which may very well be true about any other group of people that we can name today...
  • Feb 1, 2011, 08:30 AM
    tomder55

    Yes ;that's why I agreed with NK's observation.

    I'll be blunt here. The US policy has been correctly identified by Ex as naiive. The current POTUS has in Carteresque fashion 'spoken stupidly ' in this crisis,not quite supporting democratic movements ,while at the same time stabbing a staunch ally in the back. Mubarak has been a voice of sanity in a very volatile region for 3 decades despite his strong arm.

    Further ,Obama did nothing to support the democratic asperations of the Iranian people when they were revolting and getting murdered in the streets by the jackboots of the jihadists . So where does he stand ? Is he for democractic reform if it's a dictator ,but against it if it's a revolt against the jihadists ? I think that's it.

    Either way his inconsistency is a source of uncertainty that friends and foes will pick up on and weaken us further .
  • Feb 1, 2011, 08:41 AM
    RickJ
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    yes ;that's why I agreed with NK's observation.

    I'll be blunt here. The US policy has been correctly identified by Ex as naiive. The current POTUS has in Cateresque fashion 'spoken stupidly ' in this crisis,not quite supporting democratic movements ,while at the same time stabbing a staunch ally in the back. Mubarak has been a voice of sanity in a very volatile region for 3 decades despite his strong arm.

    Further ,he did nothing to support the democratic asperations of the Iranian people when they were revolting against the jackboots of the jihadists . So where does he stand ? Is he for democractic reform if it's a dictator ,but against it if it's a revolt against the jihadists ? I think that's it.

    Either way his inconsistency is a source of uncertainty that friends and foes will pick up on and weaken us further .

    Clearly you know more than I do of what is going on...

    I cannot help but agree with your last point. Unless we Americans speak and do more intelligently than we have in the past many years, things can only get worse for us and our relationships with others.
  • Feb 2, 2011, 04:16 PM
    paraclete
    Hey these Arabs are revolting. Did you see the horse riders get their licks? It is hard to imagine what is going on over there. It would all stop if they use the tanks
  • Feb 2, 2011, 05:33 PM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    did you see the horse riders get their licks?...

    Hello again, clete:

    You are as warped as I thought you were.

    excon
  • Feb 3, 2011, 01:47 PM
    paraclete
    Comment on excon's post
    No ex, I expect that they were paid stooges of Mubarak
  • Feb 3, 2011, 08:13 PM
    excon

    Hello again,

    They've confiscated the cameras and hassled the journalist's. It's morning, and NO pictures are getting out... I wonder what they're planning that they DON'T want us to see. It can't be good.

    excon
  • Feb 4, 2011, 12:55 AM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by excon View Post
    Hello again,

    They've confiscated the cameras and hassled the journalist's. It's morning, and NO pictures are getting out... I wonder what they're planning that they DON'T want us to see. It can't be good.

    excon

    Ex it is business as usual for a repressive regime. If the US stood up and told Mubarak to bow to popular pressure and call an election immediately this might stop before more are dead. I expect the outcome to be either one of two scenarios; a muslim extremist organisation takes over, or the army looses patience and there is a coup
  • Feb 4, 2011, 03:58 AM
    tomder55

    Obama has recommended that Mubarak resign and hand over power to a transitional leadership headed by the new VP Omar Suleiman .
    There is no reason to believe this offer will be accepted. There is also a problem in the fact that the offer violates the Egyptian constitution. The power is supposed to be transferred to the head of the Assembly upon resignation of the President.
    Maybe the White House forgot to read the Egyptian constitution before making the offer ?

    We will learn sometime after the noon prayers Mubarak's answer. As of now ,protesters are pouring into Tahrir Square for another day of demonstrations.

    The Muslim Brotherhood is making their presence known during the riots .
    Quote:

    Brothers — distinguishable by their close-cropped beards — dominated the front lines, often lining up to pray for "victory or martyrdom," before throwing themselves into the fray, hurling stones, sticks and firebombs at the attackers while shouting "God is great."

    Amr Said, a 41-year-old chemist who said he is a Brotherhood supporter, told The Associated Press in Tahrir Square Friday morning that "our instructions are not to assume a role that is too visible at the moment, and to get along with all other groups including and leftist and liberals.

    "We also refrain from making our typically brotherhood chants and when one of us does, we quickly shut him up," he said.
    Anti-Mubarak activists pour into Tahrir Square - Yahoo! News

    There were plenty of examples of dictatorships being transitioned peacefully into democracy. Taiwan,Spain ,and the Philippines are examples of this.

    In those cases the US played a role in helping the transition ,We should've pushed Mubarak harder .

    Either a jihadist state run by the Brotherhood will emerge ;or that Tienneman scenario will play out. When that happens the revolt will go underground.
  • Feb 5, 2011, 01:56 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    Obama has recommended that Mubarak resign and hand over power to a transitional leadership headed by the new VP Omar Suleiman .

    Doesn't seem like they are going to take this suggestion any time soon. It's it funny how a well favoured regime is without support as soon as the people revolt.
  • Feb 5, 2011, 04:53 PM
    Stringer
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    Doesn't seem like they are going to take this suggestion any time soon. It's it funny how a well favoured regime is without support as soon as the people revolt.

    Agree, now we can add this to our list of bad decisions.
  • Feb 5, 2011, 05:11 PM
    paraclete
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Stringer View Post
    Agree, now we can add this to our list of bad decisions.

    Yes how is that going for you? Every dictator you support turns on you, amazing isn't it that the lesson is never learned
  • Feb 5, 2011, 05:28 PM
    Stringer

    Not happy about it, however I am not negative about everything that my country does.

    The way I see it most countries do attempt to do basically the right thing and what applies to any current situation requires action based upon those present circumstances.
  • Feb 6, 2011, 04:51 AM
    tomder55

    ... If only the State Dept knew what it was doing . The President sent special envoy Frank Wisner(AIG and State Dept veteran) to Egypt to speak to his personal friend Mubarak . He came back and stated that “President Mubarak’s continued leadership is critical — it’s his opportunity to write his own legacy.”

    He said that Mubarak should remain in power until the Sept elections so there could be a smooth transition.

    Problem is that is contradictory to the recent statements of the President and Sec State Evita Clintoon.

    The Sec State said prior to this that Mubarack must step down and hand over control to VP Omar Suleiman and Mohamed Tantawi (in complete violation of the Egyptian Constitution) .

    Evita reiterated those comments after Wisner's apparent snafu .

    Quote:

    It is hardly the first time the Obama administration has seemed uncertain on its feet during the Egyptian crisis, as it struggles to stay on the right side of history and to avoid accelerating a revolution that could spin out of control.

    The mixed messages have been confusing and at times embarrassing —
    Quote:

    When the first protesters appeared in Tahrir Square, Mrs. Clinton, working off the traditional American script that portrays Mr. Mubarak as a reliable ally in need of quiet, sustained pressure on human rights and political reform, said, “Our assessment is that the Egyptian government is stable and is looking for ways to respond to the legitimate needs and interests of the Egyptian people.”

    One week later, that script was cast aside for the first time in three decades. On Tuesday night, Mr. Obama and his top national security aides watched Mr. Mubarak’s defiant speech, in which he refused to resign but insisted he had never intended to run for re-election in September. It confirmed the conclusion they had gradually reached as the protest mounted: Instability would reign until the Mr. Mubarak got out of the way.

    “He needed a push,” said one official who was in the Situation Room with the president. When Mr. Mubarak’s speech was over, Mr. Obama called him, for what turned into a tense 30-minute conversation.

    Shortly afterward, Mr. Obama appeared in the foyer of the White House to declare that “orderly transition must be meaningful, it must be peaceful, and it must begin now.” He did not press Mr. Mubarak directly to resign, but Mr. Mubarak’s loyalists clearly interpreted it that way. The next day, government supporters were bused into the square and changed what had been a largely peaceful process in a day of rage, stone-throwing, clubbing and arrests, the most violent so far.
    By Friday, it was clear that Mr. Mubarak would not go gently, which led to the third iteration of the White House policy. In private, the administration worked to peel away Mr. Mubarak’s key supporters in the Egyptian elite. His defense minister, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, went into Tahrir Square, ostensibly to inspect the troops there, but largely to associate himself with the protesters.

    His appearance, along with a visit to the square by Amr Moussa, the head of the Arab League and a former Egyptian foreign minister under Mr. Mubarak, created the impression of the Egyptian leader’s increasing isolation.

    Mr. Obama also tried talking about Mr. Mubarak differently, almost in the past tense. He described him as a man who had made “that psychological break” and urged him to ask himself, “How do I leave a legacy behind in which Egypt is able to get through this transformative period?”

    Administration officials say that in phone calls and e-mails from the White House, the State Department and the Pentagon, they have urged a “council of elders” in Egypt to begin drafting revisions to the Constitution that could be sped through Parliament, while encouraging Mr. Suleiman to jump-start conversations with an array of opposition leaders, including the Muslim Brotherhood, from which some of Al Qaeda’s leadership emerged.

    “We are not trying to be prescriptive,” a senior Obama adviser said on Saturday. “The Egyptian leadership knows what it needs to do, and they don’t need us to lay it out in detail.”
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/06/wo...html?ref=world
    And yet the Obots continue to talk as if by some puppetry they can orchestrate the events unfolding . To make matters worse ,even the NY Slimes can't quite figure out what the Obama position is . Evidently neither can the State Dept. Certainly Egypt has no idea what the President's policy is.
  • Feb 6, 2011, 07:44 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    And yet the Obots continue to talk as if by some puppetry they can orchestrate the events unfolding

    Hello again, tom:

    When you're BLINDSIDED by your intelligence agencies, after spending BILLIONS upon BILLIONS for intelligence in THAT particular part of the world, it's understandable that you'd act like a deer caught in the headlights.

    Same thing happened to Bush. The BAD news is, that the BILLIONS we're spending to COUNTER what happened to Bush, isn't COUNTERING squat.

    excon
  • Feb 7, 2011, 08:26 AM
    tomder55

    ... that was an example of a President who cannot control the message coming out of his administration.
  • Feb 7, 2011, 08:40 AM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by tomder55 View Post
    ...that was an example of a President who cannot control the message coming out of his adminstration.

    Hello again, tom:

    It's true. Republicans are MUCH better at marching in lock step. Controlling Democrats, is like herding cats.

    excon
  • Feb 10, 2011, 05:15 PM
    tomder55

    Waited all day for Mubarak to resign. He didn't... he kicked himself upstairs ,and appointed his Pharaoh in waiting as a caretaker.

    VP Suleiman," a former army general and intelligence chief " told the crowds of protesters that they got their wish and they should go home now. When they don't ,the new Pharaoh in training will get on his mechanical chariot and send in the camel riders.

    Meanwhile a man who has no legitimate claim to leadership in Egypt , Mohammed el-Baradei called on the military to force Mubarak's hand. Nice. However, this is a very possible outcome. The military will want to preserve the Nasser regime style of governance. Mubarak has put that at risk.

    President Obama still talks like he is in control of the course of history . Here is a guy who can't control the message within his administration even when his Sec State and Special Envoy are in the same town.
    Further ;he has demonstrated that he is more than willing to overlook the horrors of worse dictators than Mubarak in attempt to 'extend the hand of friendship' to the despots.

    Looking forward for him to get on televison demanding the resignation of Castro ,Chavez ,the Mahdi-hatter in Tehran ,Kim Jong mentally-ILL ,and Hu Jintao.
    Then I'll believe he gives a damn about the liberty of the people of Egypt.
  • Feb 10, 2011, 05:28 PM
    smoothy

    Obama really wants the Muslim Brotherhood to take over and turn Egypt into another Iran. That's why he wants then out now... before proper elections can be arrainged and someone other than the muslim brotherhood terrorist organization can organize to get a chance to be duely elected.


    Or does he actually believe the country can run on autopilot until that can happen...

    He still acts more like a muslim than he does a christian.

    Morons what him out now... but NOBODY discusses exactly WHO is supposed to take over in the vacuum that would result if that actually happened.

    But then I suppose they Consider Iran... Syria, Lebonan and Yemen to be model societies.
  • Feb 10, 2011, 06:58 PM
    paraclete
    Smoothy

    Don't you think it is about time Obama did what Mubarak suggested and but out.

    At the moment what Egypt is moving towards is an orderly transition. This doesn't suit all and it probably won't result in democracy, unless democracy can be intrepreted as an election. However it also means no violent conflict. The last Egyptian president was assassinated, I expect this one wants to avoid going the same way. The whole thing ha sbeen taken over by opportinists. If the egyptians choose to resolve this under their constitution, the rule of law then they should be allowed too. Could you see Obama resigning if a million people and the Chinese leader called for his resignation?
  • Feb 10, 2011, 07:02 PM
    excon
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paraclete View Post
    At the moment what Egypt is moving towards is an orderly transition.

    Hello again, clete:

    That's not what the people want. I'll bet they GET what they want, and it won't be orderly.

    excon

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