RangerDave wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Find me a war Democrat administrations in power opposed.
Again, the point is not that Democrats are anti-war and Republicans are pro-war. The point is that Democrats and Republicans have different foreign policy perspectives and that we therefore get different wars at different times. Yes, once the US is engaged in a war, both parties pretty much line up behind the flag, but the original entry into the war is the issue. In the 1980s, we saw Republicans pushing for intervention against communist movements in Central America and Democrats opposing it.
Which didn't really involve actual commitment of troops, so much as funding for one side or the other.
Quote:
In the 1990s, we saw Democrats pushing for humanitarian interventions in Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Kosovo, and Republicans largely opposing those interventions. Conversely, during the 90s we also saw Republicans pushing for round two against Iraq to depose Hussein and Democrats opposing invasion in favor of containment. And that's why, when 9/11 happened, the Bush administration was hell bent on going after Iraq, while a Gore administration would have been much less likely to do so.
Bush was not "Hell bent" to go after Iraq. That came later.
Wolfowitz was hell-bent on Iraq. Second, your examples demonstrate clearly that Democrats are far more likely to commit to wars that don't even
appear to be about U.S. interests, whereas Republicans pursue military action as an extension of
this country's policy objectives.