Look Nash, you have this need to twist everything into your particular frame of reference, your particular strawman. It's your style. Unfortunately, your frame of reference is just that. It's valid for you, that's all. It's sure not an open view.
Review the whole thread.
There's a few people jumping up and down shouting "PNAC! PNAC!"
My response is "PNAC what?"
And the answer is "I don't like them".
The entire case for just war rests on WMD. You're smart enough to know that. Yeah, I gave them the benefit of the doubt on it. The time passed and now I feel the war cannot be justified. (We're stuck with it now; we have to stay with it.)
I'm the one bringing up WMD all the time? EVERYONE brings it up. It's key to the entire issue. It basically IS the issue.
That is not to say, however, that I or YOU or anyone else has any idea what they (President, Congress, Joint Chiefs) REALLY thought about the threat. Maybe they were convinced it was real, maybe they weren't. Maybe some were, some weren't. As you pointed out, everyone not involved at that level, in the end, was guessing what the intel actually said.
Now as to PNAC principles. I'm familar with the "Reader's Digest Version." Why? Because while you apparently feel PNAC is some unstoppable force, I am comfortable enough that our form of government provided checks and balances. When something gets too far out of balance, the pendulum swings back. PNAC has passed its apogee. I don't feel the need to read 90 pages of it; the short story will do. I'm not the one that can influence it in any degree anyway. For that I pretty much have to rely on the built in checks and balances.
Further, I do subscribe to
some of their principles but not necessarily for their reasons or in full. Take the one you qoute:
"the belief that America should seek to preserve and extend its position of global leadership by maintaining the preeminence of U.S. military forces".
I ABSOLUTELY believe America should maintain the preeminence of U.S. military forces. Not a doubt in my mind. However, I could really give a fig about "global leadership". That's not what matters to me. Can you understand that?
Take another one:
we need to promote the cause of political and economic freedom abroad
I basically agree with that. However, I reserve the right to disagree with PNAC's methods of achieving that goal.
So, while you try to force people into Nash-defined pigeon holes so you can slam the strawman, you have to realize that people see that tactic for what it is too.
Now, let's talk about your charge of "defending" PNAC. I have a conceptual problem here, help me out.
You say you can find nothing that PNAC has done wrong or illegal.
OK, so how is it I am "defending" them against you if you say they haven't done anything wrong?
I'm certainly not defending them against your "I don't like their political views" attack. I told you that's certainly your right to an opinion and I don't agree with them for the most part either.
What I did is point out that despite all the brouhaha about PNAC and Bush......... there's just no evidence they did anything wrong.
In fact, there's really no evidence they did anything other than what they are saying they did, which is make a decision for war on the intel they had about the threat they saw. Which, yes, turned out to be wrong.
Defend the administration's actions? Yet another strawman.
All I did is point out that there CAN be other explanations than those that you provide. There's other possibilities. As yet there's just no definitive proof either way.
I've said in this and previous threads that if there ever IS proof, I'll be calling for and working for impeachment/punishment proceedings. So I'm totally siding with them, right? Not.
It turned out to be an unjust war. Why? No WMD = no immediate threat. (That's why WMD is important, BTW; it's the only thing that fits just war theory. And why supporting statements from other intel agencies and Blix are important.)
However, being wrong alone is not enough to impeach Bush because there's no evidence that shows Bush deliberately lied us into the war.
Bush
may have just thought he was doing his job. Assign any probabillity you like to that other than "0". Because there is that prossibility to some unknown degree.
Now, until there's actual evidence... not opinion or simple frothing hate of Bush.... I'll have to go with presumption of innnocence.
I guess you won't though; your perogative.
I wish it was all simple. But it isn't. The Congress gave the President the clearance to act and he did.
Is the other method to wait for another Pearl Harbor? IE: wait until we have been attacked and someone or some country has openly declared responsibility for it and declared war on us?
Distrust and ignore all intel until an attack validates one of the intelligence estimates?
Only this isn't 1941 anymore and the weapons are a lot different.