lyion wrote:Incorrect. The surge is the brainchild of General Petraeus. He was confirmed by Congress unanimously recently, and after laying his plans out for Iraq. He has also been back several times to brief congress and answer questions.
Lets not cloud this please. We aren't talking about whose IDEA the surge was. We are talking about the SOLE official who ordered it. Or are you saying that it's General Petraeus that has the power to increase troop levels into different countries at the expense of other areas, extend tours of duty, move the national guard into the army - all neccessitating huge spending increases - and do so without the President's explicit orders?
Again, incorrect or we wouldn't be in the middle of wriggling for how to pay for General Petraeus' troop surge strategy. However, I do feel you don't rightly respect the separation of powers provided the legislative and executive branches. There is only one Commander in Chief, not many.
Are the new troops, ordered by Bush, currently on the ground in Iraq? If they aren't yet and are waiting for funds to pull through before embarking, I retract. I wasn't under the impression this was the case though.
You're missing the point of what I'm saying:
Bush decides to send in an additional surge of troops. He may get advice from generals and his think tanks, but this expensive decision is made and put into effect by a single man (him). In spite of the costs and manpower being used, it is at no point put up to vote, given for approval by any other body, subject to official justification, or any oversight. THIS IS WITHIN HIS POWERS AS COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. BUT:
Congress is the only body able to give funding. But Bush's decision has already sent extra troops, and now the gigantic bill has been placed in front of them in spite of the fact that the decision was unwanted, unpopular, and pretty obviously going to get us nowhere.
In other words, Bush has raked up a huge and unwanted $ bill $, and THEN starts spewing ridiculous nonsense about supporting the troops and legislative irresponsibility when the legislature doesn't bow to his whim and give him his blank check on his own irresponsible decision.
No funds tend to make any operation tougher to run. That isn't rhetoric, it's simple common sense.
Lets try an analogy.
A group of 20 friends are having a party. They ordered 10 pizzas and the pizzas REALLY SUCKED!!! Everyone hated them, they were shitty pizzas.
ONE of the friends decides, without asking anyone else, to order 20 more pizzas, all with anchovies and all that other gross shit. Everyone tells him he's a retard and they want no part of this shitty mountain of suck-pizza. But he does it anyways. Then when the delivery boy shows up, and the pizza-buying friend demands they all pay their share for the new pizzas, and throws a tantrum and calls them bad names at them (like irresponsible, and not supportive of the pizza man!!) when they say "Uhh.. why should we? We were clear no one wanted this."
This is pretty much what Bush is doing, only it's troops instead of pizza.