Rhetoric to drive a tough policy is different from the solemn duty -- the sacred duty -- to decide between peace and war in only the most exacting terms. As they say, war should be a last resort, a situation none of those speakers faced in the Middle East but which Bush waltzed to on no more than the exhortations of neo-cons, or so it seems. And this gives him the benefit of the doubt regarding his own (culpable?) intent.
Neither the President , the Congress nor the Supreme Court has the power to deny a state of war that is thrust upon us from without.Thay is why we are at war with Al Quieda.
The war with Saddam Hussein was in progress for more than ten years , it could have been ended with a withdrawal or with a re-invasion to bring about a conclusion.
Why would it have been better to preserve a status quo of ongoing low level war ?
Or why would it have been better to hand Saddam an unearned vctory?
Why do we assume that Al Queda would haveremained uninvolved in Iraq n either of these two cases?
I think that the case is incompletely made o simply deplore the bad situation and the waye came to it , to complete the case it needs to be shown how one of the other avalible choices would not have led us to the same pass or worse.