• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
Column: Is bombing Iran deja vu all over again?

Column: Is bombing Iran deja vu all over again?

June 24, 2025
Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

June 25, 2025
Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

A New Trump Plan Gives DHS and the White House Greater Influence in the Fight Against Organized Crime

June 25, 2025
New York City Democratic mayoral primary: Mamdani declares victory, Cuomo concedes before ranked choice votes are counted

New York City Democratic mayoral primary: Mamdani declares victory, Cuomo concedes before ranked choice votes are counted

June 25, 2025
Fragile ceasefire holds as Trump promises peace talks with Iran

Fragile ceasefire holds as Trump promises peace talks with Iran

June 25, 2025
New health toolkit for people with learning disabilities

New health toolkit for people with learning disabilities

June 25, 2025
Why America’s giant bunker-busting bombs may have failed to reach their target

Why America’s giant bunker-busting bombs may have failed to reach their target

June 25, 2025
Trump’s pick for appeals judge seen as ‘ill-suited’ to lifetime appointment

Trump’s pick for appeals judge seen as ‘ill-suited’ to lifetime appointment

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

How Foreign Scammers Use U.S. Banks to Fleece Americans

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Rep. Mike Quigley on intel suggesting limited damage to Iran’s nuclear program

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Trump’s pick for appeals judge draws controversy

June 25, 2025
Mexico holds first-of-its-kind nationwide judicial elections

Zohran Mamdani set to defeat Cuomo in NYC mayoral primary upset

June 25, 2025
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Faith
  • Finance and Trade
  • Our Voices
  • The Watchlist
  • Uncategorized
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
It's That Part™
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary
Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary
No Result
View All Result
It's That Part™
No Result
View All Result
Home Commentary

Column: Is bombing Iran deja vu all over again?

by Jesse It’s That Part
June 24, 2025
in Commentary
0
Column: Is bombing Iran deja vu all over again?
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Loose Weight and much more! Loose Weight and much more! Loose Weight and much more!


Create a better and healthier you! Create a better and healthier you! Create a better and healthier you!

After a short and successful war with Iraq, President George H.W. Bush claimed in 1991 that “the ghosts of Vietnam have been laid to rest beneath the sands of the Arabian desert.” Bush was referring to what was commonly called the “Vietnam syndrome.” The idea was that the Vietnam War had so scarred the American psyche that we forever lost confidence in American power.

The elder President Bush was partially right. The first Iraq war was certainly popular. And his successor, President Clinton, used American power — in the former Yugoslavia and elsewhere — with the general approval of the media and the public.

But when the younger Bush, Clinton’s successor, launched wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Vietnam syndrome came back with a vengeance. Barely three weeks after the U.S. attacked Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2002, famed New York Times correspondent R.W. Apple penned a piece headlined “A Military Quagmire Remembered: Afghanistan as Vietnam.”

“Like an unwelcome specter from an unhappy past,” Apple wrote, “the ominous word ‘quagmire’ has begun to haunt conversations among government officials and students of foreign policy, both here and abroad.”

“Could Afghanistan become another Vietnam?” he rhetorically asked. “Echoes of Vietnam are unavoidable,” he asserted.

Over the next 12 months, the newspaper ran nearly 300 articles with the words “Vietnam” and “Afghanistan” in them. The New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times ran articles mentioning Iraq and Vietnam at an average rate of more than twice a day (I looked it up 20 years ago).

The tragic irony is that President George W. Bush did what his father couldn’t: He exorcised the specter of “another Vietnam” — but he also replaced it with the specter of “another Iraq.”

That’s what’s echoing in the reaction to President Trump’s decision to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. We’re all familiar with cliches about generals fighting the last war, but journalists and politicians have the same habit of cramming the square peg of current events into the round hole of previous conflicts.

Trump’s decision to bomb Iran — which I broadly support, with caveats — is fair game for criticism and concern. But the Iraq syndrome cosplay misleads more than instructs. For starters, no one is proposing “boots on the ground,” never mind “occupation” or “nation-building.”

The debate over whether George W. Bush lied us into war over the issue of weapons of mass destruction is more tendentious than the conventional wisdom on the left and right would have you believe. But it’s also irrelevant. No serious observer disputes that Iran has been pursuing a nuclear weapon for decades. The only live question is, or was: How close is Iran to having one?

Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, told Congress in March — preposterously in my opinion — that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.” On Sunday, “Meet the Press” host Kristen Welker asked Vice President JD Vance, “So, why launch this strike now? Has the intelligence changed, Mr. Vice President?”

It’s a good question. But it’s not a sound basis for insinuating that another Republican president is again using faulty intelligence to get us into a war — just like Iraq.

The squabbling over whether this was a “preemptive” rather than “preventative” attack misses the point. America would be justified in attacking Iran even if Gabbard was right. Why? Because Iran has been committing acts of war against America, and Israel, for decades, mostly through terrorist proxies it created, trained, funded and directed for that purpose. In 1983, Hezbollah militants blew up the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon, killing 63. Later that year, it blew up the U.S. Marine barracks, also in Beirut, killing 241 Americans. In the decades since, Hezbollah and other Iranian proxies have orchestrated or attempted the murder of Americans repeatedly, including during the Iraq war. It even authorized the assassination of President Trump, according to Joe Biden’s Justice Department.

These are acts of war that would justify a response even if Iran had no interest in a nuclear weapon. But the fanatical regime — whose supporters routinely chant “Death to America!” — is pursuing a nuclear weapon.

For years, the argument for not taking out that program has rested largely on the fact that it would be too difficult. The facilities are too hardened, Iran’s proxies are too powerful.

That is the intelligence that has changed. Israel crushed Hezbollah and Hamas militants and eliminated much of Iran’s air defense system. What once seemed like a daunting assault on a Death Star turned into a layup by comparison.

None of this means that things cannot get worse or that Trump’s decision won’t end up being regrettable. But whatever that scenario looks like, it won’t look much like what happened in Iraq, except for those unwilling to see it any other way.

@JonahDispatch



Source link-

Tags: afghanistanamericadecadedecisiongeneral approvalhezbollah militantintelligenceIranIraqpresident trumpunwelcome spectervietnamwarweaponyear
Share196Tweet123Share49
Create a healthier you! Create a healthier you! Create a healthier you!
ADVERTISEMENT
Jesse It’s That Part

Jesse It’s That Part

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Trump’s Failed Attempt to Confront South Africa’s President

Trump’s Failed Attempt to Confront South Africa’s President

May 21, 2025
33 Shocking Photos Shown to Diddy’s Federal Trial Jury

33 Shocking Photos Shown to Diddy’s Federal Trial Jury

May 21, 2025
From Ukraine to Greenland, Are Trump’s Geopolitical Ambitions Driven by Mining?

Lawsuit Challenges “Unlawful” Detention of Migrants at Guantánamo Bay

June 5, 2025
Maori MPs face suspension after haka protest in New Zealand parliament

Maori MPs face suspension after haka protest in New Zealand parliament

0
FDA fluoride ban proposal stuns dentists and scientists amid health concerns

FDA fluoride ban proposal stuns dentists and scientists amid health concerns

0
WHO adopts global pandemic accord, but US absence raises concerns

WHO adopts global pandemic accord, but US absence raises concerns

0
Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

Opinion | ‘Motherhood Should Come With a Warning Label.’

June 25, 2025
Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

Trump is slated to hold a press conference at the NATO summit

June 25, 2025
How the Head of an Embattled Tennessee Youth Detention Center Held on to Power for Decades

A New Trump Plan Gives DHS and the White House Greater Influence in the Fight Against Organized Crime

June 25, 2025
Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight! Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight! Experience sustained energy, improved gut health, enhanced focus, and burn 400 calories for 9 hours straight!
ADVERTISEMENT
It's That Part™

Copyright © 2025 It's That Part.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Faith
  • Finance and Trade
  • Our Voices
  • The Watchlist
  • Uncategorized

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Our Voices
  • World News
  • Latest News
  • Commentary

Copyright © 2025 It's That Part.