Merry Christmas, War Is Over

By Mitch Berg

The war in Iraq is officially over.

Thanks to all the 1.5 million servicepeople who fought there over the past eight years.

To the families of the 4,500 who died – I’m sorry.  This country – and the people of Iraq – owe you more than anyone can ever pay.

15 Responses to “Merry Christmas, War Is Over”

  1. David Gray Says:

    American servicemen, truly the one percent…

  2. bosshoss429 Says:

    Welcome home and Merry Christmas, brothers and sisters. Job well done!

  3. golfdoc50 Says:

    Second the motion.

  4. Kermit Says:

    Did we win?

  5. Night Writer Says:

    Did we cover?

  6. K-Rod Says:

    No blood for 710

  7. Earsall Mackbee Says:

    Thanks to the President and the military.

  8. Terry Says:

    Well! That was worth it!
    Watch for the absence of the following in MSM reports on this story:
    -Mention of Harry Reid’s declaration that the war was lost (April 19, 2007).
    -Pretty much everything that appears in this Reuters story from 2007:
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2007/02/12/us-usa-politics-obama-idUSN0923153320070212

  9. Night Writer Says:

    Welcome home to the men and women who came back alive. My thanks, appreciation and regret for those who didn’t.

    Here’s U.S. troop videos set to Richard Thompson’s “‘Dad’s Gonna Kill Me”. I love the “welcome home” clips at the end.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1lmaW2uGcr0

  10. The Big Stink Says:

    Let’s hope we’re not back in Iraq trying to evict the Iranians anytime soon.

  11. bosshoss429 Says:

    “Thanks to the President”

    Yes, Earsell. A full 16 months after he promised you true believers during his campaign: “And I made it clear that by August 31st, 2010, America’s combat mission in Iraq would end,” Obama said. “And that is exactly what we are doing – as promised and on schedule.”

    Of course, since President Bush had set the withdrawal timeline to December 31, 2011 with the signing of the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) by U.S. and Iraq officials on Nov. 16, 2008, he will most likely blame Bush for the extra year!

  12. Terry Says:

    From the Reuters article I linked to in an earlier comment:
    Obama was not in the Senate at the time of the vote but opposed the war from the start. He has proposed a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq to be completed by the end of March 2008, and he told reporters he was uncertain how [Hillary] Clinton intended to end the conflict.
    And Obama’s response to Ally John Howard’s criticism of then-candidate Obama’s plan for unilateral withdrawal in 2008:
    “If he’s ginned up to fight the good fight in Iraq, I would suggest that he calls up another 20,000 Australians and send them to Iraq,” he said. “Otherwise it’s just a bunch of empty rhetoric.”
    Mackbee’s support of Obama’s Iraq War policy is dependent on the absence of critical examination of Obama’s Iraq War policy.

  13. PJKelly Says:

    Thanks to the servicemen and women, many of whom did not return.

    On a very separate note, I would also say thanks are due to President Bush. That man made a lot of mistakes, including how he approached the war, and his loyalty to an approach that increasingly made little sense. Despite that, however, he persevered and opted to go with the surge strategy against enormous political opposition, when that idea was very unpopular. In short, having the courage to finish the job when most others would have cut and run.

  14. bosshoss429 Says:

    Excellent points, PJ. Whenever a lib villifies President Bush, I like to remind them that a. he at least came to congress for permission, like he is supposed to, unlike the Dear Leader’s bogus journey into Libya, b. most of the DemocRATs voted for it, based on the same info, so they can’t come back now and say Bush lied, without exposing the fact that they didn’t perform their own due diligence and c. every president in history, has relied on intelligence provided by trusted government agencies before putting the country on a war footing, including Dems.

    I remember one key thing that Bush said during a press conference toward the end of his term. He responded to a reporter’s question by answering; “I wasn’t hired to be popular; I was hired to be a leader”. Something the current occupant of the office still does not understand.

  15. mnbubba Says:

    As usual, I’m a bit late to the party, but second/third/fourth the sentiment of thanks to all who served. May we all do something for those who returned with grevious wounds, whether visible or not, and for the families of those whose return was their final journey.

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