Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Gates: Obama White House Spent All Their Time Bashing Bush…

Weasel Zippers

"ROBERT GATES: I think the book is clear that when the president responded to Hillary’s comments that he was vaguely agreeing that opposition to the surge broadly had been political. And I absolutely believe that, having lived through that in the spring of 2007 up on the Hill. There are two things that made me remember what Hillary had said.
"The first was that I was on the opposite side of the table. Admiral Mullen and I used to joke, particularly in the first months of the Obama administration, when kind of every meeting in The Situation Room, everybody would trash the Bush administration and everything the Bush team. You know, what a bunch of bums the Bush team were and everything. And we’re sitting there thinking, what, are we invisible? We were integral members of that team, and so the fact that she would say something like that." ...

Is Chris Christie Less Believable Than Tawana Brawley?


Ann Coulter  "I agree with MSNBC. I find it hard to believe that Gov. Chris Christie knew nothing about his staff's plotting a massive traffic jam on the ramp to the George Washington Bridge for political retribution.

"On the other hand, I also find it hard to believe that Obama didn't know his own IRS was auditing his political enemies.

"And I find it hard to believe that Obama didn't know you wouldn't be able to keep your doctor under Obamacare.

"But most of all, I find it hard to believe that MSNBC host Al Sharpton didn't know Tawana Brawley was lying when she claimed to have been gang-raped by rogue cops on the Wappingers Falls, N.Y., police force." Full article.
 
....
Coulter concludes with this appropriate question (that I expect Chris Matthews will condemn as racist). "What kind of culture exists at MSNBC to encourage such willful blindness?"

'Oh, Kylie! What did you do? Next time, please don’t...': What mother told Military Cross hero daughter who twice braved hails of bullets to tend war wounded

UK Daily Mail 
Lance Corporal Kylie Watson, 23, is one of only four women in history to have been awarded the Military Cross
"When Lance Corporal Kylie Watson was summoned to the office of her commanding officer for a ‘fireside chat’ she feared the worst. ‘Do you know why you are here?’ he asked the combat medic. ‘Am I in trouble, Sir?’ she enquired. ‘No,’ he told her. ‘You’ve been awarded the Military Cross.’
"The 23-year-old, whose tour of Afghanistan’s Helmand province was her first as a fully qualified battlefield medic, was stunned.
" ‘Are you sure you’ve got the right soldier?’ she asked. But there was no mistake. The extraordinary heroism she displayed by twice running into Taliban fire to treat wounded comrades had been recognised with one of the UK’s highest honours."   Read more.

...."The motto of the Royal Army Medical Corps is ‘In Arduis Fidelis’: Steadfast in Adversity. And so Lance Corporal Kylie Watson MC has proved."

Benghazi-gate Update: Obama Admin knew with 15 MINUTES it was a Terror Attack:


 
Lieberman: Benghazi ‘Obviously a Terrorist Attack by Any Definition of Terrorism’  "Former Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) told a House committee this morning that the Obama administration rush to blame the Benghazi attack on an anti-Muhammad video underscored the White House’s narrow definition of Islamic terrorism."

These next two from Lucianne
 
Senate report: Attacks on U.S. compounds in Benghazi could have been prevented
“In spite of the deteriorating security situation in Benghazi and ample strategic warnings, the United States Government simply did not do enough to prevent these attacks and ensure the safety of those serving in Benghazi,” said Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Benghazi: Obama Administration Lied Before They Lied  ... "In the fall of 2012, the Obama White House was focused on re-election to the point that it was shutting its real duties out. President Obama was shutting his own real duties out, campaigning far more than governing. He hadn’t met with his jobs council in months. He was skipping his daily security intel briefings. The Sept. 10 release was sent out to make him look presidential, without actually performing the duties of president. There was no security meeting, and no forces were actually moved around anywhere to gear up for the 9-11 anniversary. There was a conference call, a conversation, and a press release."   Bryan Preston

Robert Gates: Harry Reid Calling Iraq War “Lost” Was “One of The Most Disgraceful Things I’ve Heard A Politician Say”…


 
"Then again, this is Harry Reid we’re talking about."

Via Free Beacon:

“The troops believed and still believe that they were being successful in their mission,” Gates said. “So I think they were able, to a certain extent, to set aside the politics here at home.”
But, Gates continued, “When you have somebody like the Senate Majority Leader come out in the middle of the surge and say ‘this war is lost’, I thought that was one of the most disgraceful things I’ve heard a politician say.”
“That sends a riveting message to kids who are putting their lives on the line every day that they’re doing it for nothing,” Gates noted, “and that was absolutely not the case.”

Obama: A New Kind of Commander-in-Chief; In Bob Gates’s first memoir, other presidents are more loyal and serious.

Michael Barone  Gates' book "presents a significantly more negative picture of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton than Gates’s statements in office led anyone to expect.

"And it presents an interesting contrast with Gates’s previous memoir, ...
To be sure, Gates in Duty says many positive things about his most recent former colleagues. He calls Obama’s decision to target Osama bin Laden the “most courageous” presidential decision he has seen.

"He praises Clinton’s judgment, her sense of humor, and her penchant for hard work. Though he doesn’t make the point explicitly in the excerpt, the secretary of state and secretary of defense weren’t constant and mistrustful antagonists.

"But he also presents some damning testimony. Listening to Obama soon after he had ordered a surge of troops into Afghanistan, “I thought: The president doesn’t trust his commander, can’t stand [Hamid] Karzai, doesn’t believe in his own strategy and doesn’t consider the war to be his. For him, it’s all about getting out.' ” ...
....
And the reason for Barone's title of his column:
"In the excerpts from Duty, Gates seems to take a similar view of George W. Bush, a “mature leader” who on the Iraq surge “risked reputation, public esteem, credibility, political ruin and the judgment of history on a single decision he believed was the right thing for the country.”

"But the excerpts suggest that Gates sees Obama as out of line with the continuity he admires in his predecessors."