Bartholomew Gallacher
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- 2002
Here's an interesting piece by Matt Taibbi in the Rolling Stone, named: "Donald Trumps's plan for the Middle East and Syria: nothing unites our political class more like the threat of ending our never-ending war."
Basically Taibbi muses, that Trump pulling out of Syria, Afghanistan and maybe the NATO might be more than enough to alienate some of the more hawkish Republicans in a way, that they want to get rid of him - and if it is by impeachment together with the Democrats, then so be it. The author himself considers the troops being there a waste of resources and money, finds America being at war at the moment with seven countries just ridiculous and believes the population has been kind of brainwashed into believing that such long conflicts are normal, where they should be not. So basically he agrees with those moves, even if Trump does them maybe for the wrong reasons.
In the end he concludes America is not divided into Repulicans and Democrats, the poor and the rich, but foremost between the war party and everything else, and the war party most surely is ready for a coming-out party in his opinion:
The Democrats’ plan until now was probably to impeach Trump in the House using at minimum some material from the Michael Cohen case involving campaign-finance violations.
That plan never had a chance to succeed in the Senate, but now, who knows? Troop withdrawals may push a collection of hawkish Republicans like Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, Ben Sasse and maybe even Mitch McConnell into another camp.
Basically Taibbi muses, that Trump pulling out of Syria, Afghanistan and maybe the NATO might be more than enough to alienate some of the more hawkish Republicans in a way, that they want to get rid of him - and if it is by impeachment together with the Democrats, then so be it. The author himself considers the troops being there a waste of resources and money, finds America being at war at the moment with seven countries just ridiculous and believes the population has been kind of brainwashed into believing that such long conflicts are normal, where they should be not. So basically he agrees with those moves, even if Trump does them maybe for the wrong reasons.
In the end he concludes America is not divided into Repulicans and Democrats, the poor and the rich, but foremost between the war party and everything else, and the war party most surely is ready for a coming-out party in his opinion:
The Democrats’ plan until now was probably to impeach Trump in the House using at minimum some material from the Michael Cohen case involving campaign-finance violations.
That plan never had a chance to succeed in the Senate, but now, who knows? Troop withdrawals may push a collection of hawkish Republicans like Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, Ben Sasse and maybe even Mitch McConnell into another camp.
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