[quote name='mykevermin']While I do not agree with drone strikes or NDAA, I'll be honest and say that with the drawing down in both Afghanistan and Iraq, I'm tepid on Obama's military actions. I'm glad we're finally leaving - and we have to acknowledge that we couldn't just pack everyone and everything up and walk away. Timetables and plans are necessary to draw down. Yes, it has taken longer than I would like - but it's moving in the direction I want it to.
Drone strikes ≠ neoconservative principles of preemptive war in action.[/QUOTE]
Neoconservatives love preemptive wars. They practically wrote the book on the subject. Obama simply stuck to the timetables set up by Bush. That's unacceptable.
Simply put, we're not leaving. We'll have troops stationed in these countries until 2024. You're giving Obama a pass out of sheer partisan hackery. At least you're showing some level of disdain for his military actions.
[quote name='mykevermin']
Obama hasn't done everything I've wanted to see in terms of defense and military engagement, but at the end of the day, he's moving in the direction I wanted him to.
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So bombing other countries and killing civilians without a declaration of war is the direction you want him to move in?
[quote name='mykevermin']
The idea that support for any military engagement means that us who were against the war are hypocrites is a figment of the imagination and a red herring. The NDAA is a bothersome piece of legislation, however, and drone strikes bothersome as well. That is not, to me, comparable to spending trillions of dollars to start two wars (and threaten one versus the third, as Bush did with Iran and Romney promises to do with Iran and threatens to do with China) that had little to nothing to do with us.
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Oh trust me, I'm not saying the right does a better job in this field. In fact, I'd say they do a worse job (I could be wrong though. When was the last time we had a democrat in office who didn't get us entangled in some sort of foreign war that had little to do with us?).
[quote name='mykevermin']
Obama accomplished what Bush could not in Afghanistan. Obama accomplished, with little resources and minimal loss of life, what would have been another trillion dollar cluster

if Bush or Romney did it.
It's not perfect, but it *is* apples and oranges.
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Maybe, maybe not. You couldn't possibly know this to be true (and neither could I). I'm assuming by accomplish you mean the killing of Bin Laden. Well, I still think they should have captured and tried him rather than just kill him on the spot.
[quote name='mykevermin']
As for Guantanamo, it's fallacious to say it's all on Obama - he's experienced not just Republican opposition, but Congressional opposition. If we accept (and we should) that not every Guantanamo detainee should be released (those we should charge should remain detained), then we must find some place to put them. There was much hand-wringing amongst Congresspersons, few to none willing to put the detainees in their district due to (irrational) public fears of "danger" or whatnot. Lacking someone willing to be reasonable and detain those who have been charged to face trial in the federal court system, Obama is left with either keeping it open or letting everyone go.
Now, Obama should be able to find *someone* or *some* jurisdiction willing to actually do something with the detainees who should be charged. Thing is, we did this - our nation created this mess, and we don't want to put them through our criminal system, nor do we want to let them go. How can we, knowing that, hold Obama solely accountable for that?[/QUOTE]
He could have closed it if he really wanted to. How long did democrats control both houses? He promised he would do it on day one.
If I seem a little angry, it's because these were the main reasons I voted for Obama last election and he didn't deliver on his promises.