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The Bush/Gore Contest with an alternate ending

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yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
20,577
432
126
Originally posted by: DonVito
Originally posted by: Genx87
I love how the OP pleas for civility when his title is such flamebait.

True indeed. I imagine it will only be a member of time until he starts threatening other members and gets banned again, though.

As to the main topic, I imagine 9/11 would likely have occurred under Gore, but I am quite sure his reaction would have been very different. Operation Enduring Freedom would probably have happened, but since his cabinet and Pentagon staff wouldn't have consisted of PNAC signatories, we would sure as hell not be at war in Iraq. I imagine things would have been back to normal within a year or so - whether that would be a better outcome depends on your political perspective, but it sounds a lot better to me.

The notion that OEF would have turned into a massively lethal Iranian proxy war is obviously silly speculation - I see no reason to believe this would have occurred.

I think I agree most with this. According to both retired general G. Norman Schwarzkopf's and retired general Jamer Horner's autobiographies, it was Cheney that was pushing hard to go into Iraq in '91 - it was then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell's job to "handle" him. Without his overly hawkish presence and others who echoed that sentiment I imagine another Iraqi invasion would never have occurred.
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
0
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
If...had...

Does it really matter since it's all speculation?
Well,,,lets think here,,,,. Are you talking about my post or the notion that 3000 + have died for nothing?????
 

CADsortaGUY

Lifer
Oct 19, 2001
25,162
1
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www.ShawCAD.com
Originally posted by: Ozoned
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
If...had...

Does it really matter since it's all speculation?
Well,,,lets think here,,,,. Are you talking about my post or the notion that 3000 + have died for nothing?????

The whole idea of speculating about what if gore... doesn't matter as it's nothing more than speculation with 7 years of hindsight to distort things. I guess I just don't see the point.
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
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Originally posted by: Rogodin2
Gore and Clinton never believed that 'premptive war' was viable. It's only been Hitler and GHWB (that attract enough historcal attention to make manifest) that used such a strategy.

One single American and Iraq life aren't worth the billions of dollars that sustain the american way of life. You are all responsible.

Rogo
Everthing in our worlds history has led us to where we are now. That being 6.6 billion mouths to feed in this world, and currently it is the western way of life that makes that possible. You are correct, we are responsible.

 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
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Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
Originally posted by: shinerburke
Originally posted by: JEDIYoda
Originally posted by: Craig234
I agree with other posters that Gore would have done more about Al Queda, and that he may not have prevented 9/11. I do think he'd have gotten bin Laden and other Al Queda leaders in response. I'm not sure what he'd have done about Saudi Arabia (the Bush family is close to the Saudi ruling family), but he very likely would not have gone to war in Iraq.

You have to be kidding?? right?
Gore didn`t even see combat! Gore was supposedly a military journalist...that`s even debated!!!


What does that have to do with the price of tea in China?

He's being a masterdebator!
9/11 - yep. Flying saucer attacks seemed as likely.

Afghanistan- Don't know. He might have invaded, or launched missiles.

Iran wouldn't be nearly as much of an issue, since the catalyst for the current extremists coming to power was the Axis speech. We would probably be normalizing relations now and the hard core clerics and abuwahatver would be on a bus to nowhere.

Iraq- NFW.

My guess is that we'd still have an impotent Saddam, a more stable Iran, and no IraqI war, with far more international support in going after terrorists.


Creating a Jewish state in the middle east is what pissed them off.
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
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Originally posted by: rpanic
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
If Gore or anybody else would have been elected over Bush, America would be a hell of a lot better off than we are now.

So true, at least we wouldn't be so hated if nothing else.
Who hates us, and how did you come to that conclusion????
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
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Originally posted by: QuantumPion
Originally posted by: bamacre
To think that Gore would have invaded Iraq is quite looney.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JE48XHKG64

wow i think he gained all the weight that clinton lost






9/11 still would have happened. probably would have started a bombing campaign and eventually troops on the ground in afghanistan. not sure if we'd have 'gotten' bin laden yet (iraq, being flat, is better suited to our northern-european plains focused military than afghanistan, not to mention that bin laden and folks know the ground much better). probably wouldn't be in iraq but might be on the border. iran we'd probably be fighting a proxy war with in afghanistan (assuming ahmenidejad would have been elected, which is likely). we'd be part of the EU's cap and trade deal and getting the raw end of it (as the EU can lower its overall emissions by fixing eastern europe, where we have no such easy solution)
 

DAPUNISHER

Super Moderator CPU Forum Mod and Elite Member
Super Moderator
Aug 22, 2001
32,049
32,561
146
Al Gore has probably thought many times since 2000, "damn! I dodged a serious bullet!" Life has been very good to him the last few years, being POTUS would not have treated him nearly so well.

In case no one ahs brought it up, SNL did have Al do a skit where he was POTUS, it was fairly funny too. I won't comment on the "what if?" though, Marvel might sue me. :p
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
0
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
If...had...

Does it really matter since it's all speculation?
Not really, we are stuck with the mess we have now caused by Bush and it doesn't look like any of the potential candidates (those that might win) are capable of cleaning up that mess in a satisfactory way.
Hmmmm, I wonders if Hillary knows what the conversion rate is for $/euros.
 

QuantumPion

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2005
6,010
1
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Originally posted by: JEDIYoda
Originally posted by: Craig234
Originally posted by: JEDIYoda
Originally posted by: Craig234
I agree with other posters that Gore would have done more about Al Queda, and that he may not have prevented 9/11. I do think he'd have gotten bin Laden and other Al Queda leaders in response. I'm not sure what he'd have done about Saudi Arabia (the Bush family is close to the Saudi ruling family), but he very likely would not have gone to war in Iraq.

You have to be kidding?? right?
Gore didn`t even see combat! Gore was supposedly a military journalist...that`s even debated!!!

Since when is combat experience needed to start a war? You might note the current president's lack of combat experience and his rush to war.

It actually seems that presidents with combat experience are often more reluctant to.

You sound like a screeching ideologue with your anti-Gore comments based on nothing.

And your diatribe is based on verifiable facts??

No combat experience:

Madison / War of 1812
Lincoln / Civil War
Wilson / WW1
F. Roosevelt / WW2

Combat experience:

T. Roosevelt (Spanish-American War) / Philippine War
Truman (WW1) / Korean War
Kennedy (WW2) / Viet Nam
G. H. Bush (WW2) / Gulf War 1

Based on this I do not think there is any real correlation between a President's combat experience and his willingness to go to war.
 

heyheybooboo

Diamond Member
Jun 29, 2007
6,278
0
0
9/11 would have happened in some shape or form - and will happen again, most likely as domestic terrorism (McVeigh, Rudolph, DC Sniper, antrax . . . whatever)

I think with Gore we would have had smaller tax cuts, a balanced budget, a social security *Lock Box*, really Clear Skies, a coherent national energy policy and alot of dead MFs (i.e., Taliban/AQ) in Afghanistan.

We wouldn't have nearly doubled the national debt - that's for sure!
 

QuantumPion

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2005
6,010
1
76
Originally posted by: ElFenix
lincoln didn't start the civil war.

Eh, it's debatable. The south fired the first shots, but Lincoln previously rejected diplomatic measures and called for militias to retake seized forts after Sumter was lost with no casualties.

The South sent delegations to Washington and offered to pay for the federal properties and enter into a peace treaty with the United States. Lincoln rejected any negotiations with Confederate agents on the grounds that the Confederacy was not a legitimate government, and that making any treaty with it would be tantamount to recognition of it as a sovereign government.

Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina and Fort Pickens were the remaining Union-held forts in the Confederacy, and Lincoln was determined to hold Fort Sumter. Under orders from Confederate President Jefferson Davis, troops controlled by the Confederate government under General Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard bombarded the fort with artillery on April 12, forcing the fort's capitulation. Northerners rallied behind Lincoln's call for all of the states to send troops to recapture the forts and to preserve the Union. With the scale of the rebellion apparently small so far, Lincoln called for 74,000 volunteers for 90 days. For months before that, several Northern governors had discreetly readied their state militias; they began to move forces the next day.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
350
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And Kennedy didn't start Viet Nam, he prevented it while in office. While the number of 'advisors' increase, he fought hard against his own advisors and especially the military to not send any combat troops. He had a plan to withdraw from Viet Nam after re-election in 1964.

In fact, Eisenhower deserves more blame than Kennedy, for the whole support of continued French colonization of Viet Nam (the US was paying up to 90% of the French war costs), blocking elections because we didn't like the man who would win and push for independence, and other measures.

LBJ deserves the responsibility for the combat war.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
4,268
126
Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: QuantumPion
Originally posted by: bamacre
To think that Gore would have invaded Iraq is quite looney.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JE48XHKG64

wow i think he gained all the weight that clinton lost






9/11 still would have happened. probably would have started a bombing campaign and eventually troops on the ground in afghanistan. not sure if we'd have 'gotten' bin laden yet (iraq, being flat, is better suited to our northern-european plains focused military than afghanistan, not to mention that bin laden and folks know the ground much better). probably wouldn't be in iraq but might be on the border. iran we'd probably be fighting a proxy war with in afghanistan (assuming ahmenidejad would have been elected, which is likely). we'd be part of the EU's cap and trade deal and getting the raw end of it (as the EU can lower its overall emissions by fixing eastern europe, where we have no such easy solution)

There was virtually no chance of the present Iranian government existing. It was after the axis speech and the invasion of Iraq that things turned south in a really bad way. If you recall the election rules were changed after that so only those approved by the radicals obtained office, with the radical clerics displacing the more moderate ones (yes they had them).
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,161
7
0
Originally posted by: Craig234
And Kennedy didn't start Viet Nam, he prevented it while in office. While the number of 'advisors' increase, he fought hard against his own advisors and especially the military to not send any combat troops. He had a plan to withdraw from Viet Nam after re-election in 1964.
Craig that is a myth, and we had a long thread of mine in which that was discussed.

From the JFK library itself a speech given in September of 1963
?In the final analysis, it is their war. They are the ones who have to win it or lose it. We can help them, we can give them equipment, we can send our men out there as advisers, but they have to win it, the people of Vietnam, against the Communists... But I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw. That would be a great mistake.... [The United States] made this effort to defend Europe. Now Europe is quite secure. We also have to participate?we may not like it?in the defense of Asia.?

And then we have this RFK quote
"The President felt that he had a strong, overwhelming reason for being in Vietnam and that we should win the war in Vietnam....If you lost Vietnam, I think everybody was quite clear that the rest of Southeast Asia would fall."

Craig, can you show ANY evidence of JFK's "secret" plan to withdraw after the election?
And why was JFK making all these pro-war statements, but secretly planning to end the war after the election? If he thought the war was wrong why wait till after the election?
You are telling me that he was going to let this war that he wanted to end continue for an entire year? To what end?


BTW I am not going to respond unless you provide some type of PROOF that JFK was planning to end the war post election. And don?t make your proof some 1970s era speech given after the war had fallen from favor.
 

WHAMPOM

Diamond Member
Feb 28, 2006
7,628
183
106
Well, we could have elected Nader Prez' in 2000 and had no 911, 'cause he would have had the cockpit doors reinforced.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
350
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Originally posted by: ProfJohn
Originally posted by: Craig234
And Kennedy didn't start Viet Nam, he prevented it while in office. While the number of 'advisors' increase, he fought hard against his own advisors and especially the military to not send any combat troops. He had a plan to withdraw from Viet Nam after re-election in 1964.
Craig that is a myth, and we had a long thread of mine in which that was discussed.

From the JFK library itself a speech given in September of 1963
?In the final analysis, it is their war. They are the ones who have to win it or lose it. We can help them, we can give them equipment, we can send our men out there as advisers, but they have to win it, the people of Vietnam, against the Communists... But I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw. That would be a great mistake.... [The United States] made this effort to defend Europe. Now Europe is quite secure. We also have to participate?we may not like it?in the defense of Asia.?

And then we have this RFK quote
"The President felt that he had a strong, overwhelming reason for being in Vietnam and that we should win the war in Vietnam....If you lost Vietnam, I think everybody was quite clear that the rest of Southeast Asia would fall."

Craig, can you show ANY evidence of JFK's "secret" plan to withdraw after the election?
And why was JFK making all these pro-war statements, but secretly planning to end the war after the election? If he thought the war was wrong why wait till after the election?
You are telling me that he was going to let this war that he wanted to end continue for an entire year? To what end?


BTW I am not going to respond unless you provide some type of PROOF that JFK was planning to end the war post election. And don?t make your proof some 1970s era speech given after the war had fallen from favor.

John, you are the master of using a single quote on a topic to claim you 'proved' something, and ignoring the mounds of other evidence to the contrary.

I've written at some length on this previously, and to save my time, I'll be blunt that your post is a piece of the most superficial hackery, lacking any context or completeness.

Actual historians and scholars have investigated the topic, and uncovered clear evidence on the situation to the contrary.

I could explain the issue in some detail but feel it's a waste of time, you don't show any interest in the facts generally.

But I'll say a few words for the readers. JFK had a style that was to 'preserve his options'. He tended to wait until the later times possible to commit to a decision. So we can't say for sure that he would not have eventually decided to go to a larger war in Viet Nam 100%; we're limited to perhaps 98%.

Why don't you read just one of the many important books on the topic, JFK and Vietnam by John Newfield, so you have a bit of an idea what the hell you're talking about, and then post. Other important books for their documentation of evidence from the contemporaries include "One Brief Shining Momemt" by Pulitzer-prize winning historian William Manchester, who quotes Mike Mansfield, the Senate majority leader and one of JFK's closest allies - someone JFK sent to Viet nam to get the 'real story' on what to do - as coming back and telling JFK that the only sensible option was to get out, and JFK responding that he planned to do that, but had to wait until after the 1964 election to avoid giving the republicans a big issue to attack him on. (That's the answer to your question, 'why wait' - withdrawal was a very unpopular thing at the time. Yes, you can criticize him for that if you like, but it is what it is. For your partisan issue, you can't compare it to Nixon's reported traitorous sabotage of LBJ's peace negotiations in 1968 to help him win the presidency).

Having said that, another factor was likely his desire to delay committing to his policy to see how well the war could go in the meantime. Like everyone else, he did not know for sure how the war would go, and was trying to figure that out (hence sending Mansfield), keeping his options open - and thus Robert Kennedy's quote that he would like to win in Viet Nam if he could, *with the limited efforts of materials and advisers* as JFK clarified.

Another is "In Retrospect" by JFK's secretary of defense Robert McNamara, who also concluded from his interactions with Kennedy that he would have withdrawn.

If you understood much at all about the times politically, you would understand that Kennedy was dancing a tightrope between a culture that was pretty militarist at the height of the cold war, and his efforts for peace. He won by running as a 'cold warrior', calling for arms spending and to 'pay any price, bear any burden' for the war for freedom, but in his policies repeatedly took the dovish route, often against his own advisors, and learned to fight for peace in the cold war (a book of speeches was called 'The Strategy of Peace').

If you have any interest in actually understanding Kennedy and be bothered to read one magazine article, try this recent article in Time magazine.

While Kennedy was talking the cold warrior talk that was needed politically, he was also laying the groundwork for withdrawal - you need look no further than the part of the quote you did not see fit to bold because it contradicts your position, but also the *withdrawal* of the first thousand troops in a symbolic message, especially to the military, in October, 1963.

In the final analysis, it is their war. They are the ones who have to win it or lose it. We can help them, we can give them equipment, we can send our men out there as advisers, but they have to win it, the people of Vietnam...
JFK

If you want to see what Kennedy was about as the leader for peace in a time of the cold war, read his own amazing speech at American University in June, 1963.

So, John, do us and yourself a favor and stop with the ideologically-driven phony claims and the out of context quote to 'prove' it, and try the actual history for once.
 

imported_Shivetya

Platinum Member
Jul 7, 2005
2,978
1
0
ProfJohn,

don't bother arguing with the stupid, they always bring you down to their level.

This is now another "is is" argument. I guess the new excuse is "well they thought this but did this" is all they need to justify having no exact position but instead going with the equivalent of whatever the polls need...


revisionist.. JFK got us in it, almost got us into a Nuclear war, botched other Cuba operations... but he had nice hair. I think that last part is all that is required of the left who have the attention span of nats but even lack that much brainpower.
 

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2001
6,021
547
126
Although 9/11 would have, probably, still taken place (after all, the monkey currently in the White House hadn't even shown his true colours yet at that time), I believe the Iraq invasion would have never taken place.

HOWEVER...

A Gore presidency would have been accompanied by the Lieberman vice-presidency...

Remember Lieberman? the crybaby who pushed so many times for bans on video games, the idiot who wanted to destroy id Software for making "Doom", the moron wailing about violence and so forth, and actively lobbying for stronger DRM, copyright and draconic legal measures against people suspected of "pirating"...

I don't know if this nightmare would have been a better prospect in the long run... The Liebermans of this world should follow Jack Valenti to the grave, as soon as possible.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
350
126
Originally posted by: Shivetya
revisionist.. JFK got us in it, almost got us into a Nuclear war, botched other Cuba operations... but he had nice hair. I think that last part is all that is required of the left who have the attention span of nats but even lack that much brainpower.

The ignorance there is embarrassing for the poster as usual.

JFK did not get us in Viet Nam, Eisenhower did - refusing their request for us to help them be free of colonization by siding with the French, paying for up to 90% of the French war costs, the whole interference in their affairs by creating a phony country called 'South Vietnam' to begin with in 1954 for which we could put our guy in charge and set up the war of North Korea 'invading' them (akin to the USSR declaring the southern US a new country, naming a leader, and saying the northern US 'invaded' the south), preventing elections, etc.

JFK worked to disentangle us - see the mess he cleaned up in Laos by ending Eisenhower's policies to only side with right-wing puppets and ignore independent, moderate leaders.

He did also greatly increase the number of non-combat 'advisers' to try to help the South Vietnam nation he inherited be viable, tried to get the brutal Diem regime to reform.

But JFK was under huge pressure from his own advisers and the military to send troops to Viet Nam. He refused, year after year, as they continued to put the plans in front of him.

You want to take the simplistic pot shots you can't back up on other topics - yes, he made mistakes with Cuba, as he again inherited the problem from Eisenhower who had shunned Castro's attempts to get along and driven him to the USSR for an ally, the real origin of the Cuban Missile Crisis. JFK made mistakes; the CIA was also doing its own thing. It's somewhat hard to determine now just how much the CIA was doing was really rogue, versus that being 'plausible deniability' that the Kennedys had ordered those operations to end, but at least some of it was. Remember that these were rough, dangerous times as the President was quoted saying he'd like to 'cut the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter them in the wind', when the President believed that we were not that far from a military coup against him by a right-wing Joint Chiefs that barely concealed their insubordination.

During the Cuban Missile Crisis, his own advisers were nearly unanimous, and the military was unanimous, in recommending air strikes and invasion of Cuba, as I recall.

While I think JFK can be faulted for defending the indefensible, a double standard for us to publically demand the right to missiles on the USSR's border in Turkey while denying the same to the USSR in Cuba, he did a damn good job in that crisis at averting war, a war which the republicans almost certainly would have had (and which we later realized would have been nuclear, as the Russians in Cuba had operational tactical nukes and the freedom to use them without Moscow's permission on any invading forces).

Not everyone realizes now that at the time, the US public ranked Cuba as our #1 foreign policy problem - Kennedy needed to do something. His government did - however much with or without his permission, with Robert Kennedy heading up the covert 'Operation Mongoose' but shutting down other operations - organize terrorism in Cuba, and the CIA did work with the mafia to try to assassinate Castro.

But Kennedy was also pursuing other plans on Cuba that were not completed, including peace overtures through private channels.

Your 'nice hair' comment is the sort of ignorant hackery that should shame you into apologizing to the readers.

Kennedy had a mastery of foreign policy, imperfect as it was, that I'd put up against any president since FDR - and also important, an agenda that was relatively 'benevolent'.

His efforts to do things like end the US support for European colonization of third world nations was excellent in ending something very wrong.

He did the opposite of the current president - he increased the US's popularity in the world greatly by making the US stand for a lot better principles than it has recently.
 

blackangst1

Lifer
Feb 23, 2005
22,902
2,359
126
Originally posted by: QuantumPion
Originally posted by: ElFenix
lincoln didn't start the civil war.

Eh, it's debatable. The south fired the first shots, but Lincoln previously rejected diplomatic measures and called for militias to retake seized forts after Sumter was lost with no casualties.

The South sent delegations to Washington and offered to pay for the federal properties and enter into a peace treaty with the United States. Lincoln rejected any negotiations with Confederate agents on the grounds that the Confederacy was not a legitimate government, and that making any treaty with it would be tantamount to recognition of it as a sovereign government.

Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina and Fort Pickens were the remaining Union-held forts in the Confederacy, and Lincoln was determined to hold Fort Sumter. Under orders from Confederate President Jefferson Davis, troops controlled by the Confederate government under General Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard bombarded the fort with artillery on April 12, forcing the fort's capitulation. Northerners rallied behind Lincoln's call for all of the states to send troops to recapture the forts and to preserve the Union. With the scale of the rebellion apparently small so far, Lincoln called for 74,000 volunteers for 90 days. For months before that, several Northern governors had discreetly readied their state militias; they began to move forces the next day.


Says who? So called "written accounts?" Give me a break. It's what historians WANT us to believe. There's no solid proof whatsoever. Us in P&N have doubts on issues with better evidence.

(Yes Im playing devil's advocate. But still a valid point)
 

ElFenix

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Mar 20, 2000
102,402
8,574
126
Originally posted by: Hayabusa Rider
There was virtually no chance of the present Iranian government existing. It was after the axis speech and the invasion of Iraq that things turned south in a really bad way. If you recall the election rules were changed after that so only those approved by the radicals obtained office, with the radical clerics displacing the more moderate ones (yes they had them).

a centrist former president, a reformist critic of the guardian council, and a proper reformist candidate were in the 7 candidates running for the office (and amongst the top 4 vote getters on the first ballot). seems like it was a hard-line populist vs. a group of more liberal candidates. and when the liberal candidate who got through the first ballot was someone who had been president already (associated with the business class and allegedly corrupt), the populist won out. seems to me that very little of that election had to do with foreign policy, and had very much to do with internal iranian politics. so, i don't think the facts bear out your assertion.

and call me a cynic but i don't think what the US did or said would have changed khamenei's actions, even if the facts did bear out your assertion
 

ProfJohn

Lifer
Jul 28, 2006
18,161
7
0
Let me get this straight Craig....

JFK was lying to the American people about the Vietnam war? He talked about staying in Nam to make people happy, but he real plan was to withdraw?

I guess that makes him no different that current Democrats who will do and say anything to get elected. Sad to think that the Democrat hero was nothing more than a liar.