Waging a war of words on Iraq
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Time to duck and cover. Tom Williams has detonated yet another toxic
mushroom cloud. A creature of habit, his perennial target is Pilot
columnist Joseph Bell.
Bell is a notorious recidivist, whose columns routinely get up
Williams’s nose. On April 22, Bell had the temerity to discuss Iraq
and a local talk by Gen. Anthony Zinni. To which Williams responded
in no fewer than 1,240 words and a paid advertisement. The snarky
rustic surpassed himself.
Bell, said his nemesis, suffered from confusion and indulged in
lamentations over Zinni’s “musings.” Strange, but I scoured Bell’s
column in vain for any sign of either.
Williams also reminds us that Zinni is now retired; then he quotes
George Shultz (also retired) at length -- from which he concludes
that rogue states are fair game. Ample justification, verily, to
trash the Baghdad Pottery Barn.
“Now, on to the explanation of why we have an absolute, legitimate
right to be in Iraq,” Williams continues. First he cites Saddam
Hussein’s violations of some 12 resolutions adopted by the United
Nations. This is a hoot, given that Williams had previously dismissed
it as “the most impotent and useless organization ever devised by man
or beast.” Holy Halliburton! I hope President George Bush knows this,
since he’s leaving the June 30 transition planning to the United
Nations’ Lakhdar Brahimi.
Finally, Williams rolls out the weapons of mass destruction
nostalgia. “Those weapons still exist today and will someday be found
. . . I will bet Bell my Social Security retirement account on that.”
Mirabile dictu.
Williams must have taken his weapons of mass destruction cues from
Ahmad Chalabi and his jocular band of Iraqi exile fabulists,
including one known as “Curveball.” (Chalabi, by the way, is still on
the Department of Defense payroll -- or at least his organization is,
according to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.)
As for Williams’s parting shot at “professor” Bell (“what about
the foregoing don’t you understand”): I would ask Williams; what it
is about quagmires that he doesn’t understand?
DICK LEWIS
Balboa
I can’t understand why almost half the entire page is devoted to
this guy, Tom Williams. I’m a World War II veteran. I come from a
family of four World War II veterans, one of whom was killed. I’m
very much for this country, in what we do, but this idea of Iraq and
the war in Iraq is definitely wrong.
We have done a very grievous error in going there. And this
commentary by this individual is definitely one-sided. Why didn’t you
do something on the other side of the scale or is this paper turned
to nothing but a complete right-wing? I’m really disturbed at what
the Daily Pilot has done in giving this commentary this much space.
LEO ARRANAGA
Newport Beach
Tom Williams’ impressive command of facts; his liberal (pun
certainly intended) use of former Secretary of State George Shultz’s
opinion and speech reprint; his alternate disparagement of the United
Nations and use of its resolutions to further his argument or
justification of invasion notwithstanding; I would like to know if he
thinks the world is a safer place for our acting on this “right.”
SALLY MARSHALL
CORNGOLD
Newport Beach
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