The Financial Times has reported, as have others:
"Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state who has advised the Bush administration on the war in Iraq, on Sunday said he no longer believed a military victory was possible in the conflict."
Meanwhile, George Bush has conceded that things will need to be re-evaluated in relation to the USA's role in Iraq and Tony Blair has labelled the Iraq War a "disaster".
John Howard? He has has sought to persuade the US to "stay the course" - a term no one is using anymore - and says the Iraq War wasn't a "disaster". Yet again Howard shows he inhabits a different planet to everyone else.
If there was ever a damning analysis of the whole fiasco which has become known as the Iraq War, it comes from Major-General Alan Stretton, who was the Australian Army chief of staff during the Vietnam War and was later placed in charge of Darwin after Cyclone Tracy. He spoke out strongly out against involvement in the Iraq War and has now had an op-ed piece, "Leave now or perish Mr Howard", published in The Age. Well worth reading!
"Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state who has advised the Bush administration on the war in Iraq, on Sunday said he no longer believed a military victory was possible in the conflict."
Meanwhile, George Bush has conceded that things will need to be re-evaluated in relation to the USA's role in Iraq and Tony Blair has labelled the Iraq War a "disaster".
John Howard? He has has sought to persuade the US to "stay the course" - a term no one is using anymore - and says the Iraq War wasn't a "disaster". Yet again Howard shows he inhabits a different planet to everyone else.
If there was ever a damning analysis of the whole fiasco which has become known as the Iraq War, it comes from Major-General Alan Stretton, who was the Australian Army chief of staff during the Vietnam War and was later placed in charge of Darwin after Cyclone Tracy. He spoke out strongly out against involvement in the Iraq War and has now had an op-ed piece, "Leave now or perish Mr Howard", published in The Age. Well worth reading!
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