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Author Topic: Commander of Centcom resigns
johnpauljones
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posted 11 March 2008 11:41 AM      Profile for johnpauljones     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
This story just broke. According to CNN and USAToday he resigned due to differences of opinion with the adminsitration.

quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Robert Gates says that Admiral William Fallon, the top U.S. military commander for the Middle East, is resigning.
Gates said Fallon had asked Gates for permission to retire and that Gates agreed.

Fallon was the subject of an article published last week in Esquire magazine that portrayed him as opposed to President Bush's Iran policy. It described Fallon as a lone voice against taking military action to stop the Iranian nuclear program.


usa today


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martin dufresne
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posted 11 March 2008 01:26 PM      Profile for martin dufresne   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
The Man Between War and Peace (just resigned)

The Bush Administration wanted a war with Iran. The head of U.S. Central Command, Admiral William "Fox" Fallon, disagreed. And now, as of March 11, Fallon has resigned.

Read the Esquire interview that started the whole fracas.

o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
1.
If, in the dying light of the Bush administration, we go to war with Iran, it'll all come down to one man. If we do not go to war with Iran, it'll come down to the same man. He is that rarest of creatures in the Bush universe: the good cop on Iran, and a man of strategic brilliance. His name is William Fallon, although all of his friends call him "Fox," which was his fighter-pilot call sign decades ago. Forty years into a military career that has seen this admiral rule over America's two most important combatant commands, Pacific Command and now United States Central Command, it's impossible to make this guy--as he likes to say--"nervous in the service." Past American governments have used saber rattling as a useful tactic to get some bad actor on the world stage to fall in line. This government hasn't mastered that kind of subtlety. When Dick Cheney has rattled his saber, it has generally meant that he intends to use it. And in spite of recent war spasms aimed at Iran from this sclerotic administration, Fallon is in no hurry to pick up any campaign medals for Iran. And therein lies the rub for the hard-liners led by Cheney. Army General David Petraeus, commanding America's forces in Iraq, may say, "You cannot win in Iraq solely in Iraq," but Fox Fallon is Petraeus's boss, and he is the commander of United States Central Command, and Fallon doesn't extend Petraeus's logic to mean war against Iran.

So while Admiral Fallon's boss, President George W. Bush, regularly trash-talks his way to World War III and his administration casually casts Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as this century's Hitler (a crown it has awarded once before, to deadly effect), it's left to Fallon--and apparently Fallon alone--to argue that, as he told Al Jazeera last fall: "This constant drumbeat of conflict . . . is not helpful and not useful. I expect that there will be no war, and that is what we ought to be working for. We ought to try to do our utmost to create different conditions."

What America needs, Fallon says, is a "combination of strength and willingness to engage."

Those are fighting words to your average neocon--not to mention your average supporter of Israel, a good many of whom in Washington seem never to have served a minute in uniform. But utter those words for print and you can easily find yourself defending your indifference to "nuclear holocaust." (...)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o


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adam stratton
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posted 11 March 2008 05:27 PM      Profile for adam stratton        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Admiral William Fallon is evidently in sync with world opinion, while the "Commander in Chief" seems to be contemptously ramming his fascist ways.

quote:
BBC Poll: Support for Iran action drops

A poll carried out for the BBC shows that the international support for tougher actions against Iran has dropped in the past 18 months.

Of more than 30,000 people asked, most supported Iran's right to produce nuclear fuel if subject to UN checks.

"It appears that people in many countries are interested in ramping down the confrontation with Iran, while still using UN inspectors to ensure that Iran is not developing nuclear weapons," said Steven Kull, director of Pipa, which carried out the poll in partnership with Globescan, on behalf of the BBC World Service.

The results of the survey shows that the public support for sanctions or military strikes against Iran has fallen in more than half of the countries.

Here


[ 11 March 2008: Message edited by: adam stratton ]


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