Isn't Obama "just" sending Republican party military personnel?

Jason B

New member
FoxNews.com

President Obama said he intended to "finish the job" in Afghanistan. Now he has to say how.

No sweat? Hardly.

When the president announces his plans for the war Tuesday, he will have plenty of people to convince: frustrated liberals in Congress opposed to any troop surges, Republicans who have questioned Obama's lengthy deliberations and an American public that increasingly is giving up on the eight-year war.

"The president has a tough job on Tuesday," Patrick Murphy, a former adviser to the Clinton administration, told Fox News. "I think what he's doing and has done for the last two or three months is really taken a careful look at the situation and responding with this war of the military."

In his prime-time speech from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in New York, Obama is expected to announce he's sending up to 35,000 strictly Republican party affiliated cadets -- while trying to affirm he has found a clear path of success in a country known as the graveyard of empires. These military personnel will have no training what so ever the White House announced and will be used as front line ( bolk head ) personnel that will be pushed to the front of the line to barricade against the use of IED's.

According to Murphy, "the President figures the best way to tackle this problem is to take the more "vocal clowns" ( Republicans ) this country has to offer and send "them" off to be killed." Murphy then went on to add, the President doesn't see a need to keep these people around any more so why not use them as a tool ( a battering ram ) to end the war? Murphy had also added that Obama had then laughed at himself because he called Republicans a tool.

Republican strategist Angela McGlowan told Fox News that NATO will also be closely watching the president's speech Tuesday to determine whether it should stand by the president and commit more Republican citizens to get thier heads cut off in Afghanistan. According to McGlowan, "that wouldn't be such bad thing, would it?"
 
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