I recently read some comments on websites which talked about warmongering Republicans always dragging the country into wars. It seemed to me that attitude is probably a remnant of the protests against Bush's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Strange how those protests evaporated after Obama's election, even though Obama adopted Bush's strategy in toto, and even though casualties have gone up.
Research suggests that the Democrat and Republican parties, in their current form, go back to about the era of the Civil War. The Civil War does not really provide any useful information on this question, since you can blame Lincoln, the Republican, for violating state rights in driving the nation to war to end slavery, or you can blame the Democrats for starting the war to keep slavery. In either event, both parties were directly involved.
Starting after the American Civil War, we find the following wars and incursions:
Spanish-American War (1898), McKinley, Republican
World War I (1914-1918), Wilson, Democrat
World War II (1939-1945), Roosevelt, Democrat
Korean War (1950-1953), Truman, Democrat
Bay of Pigs (1961), Kennedy, Democrat
Vietnam War (1964-1975), Johnson, Democrat, and Nixon, Republican
Grenada (1983), Reagan, Republican
Panama (1989), Bush, Republican
Persian Gulf War (1990-1991), Bush, Republican
Bosnia (1995-1996), Clinton, Democrat
Afghanistan (2001-present), Bush (W), Republican, and Obama, Democrat
Iraq (2003-present), Bush II, Republican, and Obama, Democrat
Libya (2011), Obama, Democrat
One could also include Carter's (D) failed attempt to recover the hostages from Iran, Reagan's (R) bombing of Libyan military installations, or Obama's (D) incursion into Pakistan to attack Bin Laden, but these were primarily one-time military operations designed to achieve specific goals rather than ongoing wars or incursions.
Even a cursory examination of this list gives the lie to any statement that one party or the other is more guilty of warmongering, although, to be honest, if I were a liberal, I would be careful to avoid taking casualty totals into account
It seems like this information would be common knowledge for anyone who has studied a bit of history, but it also seems that some people (usually, I suspect, of the liberal bent) are anxious enough to avoid the impact of facts on their beliefs that they will "revise" history to avoid any examination of actual history. It is important to have the right view of history in regard to questions such as this.
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