Here's the YouTube of Albright's "60 Minutes" interview from 1996, where, in response to the death of over 500,000 Iraqi children during the 1990s-era U.N. sanctions regime, she said "we think the price" of punishing Saddam "is worth it":
Here's the report, from the Gainseville Sun, on Albright's speech at the University of Florida:
Calling the invasion of Iraq possibly the worst foreign policy blunder in American history, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright gave a bleak assessment of the state of world affairs before a University of Florida audience Wednesday.These are odd statements from a former bellicose Secretary of State who said in 2003:
"I have said that I'm afraid that Iraq is going to go down in history as the greatest disaster in American foreign policy," Albright said. "Now that's quite a statement, because it means I think it's worse than Vietnam - not in the number of Americans who died or Vietnamese versus Iraqis, but in terms of those unintended consequences. And the biggest unintended consequence in Iraq is Iran. I think one might say that Iran has actually won the war in Iraq."
Looking toward Afghanistan, Albright said things aren't much brighter.
"President (Hamid) Karzai of Afghanistan is a very fine man, but he's basically mayor of Kabul," she said. "He does not control the whole place."
Albright gave two presentations at UF, first at the Levin College of Law and then at the Graham Center for Public Service. She fielded questions about foreign policy from both audiences, and in an interview with reporters afterward she commented on the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
..."The American forces are both the solution and the problem," she said. "They are like fly paper that attracts everybody who hates us."
The ouster of Saddam has indeed made the world, or at least Iraq, a better place.What explains the change of heart?
Political expediency sure, plus a little BDS, soothed by the Obama-messiah elixer, would be my guess.
Be sure to check Gateway's post for additional commentary and links.
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