Apologies for the repost.
N.H. Debate: The GOP Field
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Compare that with the far larger cuts made during the first Bush administration: In 1989, the military stood at 2,130,229 and the Army had 769,741 soldiers. By 1993, those numbers had declined by 19.9 percent and 25.6 percent, respectively.
And as we've pointed out before, it was the first Bush administration – specifically then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney – that began bragging openly of the peace dividend.
McCain's Questionable Timeline
In his rush to criticize Donald Rumsfeld's defense strategy, Sen. John McCain did some rewriting of his personal history:
McCain: Now, I strongly disagree with the strategy employed by Secretary Rumsfeld, and by the way, I'm the only one here that disagreed at the time. And I'm the only one at the time that said we've got to employ a new strategy and outlined what it was, which is the Petraeus strategy. And I said at the time I had no confidence in the then-secretary of defense.
It's true that McCain was an early critic of Rumsfeld's strategy in Iraq. In a November 2003 interview with PBS' Jim Lehrer, McCain said:
McCain: I respect the opinions of Secretary Rumsfeld and our military commanders but. ... All of the trends are in the wrong direction. … And so in my view we need more special forces, more Marines, more counter intelligence, more MPs, more of the kinds of forces that do counter insurgency work.










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