Analysis: ‘A horrible vote’: Congress revisits one of its gravest mistakes, the Iraq War
But two years later, she joined her unit from the Illinois Army National Guard during its tour of duty, becoming one of the first few women to pilot combat missions in Iraq. In 2004, a rocket-propelled grenade hit her Black Hawk helicopter. The attack ended with her losing both legs, earning her the Purple Heart.
More than two decades after that initial vote, Congress appears ready finally to scrap the 2002 Iraq War resolution — one of its most flawed votes ever.s, lawmakers caved to the political pressure of the post-9/11 moment and granted the George W. Bush administration the authority to wage war in Iraq with little restraint.
Sen. Susan Collins also is ready to jettison the war resolutions, formally known as authorizations for the use of military force, or AUMF. But Collins still blames top Bush administration officials for her initial vote, particularly then-Secretary of State Colin Powell, who she said told her on the eve of the vote that with congressional approval, the United States would be able “to avoid war” and get Saddam Hussein to back down.
“Here’s what I would ask people to focus on,” Graham said Thursday. “Is the world better off without Saddam Hussein, and are we better off with a democracy replacing him? I’d say yes.”
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