House Nixes Global War on Terror
Perhaps the struggle should be called "the war that must not be named."
According to The Military Times, the House Armed Services Committee is banishing the global war on terror from the 2008 defense budget.
Only it is not because the war has been won, lost or even called off, but it is because the committee’s Democratic leadership doesn’t like the phrase.
A memo for the committee staff, circulated March 27, says the 2008 bill and its accompanying explanatory report that will set defense policy should be specific about military operations and “avoid using colloquialisms.”
“You have to wonder if this means that we have to rename the GWOT,” said a Republican aide, referring to the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal and the Global War on Terrorism Service Medals established in 2003 for service members involved, directly and indirectly, in military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the world.Tags: Open Thread, Wire, Headlines, United States, Democrats, Congress, War, Military, terrorism, Middle East, Operation Iraqi Freedom, Afghanistan, Operation Enduring Freedom, Iraq
“If you are a reader of the Harry Potter books, you might describe this as the war that must not be named,” said another Republican aide. That is a reference to the fact that the villain in the Harry Potter series, Lord Voldemort, is often referred to as “he who must not be named” because of fears of his dark wizardry.
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