Thursday, March 19, 2015

GOP Traitors? Here's The Sordid History Of Democrats' Black-Market Diplomacy

Politics: President Obama blasted the GOP again over efforts to halt his Iran giveaway deal, suggesting it was treason. In reality, it's Democrats who have a long, sordid history of doing what they accuse Republicans of doing.
President Obama is ripping the GOP for opposing a reported deal in which we would take Iran's word that it won't develop nuclear weapons.
He's accused 47 Republicans who signed a letter to Iran's leaders, warning that any Congress can reverse deal they sign with Obama, of "making common cause" with the mullahs — a joke, given the enraged reaction from Tehran.
He's also had his media allies crank up a campaign to label the Republicans as "traitors" — the word that the leftists at the New York Daily News used in its headline.
Meanwhile Obama's Twitter hipsters tweeted #47traitors as their hashtag meme, hoping to go viral with low-information voters.
A sudden round of corruption charges materialized against Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, who just happened to oppose the Iran deal, suggesting Chicago-style political payback on a dissident. Now he has his chief of staff, Denis McDonough, sending "a stern warning" to Congress not to interfere with the talks.
Democratic Rep. David E. Bonior (MI) introduced to Iraqi 
Foreign Minister Naji Sabri in Baghdad on Sept. 27, 2002. 
He was joined by Reps. Jim McDermott and Mike 
Thompson. AP
It's partisan politics, but it reeks of hypocrisy. It's the Democrats who have a long history of interfering in U.S. foreign policy and undercutting the president abroad — to the point of influence peddling, payoffs and actual treason.
Here's a short litany of the Democrats' long history of encouraging and even aiding America's enemies:
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• In 1983, Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy sent a fawning letter through another Democrat, California Sen. John Tunney, to Soviet dictator and former KGB top thug Yuri Andropov, seeking to undercut President Reagan in the interest of "world peace." Kennedy also consorted with the communist regime of Chile and had been known to have Cuban ties.
• In 1983, U.S. troops invaded Grenada, overran its Cuban installations — and found Berkeley Democratic Rep. Ron Dellums' name all over their documents, advising the Castroites how to thwart President Reagan.
• In 1985, then-freshman Sen. John Kerry flew down to Managua, Nicaragua, home of the Marxist Sandinistas and their Cuban-inspired government. He wanted to cut a deal with them at a time when the U.S. opposed their destruction of democracy and human rights. Just days after Kerry cut his deal, Sandinista leaders jetted off to Moscow to forge an alliance.
And There's More. Read the Rest of the story HERE.

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