Obama eludes and elides on Iraq
The next Bill Clinton of the Democratic Party isn’t a Clinton, it’s an Obama
By Charles Bird Posted in Archived — Comments (27) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
In an earlier post, I endorsed Barack Obama as the best choice for Democratic nominee, but that doesn’t mean I think he should be president. The two most important issues for me are the economy (which I’ll address in a later post) and the War against Militant Islamism, and the most important part of the war is Iraq. I have serious problems with Obama’s “plan” and statements and political record on the subject. In last Tuesday’s debate, Obama brought up the familiar refrain about judgment and the choice to go to war in the first place. Quote:
Well, Senator Clinton I think equates experience with longevity in Washington. I don't think the American people do and I don't think that if you look at the judgments that we've made over the last several years that that's the accurate measure. On the most important foreign policy decision that we face in a generation -- whether or not to go into Iraq -- I was very clear as to why we should not -- that it would fan the flames of anti-American sentiment -- that it would distract us from Afghanistan -- that it would cost us billions of dollars, thousands of lives, and would not make us more safe, and I do not believe it has made us more safe.
Obama’s brilliant answer killed a flock of birds with one stone: He differentiated himself from an opponent where there is little real daylight between the two, he made clear that his opinions are more closely aligned with the party base, and he successfully skirted around the fact that he is a freshman Senator with basically two years of legislative experience on the national stage. Most importantly, he successfully diverted the discussion away from his judgment on an issue of equal (if not greater) importance: Whether to draw down our troops or make a fundamental change in the strategy. In January 2007, during Iraq’s darkest hour, Obama was clearly against the surge strategy .
More below the fold...
Meanwhile, Obama said he told the president directly that an "escalation of troop levels in Iraq was a mistake." Obama was among more than a dozen senators of both parties who were invited to the White House to discuss his plans for Iraq. Bush plans to continue to meet with lawmakers and is expected to announce his new Iraq strategy next week in an address to the nation. "It was an open-ended discussion," Obama told reporters after the meeting. "The president asked for our opinions. I think both Republican and Democratic senators expressed grave concern about the situation in Iraq. I personally indicated that an escalation of troop levels in Iraq was a mistake and that we need a political accommodation, rather than a military approach to the sectarian violence there," said Obama.
Obama’s comment betrayed a lack of understanding of what the strategy was really about, because the whole point of the COIN strategy is to create an environment where insurgents will choose to resolve differences through the political process rather than by violence. Either that or he was being less than honest. Obama had the chance to further examine Petraeus' strategy, and in hypocritical fashion, Obama voted “yea” in confirming Petraeus to four-star general yet four days later he introduced process-oriented legislation that would gut the Petraeus plan.
Wanting to learn a little more, I checked his campaign website and was even more disappointed, starting with this sentence:
At great cost, our troops have helped reduce violence in some areas of Iraq, but even those reductions do not get us below the unsustainable levels of violence of mid-2006.
The statement is flatly and factually false as seen below (hat tip to Engram for the graphs).


Suicide bombings—which are the exclusive province of al Qaeda—killed 213 of 566 civilians last month, or 38% of the total, and al Qaeda was responsible for 291 killings or 51% of the total. Despite comparatively small numbers, al Qaeda remains lethal. Shiite hit squads are also a problem. There were 97 extra-judicial killings last month, meaning that these groups hunted down military-age Sunni males and killed them execution-style. But basically, there are 1,000 fewer civilian deaths per month under the current surge strategy. Under the Obama “plan”, there is every reason to believe civilian casualties would have looked like this.

Why? Because going by Obama’s proposed legislation, his “plan” called for unilateral troop draw downs during a time when terrorist attacks and extra-judicial killings were raging. Of course, the trend lines are arguable, but the conclusions in the April 2006 National Intelligence Estimate are not, which said:
The Iraq conflict has become the cause célèbre for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of US involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement. Should jihadists leaving Iraq perceive themselves, and be perceived, to have failed, we judge fewer fighters will be inspired to carry on the fight.
It couldn’t be clearer to me that the McCain/Petraeus plan has made significant strides in convincing jihadists that they are failing in Iraq. Obama’s so-called plan, which called for cutting and running when suicide bombings were peaking,

would have signaled our defeat at the hands of these terrorists. Obama’s short-sightedness on troop withdrawals would likely have inspired al Qaeda & Co. to carry on the fight, using Iraq as a propaganda tool for recruiting more terrorists into their fold. I am convinced that there would be more militant Islamists today if Obama got what he wanted back in January 2007. Then there’s his next sentence, which is a whopper:
Moreover, Iraq's political leaders have made no progress in resolving the political differences at the heart of their civil war.
Muqtada al-Sadr is a political leader, and he stood down his JAM militias last August and he recently extended his ceasefire. That's political progress. Although progress has been halting, political leaders in the national government have made significant strides at resolving political differences. Although no oil revenue sharing bill has passed, political leaders have set up a system for sharing oil revenues. When Sunni tribal sheiks joined the coalition and turned their collective backs on al Qaeda, political progress was made. Obviously, much work remains to be done, the fact remains that Obama’s statement is outrageously untrue.
Also, it is arguable that there is a civil war in Iraq, but Obama and the Democratic Party continue to trot out this storyline. There are competing factions, to be sure, and those factions frequently resort to violence. But calling Iraq a civil war glosses over the actions of al Qaeda, whose primary goal is to foment a civil war between Shiites and Sunnis, and they are failing in that endeavor. It ignores the fact that northern Iraq is stable. It ignores the fact that southern Iraq is virtually all Shiite and run by Shiites. It ignores the fact that Anbar province is virtually all Sunni and is run by Sunnis. The fact of the matter is that there are mixed Sunni-Shiite areas in Iraq, especially Baghdad, where sectarian violence has occurred and has sparked a refugee problem. Calling it a “civil war” is a matter of opinion, not fact, and that’s what Obama does all too often. He conveys opinions, giving the impression to impressionable voters that they are facts when they are really not. It is slickness reminiscent of Slick Willie himself. More from Obama’s campaign website:
As a candidate for the United States Senate in 2002, Obama put his political career on the line to oppose going to war in Iraq, and warned of “an occupation of undetermined length, with undetermined costs, and undetermined consequences.”
Obama was not a candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2002. He ran for a U.S. House seat in 2000 and lost, and in 2004, he resigned from the State Senate to run for the U.S. Senate. In 2002, Obama was running for reelection to the State Senate, a position he held since 1996. His district has a huge Democratic majority, so he was an incumbent with a safe seat; therefore it is ridiculous for him to claim that he put his career on the line. Obama continued this lie in last Tuesday’s debate when he said, “My objections to the war in Iraq were simply -- not simply a speech [referring to his October 2002 speech against invading Iraq]. I was in the midst of a U.S. Senate campaign.” Obama’s “career on the line” nonsense is under the section titled “judgment you can trust” on his website, which leads me this question: How can you trust a man’s judgment when you cannot justifiably trust his facts?
Again going by his campaign website, Obama believes the following:
Obama will immediately begin to remove our troops from Iraq. He will remove one to two combat brigades each month, and have all of our combat brigades out of Iraq within 16 months.
This is troubling on multiple levels, first because Obama says not a word about strategy and tactics. It’s all about sending troops home, nothing about the situation on the ground. Second, Obama’s timeline conflicts with General Petraeus’ timeline. What's more, Obama's large and precipitous withdrawal conflicts with the latest National Intelligence Estimate, which says the following:
Coalition capabilities, including force levels, resources, and operations, remain an essential stabilizing element in Iraq. If Coalition forces were withdrawn rapidly during the term of this Estimate, we judge that this almost certainly would lead to a significant increase in the scale and scope of sectarian conflict in Iraq, intensify Sunni resistance to the Iraqi Government, and have adverse consequences for national reconciliation.
Obama’s logic is the exact opposite of the NIE, and he is on the wrong side of the issue. Finally, Obama's phased surrender plan conflicts with his own words in 2004:
Now, us having gone in there, we have a deep national security interest in making certain that Iraq is stable. If not, not only are we going to have a humanitarian crisis, we are also going to have a huge national security problem on our hands-because, ironically, it has become a hotbed of terrorists as a consequence, in part, of our incursion there. In terms of timetable, I'm not somebody who can say with certainty that a year from now or six months from now we're going to be able to pull down troops.
Now his mantra is that, by leaving, reconciliation among Iraqis will happen and everything will get better, even though such significant withdrawals will likely destabilize the country, reintroduce chaos and reignite sectarian violence. The environment Obama seeks is the very same one which allowed al Qaeda to grow and fester. Here’s some more illogic:
He will keep some troops in Iraq to protect our embassy and diplomats; if al Qaeda attempts to build a base within Iraq, he will keep troops in Iraq or elsewhere in the region to carry out targeted strikes on al Qaeda.
Newsflash. Al Qaeda is in Iraq right now. They’re the ones responsible for 51% of civilian deaths last month, and they’re the ones who General Petraeus still considers our biggest challenge there. Obama’s statement makes no sense because it assumes that al Qaeda is already gone.
Obama also wants to “surge our diplomacy”. Another newsflash. It’s already happening. Ambassador Crocker is in Iraq, coordinating his efforts with General Petraeus and working constantly with the various Iraqi factions to help them achieve their political benchmarks.
Obama’s statements on Iraq lead me to believe that he would be a foreign policy disaster for America. If he gets his way, Iraq would destabilize, reversing all the hard-fought gains made and adversely affecting our national security. Even if you accept that he made the right judgment in 2002, his judgments in 2007 and 2008 on the surge strategy are more important because they are current and because losing in Iraq could have calamitous repercussions on our country. Vietnam was bad enough. As Tom Maguire notes, Obama is not running in 2002 and he’s not running against George W. Bush. The issue on the table is what Obama would do in Iraq today. To me, it looks like he'd rather surrender, no matter all the remarkable gains we've made since September.
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Obama eludes and elides on Iraq 27 Comments (0 topical, 27 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
And put him away in a box. At some point there are going to be Ads running on this topic, his experience and his courageous politics of change. When that happens he will have to answer and his campaign ends.
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
... are very simply saying, "We can end this war!" which I think is one reason he has a lot of traction with young people. Too bad they can't reason through the realities of war and what it takes to win and why winning is so important.
Excellent article, Mr. Bird. Thanks.
Where we have been distracted from, what then? We will discover with the help of Obama, liberals, and the Democratic Party, that we have been distracted from America's urgent & crushing domestic problems. Education, our run down infrastructure [ which we've been paying billions to maintain], the always rediscovered homeless, etc. The problems which never go away and for which the supposed answers are always and monotonously the same.
Afghanistan will be the next Iraq if Obama has his way, an impediment to domestic bribery and a sop thrown to the left, who seem to think islamic murderers are miscreant Boy Scouts.
"a man's admiration for absolute government is proportinate to the contempt he feels for those around him". Tocqueville
First, I want to commend you on an excellent piece. Very good use of visuals and graphs as well.
As far as casualty rates, Obama is not providing fair context. Imagine if I took over a company with 5million in sales, and I increased that to 9million in a year. That would be a great job. On the other hand, by Obama's standards, it would be unacceptable because I am still not getting the sort of sales of say a fortune five hundred.
You can't simply look at violence levels and say they are unacceptable. They were at extraordinary levels and they have come down significantly. The trajectory is downward. They may still be at unacceptable levels but that is a result of the failed previous policy not this one.
Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor
But claiming that the surge is effective is also ignoring reality. Violence is down in Iraq simply because we have put al-Qaeda on our payroll. They won't resume the attacks until we stop paying them protection money. Hopefully, by then, we will be out of the country.
and total nonsense. We have done no such thing. The reason that the surge has been effective is because we have been effective in flipping the Sheiks to our side. Period. The Sheiks who were mostly allied with AQI are now allied with us. There are no AQI on our payroll. That is total nonsense.
Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor
That is a flat out falsehood and total nonsense. We have done no such thing. The reason that the surge has been effective is because we have been effective in flipping the Sheiks to our side. Period. The Sheiks who were mostly allied with AQI are now allied with us. There are no AQI on our payroll. That is total nonsense.
We can live in a dream world or we can deal with reality. Now, I don't know about knowingly putting AQI fighters on our payroll in Iraq, but we have in fact put thousands of Sunni fighters on our payroll in Iraq, and surely we know that at least a few of those guys were in AQI or were helping AQI. We've also resorted to giving the Sunnis tons of money and weaponry. I discuss this and provide a few sources in my blog post entitled "Reality Check on Iraq."
If we call bribing and arming Sunnis who not too long ago were helping to kill us, and who would gladly slit our throats again if they had the chance--if we call that "success" because it's led to a reduction in violence, then I suggest we're talking about a dangerous, misguided policy that has the potential to backfire on us horribly.
Mike Griffith
Let Freedom Ring website
http://ourworld.cs.com/mikegriffith1/id47.htm
you are
1) making the case that Sunni = al Qaeda? or 2) making the case that it is bad to help the various Awakening movements? or 3) making the case that it is better to have these guys killing our troops than it is employing them?
Have you given thought to who, exactly, officered the Luftwaffe, Kreigsmarine, and Bundeswehr when they were formed in the 1950s? And why that didn't turn out to be 100% bad?
"A man can never have too much red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition." -- Rudyard Kipling
I am unfamiliar with. Can I get some background on the history of these groups?
Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor
...just performing a public service, as many on the left are humor-challenged.
______________________________
"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
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"If we want to take this party back, and I think we can someday, let’s get to work." – Barry Goldwater
...it was always clear to any knowledgeable observer that the U.S. eventually would be in the position of defending the Sunnis from the Shia.
It took us a while to gain the trust of the Sunni tribal leaders that we weren't there to rule, that they weren't going to rule Iraq under a Saddam II, and that Al Qaida was worse that us.
With the surge, we've started a way to organize the Sunni forces in a manner (from bottom up) that can survive our departure, if we have enough time and don't snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory by a precipitous politically-motivated withdrawal.
Certainly later than ideal, but we're finally on the right track so long as we continue to also keep Iran under control.
To try get as many insurgents to give up and join the coalition as possible, leaving the irreconcilables for us to pick off. There will no doubt be al Qaeda types who give up the ghost and join the coalition. This is a component of victory, not the problem that you're thinking it is.
1. McCain, 2. Thompson, 3. Giuliani, 4. Romney
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"If we want to take this party back, and I think we can someday, let’s get to work." – Barry Goldwater
I responded thinking Mr. Griffith was from the left, but then again, when it comes to Iraq, the two are rather indistinguishable.
Or use the contact form to substantiate your BS and to ask for reinstatement.
You are only seeing the last comment.
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"Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it."
-Thomas Paine: The American Crisis, No. 4, 1777
Fine piece, Charles. Thanks. Here are two additional points:
1. Historically, in the development of free nations, political progress starts at the local level and slowly extends to the regional level and then the national level. The U.S. began as a collection of towns, then states, then loosely confederated states, then more closely united states. France and Germany had similar - if less fortunate - histories of national development.
The fact that Iraq's political progress is beginning at the local level is a good sign. If political development were just on the national level and extending downward, it would be less likely to be accepted by the people.
2. Not only are terrorist attacks far down, but sectarian violence is also far down. Per the Iraqi military, sectarian attacks have fallen 80% in Baghdad.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080216/ts_nm/iraq_dc
Fixed.
1. McCain, 2. Thompson, 3. Giuliani, 4. Romney
http://www.understandingwar.org/iraq-project
It is possibly the best resource out there for understanding our past and ongoing operations.
You can sign up for free email updates, too.
(No offense to Victory Caucus, www.victorycaucus.com, which is also an outstanding site for keeping up on the war.)


Billy Cunningham is on radio now discussing Obama, Hillary and McCain.
I am listening on www.wjr.com