Canary In The Coalmine
"Oh, The Tide Is Turning!"
By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in Democrats | Democrats | Iraq | The 2008 Election | The Surge — Comments (10) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
How do we know that things have gotten significantly better in Iraq?
Perhaps because of stories like this one:
As violence declines in Baghdad, the leading Democratic presidential candidates are undertaking a new and challenging balancing act on Iraq: acknowledging that success, trying to shift the focus to the lack of political progress there, and highlighting more domestic concerns like health care and the economy.
Advisers to Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama say that the candidates have watched security conditions improve after the troop escalation in Iraq and concluded that it would be folly not to acknowledge those gains. At the same time, they are arguing that American casualties are still too high, that a quick withdrawal is the only way to end the war and that the so-called surge in additional troops has not paid off in political progress in Iraq.
But the changing situation suggests for the first time that the politics of the war could shift in the general election next year, particularly if the gains continue. While the Democratic candidates are continuing to assail the war -- a popular position with many of the party's primary voters -- they run the risk that Republicans will use those critiques to attack the party's nominee in the general election as defeatist and lacking faith in the American military.
If security continues to improve, President Bush could become less of a drag on his party, too, and Republicans may have an easier time zeroing in on other issues, such as how the Democrats have proposed raising taxes in difficult economic times.
"The politics of Iraq are going to change dramatically in the general election, assuming Iraq continues to show some hopefulness," said Michael E. O'Hanlon, a senior foreign policy fellow at the Brookings Institution who is a supporter of Mrs. Clinton's and a proponent of the military buildup. "If Iraq looks at least partly salvageable, it will be important to explain as a candidate how you would salvage it -- how you would get our troops out and not lose the war. The Democrats need to be very careful with what they say and not hem themselves in."
The usual caveats apply, of course: The situation in Iraq remains fluid and victory is not yet won. There will continue to be a need for American troops in the country and the reconstruction effort will be ongoing by the time the election rolls around.
But at the same time, it is important to note that there has been a significant and fundamental change in the narrative concerning Iraq. What was once seen as unwinnable is now palpably within reach in terms of reconstituting the country and helping to turn it into a Middle East success story. And the political dynamics here at home reflect this new reality. If things continue to go down the current positive path, it will seriously upset the conventional wisdom that has the Democrats winning the White House in 2008 thanks to public dissatisfaction with Iraq. And while Democratic candidates may strive to distance themselves from their previously resolute antiwar positions, we have the Internet to remind us of what they said, and how often they called the surge "a failure" and denigrated any and all improvements in Iraq as being ephemeral. By their judgments and predictions on this issue, we shall know them.
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Canary In The Coalmine 10 Comments (0 topical, 10 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
I'm starting to see five Iraq wars going on simultaneously:
1. Sunnis fighting al Qaida in Iraq
2. Sunnis fighting Shiites
3. Kurds doing their best to get out of Iraq
4. Iraqis of all sorts fighting the occupation
5. The Iraq war fought between Republicans and Democrats in Washington
This website's participants seem to be inward looking, focusing mostly on number 5.
Meanwhile, back in Iraq, the fighting goes on (coalition deaths will be higher in November than October) and there's no resolution to the political conflict. How long will America withstand the damage to its army, reputation, and treasury caused by this aventure?
F. Leza
Caracas, Venezuela
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Considering where the good doctor's head was, when practicing medicine, is it any wonder that the man has issues?
You missed Shia fighting AQ in Iraq
The ISF fighting the insurgent elements
The US struggling to bring order to the country.
And the legions of morons who somehow want to make this about something its not.
How is Chavez working out for you ? The need to blame others for your misfortune must be reaching a fever pitch down there. Ah well freedom of speech is alive and well up here so you can still vent.
______________________________
"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
treason---or is that if one votes against him in a referendum? So hard to keep up with the subtleties of Hugo and his housepets.
Another reason to rejoice in the success of the surge is that an ultra-leftie named Kevin Drum is now deleting any posts that disagree with him on his fast-disappearing Washington Monthly. Tantrums by webmasters on the left result in banishment rapidly nowadays, as they don't like the surge, nor anyone who mentions that it is successful.
The Surreality-based community over there has trouble dealing with its proprietary mass psychosis.
Coming as he does from a place where democracy is being murdered, it is not unsurprising that he sees all political processes in terms of violence, revolution, and war. Granted, he should be off trying to stop the Long Night in his own land, not trying to convince us that we have one of our own coming on, but that's just his defense mechanism talking.
The Fuzzy Puppy of the VRWC. I've been usurped!
Since the D finally admitted to some success on Iraq, how is Hillary going to respond in the general when our nominee asks:
'So if you admit that Petraeus's strategy worked, weren't you wrong to call him a liar when he told you it was working back in September? Why should the American people and the military trust your judgment as commander-in-chief when you obviously couldn't recognize progress on the ground AND you called a hero a liar and essentially a traitor?'
That 'willing suspension of disbelief' comment is really going to bite her I think. I want to see about 10 million ads showing here saying that, Harry Reid calling the surge a failure, and then graphs showing the decline in violence.
that question, certainly Rudy will. What will be sickening is her staff and media calling it a smear. To ask her a simple question, other than how she will save the world, is totally off base, It's the Lazio Syndrome. It will work among the severely retarded bloc of voters but nationwide and in total it will fail. At large there is a modestly sufficient pool of intelligence to wonder why a purported genius and savior can't answer a direct question asked for good reason.
"a man's admiration for absolute government is proportinate to the contempt he feels for those around him". Tocqueville

follow, like the good little dogs they are. Who are they after all to question or disobey the organ that has given them an aura of normalcy?
The Times is shooting up flares in order to save the lemmings from rushing over the cliff. Essentially the message is "we can't cover for you anymore, there's only so much we can suppress". A warning shot across the bow so the fools will know what to say next but also a cover your ass move by the Times to save the tattered shreds of respectability and journalistic reputation.
They did a optimistic and big front page story on Tuesday as well but the dopes probably didn't get the message. So through gritted teeth and anguish the Times has tried again.
This is just killing the fanatical readers of that rag but that's what you get for mailing your brains in to the Times subscription department.
Next, expect the Democratic candidates to show up at rallies dressed in combat fatigues, maybe with web belts and bandoleers.
Hillary will have fitting problems.
"a man's admiration for absolute government is proportinate to the contempt he feels for those around him". Tocqueville