George Orwell, call your office. You can add to your list of opposites ("war
is peace," "ignorance is strength" and "freedom is slavery") a new one. It
is the emerging plan of congressional Democrats, joined by at least one
Democratic presidential candidate: "losing is winning."
After years of embracing defeat and openly saying of Iraq "the war is lost"
and "this surge is not accomplishing anything" (Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid, among others), is that a light at the end of the Democrats' dark
tunnel?
Apparently hoping to head off a potentially positive report next month from
the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, some leading
Democrats are acknowledging that the surge of American troops is succeeding.
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, who recently returned
from Iraq with Sen. John Warner, Virginia Republican, says, "The military
aspects of President Bush's new strategy in Iraq Š appear to have produced
some credible and positive results." Levin is by no means a neo-con, noting
in a conference call with reporters that the purpose of the surge was to
help produce a political settlement, which has not yet been achieved. Still,
even acknowledging progress on the ground is a far cry from a spokesperson
for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who said recently that Democratic leaders are "not
willing to concede there are positive things to point to" in Iraq. That was
less than a month ago, but some are willing to make such a concession now
for the same reason they weren't before: politics.
U.S. Rep. Brian Baird, Washington Democrat, voted against authorization for
President Bush to invade Iraq. But he told the Olympian newspaper he is
convinced the military needs more time in the region and that a hasty
pullout would produce chaos that could only help Iran and damage U.S.
security. Baird, too, recently returned from a visit to the region,
including Iraq.
Even Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who can't afford to
be on the wrong side of victory no matter how far away it might seem,
acknowledges the troop surge is producing results. So does Senate Majority
Whip Richard Durbin. Of course, they quickly add, as did Levin, that a
political settlement has not yet been achieved and isn't the Iraqi
government just awful for taking an August vacation? This is said while
Congress is on vacation. In politics and with vacations, this is known as
trying to have it both ways so that no matter how things turn out, Democrats
can claim they were on the right side all along.
Yes, says Sen. Clinton, the surge is "working," but according to her it is
coming "too late" and so it's time to bring the troops home. If one suffers
from terminal cancer and a last-ditch effort is made with experimental drugs
to save the patient's life, would a responsible physician give up and
declare the situation hopeless, even as the drugs show progress fighting the
disease?
All of Iraq's political leaders are not on vacation. The Bush administration
says Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and other members of the elected
government are negotiating a political settlement that would be acceptable
to all sides. In his weekly radio address last Saturday, President Bush
predicted political progress at the local level that will help end the
national stalemate. I know, he once said, "mission accomplished" when it
wasn't. But the window for measuring accomplishment this time is a lot
narrower.
Democrats at last appear to have a war strategy. It is to snatch victory
from the jaws of victory, even after claiming lack of progress and
forecasting defeat for at least the last three years. Before the Internet,
talk radio, cable TV and the bloggers, they might have been able to get away
with it, but Democrats have painted themselves into a corner from which they
cannot escape. If Bush administration policies produce a political
settlement and a sustained decline in violence, Democrats won't be able to
claim they favored victory all along. If violence increases and there is no
political settlement, Democrats will be left to win the war and the peace on
their own, should they win the White House and maintain their congressional
majority.
Embracing victory, however reluctantly, is a risky gamble for their party,
but what other choice do they have? |