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Monday, October 22, 2007
Michael Barone :: Townhall.com Columnist
We're Not in 2006 Anymore
by Michael Barone
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Things are not working out as Democratic congressional leaders expected. For the first eight months of this year, they struggled to find some way to shut down the American military effort in Iraq.

They took it for granted that we were stuck in a quagmire in Iraq, with continuous high casualties and very little to show for them. They pressed hard to get the Republican votes they needed to block a filibuster in the Senate and were cheered when some Republicans, like John Warner, seemed to lean their way. They worked hard over the August recess to pressure Republican House members to break ranks and vote with them.

But the Republicans mostly held fast. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell skillfully parried their thrusts in the Senate. House Minority Leader John Boehner persuaded most House Republicans to hang on. Then, over the summer, the news out of Iraq started to get better.

Mainstream media types tend to think that, while rising casualties from Iraq are legitimate news, falling casualties are not. But even so the word got out: The surge strategy was producing results. Anbar province, given up for lost in 2006, turned peaceful and cooperative in 2007. U.S. casualties and Iraqi civilian casualties were down. Brookings scholars Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack, no fans of the administration's conduct of the war, announced on July 30 (in the pages of The New York Times, no less) that this was "a war we might just win."

The congressional Democrats got ready for one more push in September. But the testimony of General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker cut the ground from under their feet. Now, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (who declared last spring that the war was lost) and Speaker Nancy Pelosi seem to have thrown in the towel. The Democratic Congress will not use its power to appropriate to end the surge or to bring the soldiers home.

That leaves the left wing of the party angry at its leaders and the party split on the war, much as it was in 2002, when about half of congressional Democrats voted to authorize military action.

The Democrats here suffered from a lack of imagination. They could not imagine that the United States military could perform more effectively in 2007 than it did in 2005 and 2006.

George W. Bush seems to have had a similar lack of imagination until the November 2006 elections woke him up. But he chose a new commander and a new strategy, and things have changed. Democratic leaders have acted on the assumption that the status quo of November 2006 would persist indefinitely. Continued...

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About The Author
Michael Barone is a Fox News Channel contributor and co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. He is Senior Political Analyst for the Washington Examiner and a Resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.
 
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A Better Foreign Policy
It's a good idea to point out Democrat failures with regard to to the war and failure to support, understand or influence our foreign policy. But this administration has failed in many respects as well - The surge is helping for sure but without a consistent overall strategy at work we're taking a step back for every two steps forward.

Please consider reviewing and sharing the following foreign policy statement by presidential candidate Mike Huckabee.

http://www.mikehuckabee.com/index.cfm?FuseAction=Blogs.View &Blog_id=507

Mike has been surging in grassroots support lately, but it seems like not too many people realize he has a strong grasp of the whole war on terror. From Afghanistan, to Iraq and Iran he understands the nature of the threats we face, both the challenges and the opportunities. And he has some very good ideas about how he as president would go about meeting them.

High Casualties in Iraq
In the scheme of things, is 3800+ casualties and, of course, a large number of wounded really out of line, or unexpected, in a conflict of this type and magnitude? We suffer perhaps 10 times this number of deaths every year on our highways. The Democrats routinely trumpet this as THE reason to get out of Iraq. Surely, there are ways to neutralize this contention without sounding heartless. It simply takes some time to formulate.
My limited experience with grievously injured military personnel, primarily amputees, persuades me that they believed in their cause and accept the sacrifices they made because it was for God and Country. It was their duty. Of course, there is a minority who lament their injuries and this is understandable. I am not criticizing them. I merely note they are in a very small minority. None of the pundits ever celebrates this selflessness. This does a grave disservice to our noble warriors.
If the current Republican strategists and speech writers can't develop a strategy, they should be replaced by those who can. In the meantime, good writers like you must take up the cudgel.
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