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Saturday, October 07, 2006
William F. Buckley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Democrats without a home
by William F. Buckley
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DEMOCRATS WITHOUT A HOME

Democrats concerned about the 2008 elections will of course be looking closely at the midterm elections one month away. Hard thought upon the upcoming elections tells us interesting things, salient among them that there is no policy extant, among Democratic leaders, on which strategic political building can be done with any confidence.

Peter Beinart, shining young light of The New Republic, scolded Democratic leaders in Congress recently for carrying on stupidly when Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of Iraq came to town. What provoked the Democratic leadership was Maliki's rebuking Israel for the extremity of the war in Lebanon.

What Maliki had done, Beinart explained in The Washington Post, was to speak as a Middle Eastern leader of a predominantly Shiite country. Maliki's criticism of Israel's war against Hezbollah had several objectives, but one of them was to voice a position on U.S. foreign policy a little less slavish in the matter of Israel than that of the Anti-Defamation League.

Beinart was objecting to the threat by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid to rescind the invitation to Maliki to address Congress. The Democrats were purporting to instruct Maliki on how to "play a constructive role" in the Middle East. But Sen. Reid's letter, writes Beinart, "wasn't really about strengthening the Iraqi government at all; that's George W. Bush's problem. It was about appearing more pro-Israel than the White House and thus pandering to Jewish voters."

The flurry is one of many that will happen before there is anything that can be classified as consolidated Democratic policy on Iraqi leadership. "The Democratic Party's single biggest foreign policy liability is not that Americans think Democrats are soft. It is that Americans think Democrats stand for nothing, that they have no principles beyond political expedience."

The final public evaluation of our Iraq venture probably will not be fully illuminated until the 2008 election season. But coming very soon is a clue to national Democratic orientation. It is the election contest in Connecticut next month featuring Joe Lieberman, deposed Democratic standard bearer, and Ned Lamont, who opposes the entire Iraq undertaking.

What can't easily be foretold is how exactly the Democrats in 2008 will get around to formulating a foreign policy on the shaky legs of their pronouncements as enunciated in the years since 9/11. Hillary Clinton, John Kerry and John Edwards have problems absorbing the postulates of policies-gone-by, when they encouraged going into Iraq.

Consider just one derivative problem they face. If the defense of Israel is accepted as an inflexible commitment, then the health of the American military in the Mideast is a concern that goes beyond merely the replacement of Saddam Hussein. If Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq evolve as a support system of radical Islamist mobilization concentrating on the elimination of Israel, friends of Israel can't be expected to ignore the consequences of U.S. inertia in the Mideast. Continued...

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About The Author

William F. Buckley, Jr. is editor-at-large of National Review, the prolific author of Miles Gone By: A Literary Autobiography.

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Lydia
Course, it doesnt prevent us from laughing AT him though! He is such a baby. So SELF absorbed he completely missed my point about the "I" and the "my".... which had nothing to do with repetition, but everything to do with a big fat EGO! Perhaps the mental age of 2???? Naw... 1!!




BrianR
Far from "great Buckley imitation", Handy's feeble effort made no sense at all. Mr Buckley always makes sense. Tastes differ. I like your direct style, though occasionally you can be crass, such as now. I like Mike Adam's sarcasm, though occasionally he can overstep the mark. I like Doug Giles "common touch" though occasionally his analogies can seem forced...

These are all different styles, but liking one doesnt mean disliking the other. Why cant you like ALL styles, including Mr Buckley's? For me, he is a superb wordsmith, and there are NO "though occasionallys," which is what sets him apart from the above, in which you are included. As for his use of language, he is searching for more precise expression. Big deal. Not a wasted word.
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