Yup. It's never been easy being a wartime American president. Great speechifying may start a war or celebrate a victory; but it can't win one. And that is where President Bush is right now. It matters surpassingly little whether the president gave a good speech Monday night or not (for my money it was a good speech of little consequence). Most of the post-speech commentary focused on its short-term political effect. Would it calm and unify nervous Republican congressmen? Would women in America feel comforted? But what matters is what happens in Iraq in the next five months. The consequence of the speech, such as it may be, rests on what it tells us about future events in Iraq.
In that regard, listeners took from the speech about what they brought to it. Sen. Joseph Biden came to the MSNBC studios ashen-faced and, seemingly, almost near tears. He looked like his dog had died. And he had. Once again, tragically, according to Mr. Biden, Mr. Bush had failed to call for a summit of world leaders to beg them to send troops to Iraq. This has long been Mr. Biden's pet idea. He assured the viewers that he had talked to world leaders who said they would surely say yes if only Mr. Bush would ask. But he didn't.
Newsweek's Howard Fineman shrewdly noted that by relying on the U.N.'s Lakhdar Brahimi to select the provisional government and a hoped-for U.N. resolution authorizing more military forces in Iraq, President Bush had lost substantial control over his destiny in Iraq. If I understand this criticism (which does make considerable sense), it is that President Bush is being insufficiently unilateralist.
Thus, just as Lincoln in 1864 was judged to be either too lenient or too severe with the South; Mr. Bush is judged to be either insufficiently multilateralist by Mr. Biden or insufficiently uniltareralist by Mr. Fineman. It strikes me that Mr. Fineman, even if he may have been being sarcastic or ironic, identified a weakness in President Bush's announced plan: Mr. Bush is relying too much on the kindness of strangers.
On the other hand, I took some comfort from President Bush's careful assertion that he was prepared to use our military forces in Iraq either in a "measured or overwhelming" manner in the next several months. The president wisely warned of difficult and violent days ahead in Iraq. I have a hunch that when those violent days come, Mr. Bush will be better served relying on that overwhelming force than relying on the United Nations.
He should move two to three extra divisions in theatre as promptly as possible. Post Script: In late August 1864, the Democratic National Convention, to much cheering, pronounced Lincoln's war "a failure." On Sept. 4, Gen. Sherman telegraphed that "Atlanta is ours, and fairly won." On the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, Lincoln won 55 percent of the votes.
Tony Blankley
Tony Blankley, a conservative author and commentator who served as press secretary to Newt Gingrich during the 1990s, when Republicans took control of Congress, died Sunday January 8, 2012. He was 63.
Blankley, who had been suffering from stomach cancer, died Saturday night at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, his wife, Lynda Davis, said Sunday.
In his long career as a political operative and pundit, his most visible role was as a spokesman for and adviser to Gingrich from 1990 to 1997. Gingrich became House Speaker when Republicans took control of the U.S. House of Representatives following the 1994 midterm elections.
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