Sunday, September 16, 2007

Bush & Dems: A Tale Of Two Mandates

I found this excellent commentary regarding Bush's "We Will Have to Be In Iraq For Decades" Speech. Moderate Voice Contributor Shaun Mullen is on target with his perspective of the current political situation regarding Iraq.

By Shaun Mullen

You have to go all the way back to Richard Nixon’s infamous 1973 “I am not a crook” speech to find a presidential address that is being made under circumstances so incredible as those when George Bush addresses the nation tonight.

Bill Clinton’s 1998 “I did not have sex with that woman” speech was ignominious, but hardly comparable.

Nixon turned a third-rate burglary at the Democratic National Committee headquarters into a constitutional crisis that would lead to his resignation, while Bush has visited a catastrophe on a third-rate dictatorship – and America – that makes the tumultuous events of the Watergate era seem quaint.

Just as few people believed Nixon when he swore his innocence, few people will believe Bush.

While the president will not be standing on the deck of an aircraft carrier in front of a “Mission Accomplished” banner, and although in six subsequent “major” speeches on the Iraq war over the last four years he has repeatedly shifted the rationales for the invasion and occupation as one after the other has been discredited, he will yet again declare that success is at hand although the evidence is overwhelmingly to the contrary.

While reaction to this latest speech will be muted at home, there will be belly laughs in Moscow and Beijing, as well as in the terrorist enclaves of tribal Pakistan — and more tears shed by the families of the nearly 4,000 men and women at arms who have died in the war.

There has been a modest spike in Bush’s approval ratings because of positive publicity about the surge strategy, as opposed to quantifiable results from it. But with only a tiny minority of Americans telling pollsters that they believe Bush is capable of administering the war and barely a majority supporting General Petraeus, there are very few minds to be changed.

The speech, as they always are, will be devoid of calls for sacrifice at home and absent of candor.

There will be no direct reference to the elephant in the room — an inept and corrupt Baghdad government that has failed to meet every benchmark of consequence set by its White House puppeteers, including a U.S.-crafted law governing the division of Iraq’s vast oil riches that now appears dead after negotiations collapsed.

Beyond more bloodshed, a perverse consequence of the president’s open-ended extension of the surge is that it sends a clear message to the Al Maliki regime that the pressure to work toward national reconciliation — which is necessary if military gains are to be sustained — is off. Its American helpmates, who are busily arming both sides in the civil war, won’t be leaving anytime soon.

What is being billed as an address to a war-weary nation in reality will be an appeal to congressional Democrats to not get in the way of a blank-check commitment to a war that will last well into the next (probably Democratic administration) if not beyond. That appeal will be paraded in drag, which is to say dressed as a gradual but limited withdrawal that after a year may merely return troop levels to where they were before the surge.

The president need not have bothered to speak.

Despite some sharp questioning of Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker regarding their claims of progress by senators on Tuesday after an utterly lame performance by House members on Monday, Democrats have neither the votes nor the will to face down the president. And like the president, who squandered his post-9/11 mandate, they have squandered theirs.

From the Moderate Voice

Visit Shaun Mullen's Blog "Kiko's House"

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