Democrats want flexibility to lose in Iraq

Washington Post:

The leading Democratic presidential candidates and their allies on Capitol Hill have launched fierce attacks in recent days on a White House plan to forge a new, long-term security agreement with the Iraqi government, complaining that the administration is trying to lock in a lasting U.S. military presence in Iraq before the next president takes office.

Among the top critics is Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.). She has used the past two Democratic presidential debates to blast President Bush for his effort, as she put it Monday in South Carolina, "to try to bind the United States government and his successor to his failed policy."

Her concerns have been echoed by Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and other Democratic lawmakers who are focusing their fire on the administration's plans for a long-term commitment to Iraq, after gaining little traction for their efforts to force a faster withdrawal of U.S. combat troops there.

"How do you make an commitment to a country where there is no way of measuring whether that country is likely to have a functioning government?" Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (Del.), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, asked in an interview yesterday.

...

You can usually count on Joe Biden to ask a ridiculous question. He probably thinks we still have binding commitments with the Soviet Union on missile defense. What kind of functioning government did South Korea have when we made a commitment to stay there and defend its territory?

What is really going on here is that Democrats are still desperate for defeat in Iraq, because a success there undermines their case against the use of force in the future. What they would like to do is take steps that would guarantee that Iraq does not have a functioning government and then use that as an excuse to leave. Most of the resolutions presented by Democrats last year on the surge were to that effect. They have operated in bad faith on the issue of Iraq for sometime and this objection is just another example of that bad faith.

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