Time to adimit that Bush was right about the Surge
It's no longer a close call: President Bush was right about the surge. According to Michael O'Hanlon and Jason Campbell of the Brookings Institution, the number of Iraqi war dead was 500 in November of 2008, compared with 3,475 in November of 2006. That same month, 69 Americans died in Iraq; in November 2008, 12 did.I don't watch the Colbert Report, but he sounds bombastic and dumb. His show appears to be based on the illogical premise that liberals are smart. That is a pretty arrogant premise and as the Surge proves it is invalid.Violence in Anbar province is down more than 90 percent over the past two years, the New York Times reports. Returning to Iraq after long absences, respected journalists Anthony Shadid and Dexter Filkins say they barely recognize the place.
Is the surge solely responsible for the turnaround? Of course not. Al-Qaeda alienated the Sunni tribes; Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army decided to stand down; the United States assassinated key insurgent and militia leaders, all of which mattered as much if not more than the increase in U.S. troops. And the decline in violence isn't necessarily permanent. Iraq watchers warn that communal distrust remains high; if someone strikes a match, civil war could again rage out of control.
Moreover, even if the calm endures, that still doesn't justify the Bush administration's initial decision to go to war, which remains one of the great blunders in American foreign policy history. But if Iraq overall represents a massive stain on Bush's record, his decision to increase America's troop presence in late 2006 now looks like his finest hour. Given the mood in Washington and the country as a whole, it would have been far easier to do the opposite. Politically, Bush took the path of most resistance. He endured an avalanche of scorn, and now he has been vindicated. He was not only right; he was courageous.
It's time for Democrats to say so. During the campaign they rarely did for fear of jeopardizing Barack Obama's chances of winning the presidency. But today, the hesitation is less tactical than emotional. Most Democrats think Bush has been an atrocious president, and they want to usher him out of office with the jeers he so richly deserves. Even if they suspect, in their heart of hearts, that he was right about the surge, they don't want to give him the satisfaction.
Yet they should -- not for his sake but for their own. Because Bush has been such an unusually bad president, an entire generation of Democrats now takes it for granted that on the big questions, the right is always wrong. Older liberals remember the Persian Gulf War, which most congressional Democrats opposed and most congressional Republicans supported -- and the Republicans were proven right. They also remember the welfare reform debate of the mid-1990s, when prominent liberals predicted disaster, and disaster didn't happen.
Younger liberals, by contrast, have had no such chastening experiences. Watching the Bush administration flit from disaster to disaster, they have grown increasingly dismissive of conservatives in the process. They consume partisan media, where Republican malevolence is taken for granted. They laugh along with the "Colbert Report," the whole premise of which is that conservatives are bombastic, chauvinistic and dumb. They have never had the ideologically humbling experience of watching the people whose politics they loathe be proven right.
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I also don't accept the premise that it was wrong to go into Iraq to begin with. It turned into a different war than was envisioned, but enemies have a way of doing that in any war. The important point is that we adapted and overcame their strategy and liberals would have lost the war and the world and the US would have been worse off for it. For that reason alone they should not be trusted with national security policy and we will find many more reasons why they should not as the Obama administration takes over.
We are already seeing some of those. Holder is going to be a disaster as AG and his policy on interrogations is going to make us less safe and probably will get American killed. Goo-goo liberalism is going to give our enemies advantages they will use to kill us. From the same folks who gave us the wall which led to 9-11, we will get rules that prohibit discomfort to our enemies during questioning.
Actually, Colbert's performance on his show is an over the top parody of Conservative talk show hosts on TV and the Radio, implying that said hosts are bombastic and dumb.
ReplyDeleteHe did such a good job Bush mistook him for an actual conservative and invited him to the 2006 Press Dinner. Needless to say, when the joke was explained to Bush, he didn't invite Colbert any more events. :P
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-869183917758574879