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Reports

Marie Cocco: Wait-and-Walk

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Posted on Oct 11, 2006

WASHINGTON—So what shall we call it?

Former Secretary of State James Baker, the Bush family fixer who has been called upon to patch up the shattered U.S. policy in Iraq, hints at the circumlocutions we will hear when his Iraq Study Group reports, conveniently after November’s midterm congressional elections, that the United States somehow must extricate itself from the bloody failure. “We’re going to try very hard to stay away from the political terms, ‘change the course, stay the course,’ and that stuff,’’ Baker said Sunday on ABC-TV’s “This Week.’’

How about wait-and-walk?

That sums up what appears to be the emerging Republican alternative to the deadly intransigence of the Bush White House. The wait is the wait until after the elections of Nov. 7. Until then, Republican candidates will accuse any Democrat who seeks a reasonable alternative to the current misadventure in Iraq of being a weak-kneed advocate of “cut and run.’‘

The walk is the slow withdrawal of American troops—call it a redeployment, if you will—that is almost certain to come once Baker and his commissioners report what most Americans already know: That our military presence in Iraq isn’t preventing the country from descending into violent chaos. That it isn’t helping the Iraqi government become functional. That the Iraq conflict is, in fact, as the National Intelligence Estimate puts it, “the ‘cause celebre’ for jihadists, breeding a deep resentment of U.S. involvement in the Muslim world and cultivating supporters for the global jihadist movement.’’ 

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The first articulation of wait-and-walk came from Republican Sen. John Warner of Virginia, the respected chairman of the Armed Services Committee, whose trenchant exchanges with Pentagon brass at his panel’s hearings these past few months suggested his growing impatience. Warner returned from Iraq last week to stun political Washington with his off-message message: Iraq is “drifting sideways,’’ he said, and the U.S. should, “in two or three months’’ (note the timetable) consider a “change of course.’’ As for our military presence in Iraq, Warner said he would take nothing “off the table.’’ It must be assumed this would include a gradual drawdown of troops.

Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) endorsed Warner’s assessment. “We must be willing to reassess and rechart our future military presence in Iraq and seriously consider input from all groups, including the bipartisan Iraq Study Group,’’ she said in a statement.

So Baker again extends his wise old hand to rescue the president—and his party—from a great folly for which Americans have paid so much in blood and treasure. His bipartisan commission seems headed toward a call for some sort of negotiated settlement, drawing in the key regional actors—Iran and Syria included, Baker says. The apparent goal would be to at least strike an agreement to prevent a civil war from bursting beyond Iraq’s present borders and becoming a conflagration involving Sunni and Shiite factions throughout the Middle East.

This is the course that academic and other experts on the Middle East have been advocating. It also bears a striking similarity to the approach promoted by a certain prominent American politician more than two years ago.

That was Massachusetts Democrat John Kerry.

“We still have an opportunity to prevent Iraq from becoming a failed state and a haven for global terrorists and Islamic extremists,’’ Kerry wrote in a Washington Post Op-Ed article that appeared on July 4, 2004. The Democratic presidential nominee called for a change of course in Iraq that would give economic incentives to draw in estranged European allies, who might then agree to a peacekeeping role for NATO troops. He proposed a regional diplomatic conference with Iraq’s neighbors, with the goals of keeping borders intact, preventing outside interference in Iraq’s internal affairs and protecting minorities.

Many of these ideas from Kerry’s presidential campaign were included in his plan, co-authored with Wisconsin Democrat Russ Feingold, to gradually redeploy U.S. troops by July 1, 2007. It specifically called for a regional diplomatic conference including Iraq’s neighbors and other Arab states.

The measure was voted down, 86-13, in June. Republicans cried “cut and run.’’ Most Democrats cowered.

I cannot predict how much the Baker plan will resemble the Kerry plan. The whispers and hints we’ve heard so far suggest something equivalent. We should all grasp a feasible way out of Iraq when it comes. But doing so will not bring back those who have perished these past two years. Nor will it expunge the guilt we bear from the failure to act sooner. 
   
Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at symbol)washpost.com.

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By SamSnedegar, October 13, 2006 at 6:20 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

I wish you good luck Jean Hay, but our policy in Iraq is “steal oil,” and it is working fine, and it will continue to work as long as we manage to hide this obvious elephant in the refrigerator from the common view. Neither you nor any Democratic challenger to the status quo that I know about will even TALK about Iraq’s oil and its importance to us.

It is not about what will happen if we keep on stealing oil, it is about what will happen if we do not.

Oh, I know that admitting that we are in Iraq for oil would mean admitting that we covet, lie, murder, and steal, but what else can you call it?

Don’t worry if you lose your chance at a seat in Congress: Congress has no power left anyhow; no enforcement capabilities, no ability to operate the treasury, no ability to direct the military, no ability to declare its own laws unconstitutional so as to reverse some of the more egregious policies of the Bushitter gang of thugs; Congress is toothless, just like the legislature in Cuba.

All Congressmen do today is what they have to so they can be reelected and get the graft. At least, when you lose the election you can’t be blamed for the sins of the Senate, which are myriad.

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By Jean Hay Bright, October 12, 2006 at 10:09 am #
(Unregistered commenter)

It is interesting that, four weeks before the Nov. 7 face-off against her staunchly anti-Iraq War Democratic opponent (me—Jean Hay Bright), Maine’s Republican U. S. Senator has suddenly had an election-year conversion on the war and the Bush administration’s failed Middle East policy. 

Up until this week, Snowe has been a war hawk, voting for the 2002 Iraq resolution and for every war funding bill since.  Snowe has shown no courage on this issue, and only now that Sen. Warner has diverted (slightly) from the Bush Administration’s drive to destruction, does Snowe feel she has permission to, also, change direction, slightly.

Snowe is a follower, not a leader. She is another Bush-enabler—one among many right now—trying desperately to distance herself from her party—and from her own votes.

Maine, and the nation, deserve better.

Jean Hay Bright, Dixmont, Maine
Democrat for U.S. Senate
http://www.jeanhaybright.us

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