The Pelosi Cop-out

Confirming in spades the central theme of today’s “Behind the Headlines” column, newly-installed Speaker of the House Nancy “It’s All About Me” Pelosi’s speech at the swearing-in reiterated her ongoing cop-out:

The election of 2006 was a call to change – not merely to change the control of Congress, but for a new direction for our country. Nowhere were the American people more clear about the need for a new direction than in Iraq.

The American people rejected an open-ended obligation to a war without end. Shortly, President Bush will address the nation on the subject of Iraq. It is the responsibility of the President to articulate a new plan for Iraq that makes it clear to the Iraqis that they must defend their own streets and their own security, a plan that promotes stability in the region, and that allows us to responsibly redeploy American forces.

Yet the President is not proposing an “open-ended commitment” — at least, explicitly. He still maintains that we can begin to withdraw as soon as the Iraqi military is up to par. If you sweep away the rhetorical flourishes, and the political posturing, the Democratic position of “phased redeployment” isn’t much different than the course we’re already on.

And why is it only the President’s responsibility to come up with a new “plan” for Iraq? Didn’t more than a few Democrats vote for this war? Okay, so the Democrats are against an “open-ended commitment” — what do they propose, instead? “Phased redeployment” is phrase-making pure and simple, but what does it mean, concretly?

The rest of Pelosi’s peroration makes it all  too clear that it isn’t just on Iraq that the two wings of the War Party come together. Sayeth Speaker Pelosi:

Let us be the Congress that rebuilds our military to meet the national security challenges of the 21st century. Let us be the Congress that strongly honors our responsibility to protect our people from terrorism.Let us be the Congress that never forgets our commitment to our veterans and first responders, always honoring them as the heroes they are.

Translation: More money for the military, more glorification of war and war-makers, more nonsense about the “war on terrorism” that truly does have no end — this is what we get from Speaker Pelosi.

And we get more of the same, only at some length, in Pelosi’s “Open Letter to the President,” co-authored with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Naturally, the Democratic National Committee’s house organ, otherwise known as the Huffington Post, is headlining this exercise in partisan gas-baggery, but if we look at what the letter actually says, it is hardly cause for celebration:

Rather than deploy additional forces to Iraq, we believe the way forward is to begin the phased redeployment of our forces in the next four to six months, while shifting the principal mission of our forces there from combat to training, logistics, force protection and counter-terror.

To be clear: the Democrats would begin “redeployment” by June, by which time the Iraqi civil war will have intensified to the point where the country will be plunged into complete chaos — and we will hear prominent voices warning against a “premature” withdrawal before “stabilization” is achieved. And how, pray tell, will changing “the mission” in the way Pelosi-Reid describe, change what is happening right now on the ground? When American forces go into Iraqi villages and kick down doors, terrorizing the inhabitants and sometimes killing them, will they do it in the name of “counter-terror,” or “force protection”? Perhaps they can pass it off as a training exercise. It is a macabre position to take — as if words had some magical power to transform atrocities into good policy. 

A renewed diplomatic strategy, both within the region and beyond, is also required to help the Iraqis agree to a sustainable political settlement.

No one at Antiwar.com opposes breaking the diplomatic embargo on Iran and Syria, yet American withdrawal must not be contingent on forging a diplomatic “consensus” and a political solution. If we ever showed any serious inclination to pack our bags and get out of town, a number of neighboring countries, such as Jordan, Turkey, and quite possibly the Iranians (or a powerful faction in Tehran), would beseech us to stay

In short, it is time to begin to move our forces out of Iraq and make the Iraqi political leadership aware that our commitment is not open ended, that we cannot resolve their sectarian problems, and that only they can find the political resolution required to stabilize Iraq.

Our troops and the American people have already sacrificed a great deal for the future of Iraq. After nearly four years of combat, tens of thousands of U.S. casualties, and over $300 billion dollars, it is time to bring the war to a close.

Agreed. Yet the Democrats have no specific proposal of their own: instead, they content themselves with taking potshots from the sidelines and insist that it is the sole responsibility of the President to call the shots. That’s what got us into this war in the first place — Congress abdicated it’s constitutional authority, and gave the White House a blank check. And Bush and his pet neocons ran with it.

The Democrats need to put up, or shut up. They’re against the “surge” — except, perhaps, Carl Levin, given the circumstances — but does that mean they’ll vote against new funding for the war? Of course not. A Democratic-controlled Congress can cut the purse-strings — and we’re waiting. My guess is that we have a very long wait indeed ….

Troops getting all their info from the liberal media

According to those pinkos at the Washington Times, passing on rumors from the anti-American fifth-columnists at the Military Times,

“Barely one-third of service members approve of the way the president is handling the war.”

“In a previous Military Times poll two years ago, 83 percent … expected victory in Iraq. ‘This year, that number has shrunk to 50 percent.'”

Obviously, the liberal media is not telling these troops the whole truth about all the great progress they are making there, or else they would be patriotic and support their commander in chief!

You have to respect the soldiers’ optimism though – half expect “victory.”

That means giving the place to Iran, right? Heck. They’ve already won.

Forget the War — It’s All About Nancy

I’m glad somebody’s holding them accountable:

While discussing the Democratic ethics legislation, Rep. Rahm Emanuel, Democratic Caucus chairman, was interrupted by anti-war protestors lead by Cindy Sheehan, a well-known activist whose son was killed in Iraq.

“We’re here to let the Democrats know that the grass roots and the anti-war movement elected them to create change,” said Sheehan.

Sheehan said that she was joined by 70 protestors to hold the Democrats accountable, saying are pressing incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the new Democratic leadership to stop authorizing additional funds for the Iraq war.

Sheehan said any additional authorizations would make the Democrats “co-conspirators” with the Republican in what she described as war crimes.

“There is already enough money in their killing budget to bring the troops home,” Sheehan said.

Nancy Pelosi is too busy holding her Pelosi-palooza to bother with such mundane details as the war. And you’ll notice that their faux-Rooseveltian “100 hours” is all about pork barrel-welfare entitlements, and nada about Iraq.

Somali Govt to Last for Weeks

Well actually the headline is “Ethiopian army to stay in Somalia for weeks” — but those of us who have paid attention to Somalia over the past few years know what that really means in relation to what the UN has been insisting is Somalia’s government. This “government” consisted of a gaggle of warlords and former communist regime bureaucrats holed up in a Nairobi Hilton — and who were only finally forced to return to Somalia when the hotel finally evicted them out for nonpayment. Even then a few of them just holed themselves up in the southern town of Jowhar, where they were nothing more glamorous than internationally-recognized version of the same thugs that lord over nearly every city in Somalia.

Now that the Ethiopian Army has come to their rescue, the commies and warlords have seized control of the important parts of the country and are now attempting to assert their collective will — naturally the first thing they do is order a complete disarmament of the entire city without exception.

“Everybody will be disarmed. There will be no sacred cows,” Information Minister Ali Jama Jangali said.

But then tellingly, and not surprisingly, the reporter feels the need to mention:

However, at a collection point seen by Reuters, not one gun had been handed in by midday.

And this is with Ethiopian backup. There is no evidence that many Mogadishans are rooting for the so-called government, at least not one made up of these butchers and gangsters and thieves. The business community — allowed to flourish over the last 15 years in near-total freedom, at least compared to the rest of Africa — will have a lot of demands that will need to be met if the government is to have anything of value left off which to survive.

So time will prove me right or wrong but I’m willing to bet that within hours of the Ethiopians heading home the technicals will come a-raiding, and with the support of various Somali civilian factions will butcher and/or expel the self-proclaimed government from the country yet again, as they did in 1991.

What if Nixon had been Hanged?

Seeing the rave reviews on how Iraqis will benefit from the hanging of Saddam Hussein, and hearing the late Gerald Ford lauded today to the heavens, I can’t help wondering how American history might have changed if Richard Nixon had been hanged.

Of course, I’m not suggesting  Nixon should have been hanged by a lynch mob.  And it is possible that Nixon could have been given a Saddam-like trial (judged fair enough by the Washington Post and most of the American establishment) and somehow avoided stretching before a crowd.

Nixon was guilty of illegally invading a foreign country (Cambodia), of perpetuating the war in Vietnam for political purposes and his 1972 reelection campaign, of violating the rights of tens of thousands of Americans with the illegal FBI COINTELPRO program, of sanctioning CIA violence and subversion around the globe, as well as Watergate and many other offenses.

Nixon also created Amtrak.

Many people assume that President Ford pardoned Nixon only for Watergate.  Instead, Ford pardoned Nixon for any and every crime Nixon committed from January 20, 1969 (the date he was sworn in) until the day he resigned in August 1974.    Ford’s pardon effectively closed the book on holding Nixon culpable for his crimes against the Constitution, Americans, and millions of other people around the world.

If Nixon had been publicly tried and a full accounting of his abuses made to the American public, it may have been far more difficult for subsequent presidents to cover up their crimes.  If politicians had vivid memories of Nixon swinging on a rope, they might have been slower to lie the nation into unnecessary foreign wars.    If Ford was hellbent on pardoning his friend, he should have had the decency to wait until the evidence was on the table.  

Some people would say that it would have been unfair to make Nixon pay the price for his lies and crimes when other presidents (such as Lyndon Johnson) got away with similar abuses and mass killings.

True enough, but it is necessary to start somewhere.

And those who are concerned about how Nixon would have personally suffered from being hanged are cold-hearted towards the tens of thousands of Americans who have been killed and maimed in subsequent unnecessary wars.  Making one politician pay the price of his conduct could have saved Americans and the world vast suffering.

Comments on this topic are welcome at my blog here.

 

3,000th GI Killed In Iraq

According to the web site Icasualties.org, the number of U.S. servicemember casualties in Iraq has reached the 3,000 mark. The web site, which tracks American deaths in both Iraq and Afghanistan, reported the latest casualty this afternoon. He was Spc. Dustin R. Donica, 22, of Spring, Texas and died of small arms fire in Baghdad on December 28th. The death takes the monthly total to 111 deaths. December was the third bloodiest month since the invasion and the deadliest of the year.