The Surgin' General

BARNES, FRED

The Surgin' General And the reeling Democrats. by Fred Barnes When congressional leaders met with President Bush last week at the White House, the Republicans were upbeat, the Democrats far less...

...House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a more imposing figure than her Senate colleague, Majority Leader Harry Reid, took the lead in criticizing President Bush's Iraq policy...
...The anchors were invited two days beforehand, the speech having been locked in...
...This idea is bound to generate Democratic attacks...
...And the president called merely to commiserate...
...It meant their efforts to change Bush's policy on Iraq fundamentally were dead...
...Now, with the momentum for retreat in Iraq diminished, Petraeus has more time and flexibility...
...Clinton invited criticism when she told Petraeus his testimony required her to suspend disbelief—another suggestion he wasn't telling the truth...
...He "could have requested more surge forces" and could keep them longer in Iraq...
...Might his speech detract from Petraeus's persuasive testimony and subject the surge to more political attacks...
...At that point, General David Petraeus had testified on Capitol Hill for one day...
...The anchor's question, he said half-jokingly, injected a negative thought as he was preparing to give his speech that evening...
...The New York Times ad by MoveOn.org trashing Petraeus as a liar backfired badly...
...Few Democrats distinguished themselves in interrogating Petraeus...
...Their assumption had been that opposition to the Iraq war would swell over the August congressional recess, causing wishy-washy Republicans to join them in thwarting Bush's war plans...
...The scariest words for Democrats in Bush's speech involved Petraeus directly...
...Petraeus capitalized on that...
...Senator Barbara Boxer rambled on about the general's earlier optimism about the war, then gave him no time to answer...
...Had he considered not addressing the nation in prime time...
...They wanted to talk about the budget...
...Fred Barnes is executive editor of The Weekly Standard...
...The effect ofPetraeus's performance was to slow the clock in Washington, as Peter Wehner, fresh from six years at the Bush White House, pointed out on National Review Online...
...But to the surprise of Bush and his aides, the Democrats weren't primarily interested in discussing Iraq...
...One question by a television anchor surprised Bush...
...According to the clock trope, Washington was racing toward full-blown rejection of America's intervention in Iraq, while the Iraqi government was moving far less quickly to meet Washington's— mainly Congress's—demand for political reconciliation and reduced violence...
...political, economic, and security engagement that extends beyond my presidency...
...Petraeus had answered "yes," twice, Levin said, adding, "I don't think the president is saying that...
...Democrats argued those withdrawals shouldn't be counted as new since they'd always been planned as the surge winds down in mid-2008...
...Making matters worse, Democrats were afraid to repudiate MoveOn.org because the party relies so heavily on it for money and campaign workers...
...by Fred Barnes When congressional leaders met with President Bush last week at the White House, the Republicans were upbeat, the Democrats far less buoyant...
...It hadn't...
...He would not be giving a "Bush report" or a "Bush-Petraeus report," as Democrats had alleged...
...It was his and his alone...
...The prospect of a return engagement by Petraeus can only fill Democrats with a feeling of dread...
...Representative Robert Wexler of Florida was histrionic and demagogic, but managed to be widely quoted in the media...
...Carl Levin, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, thought he'd found a wedge to drive between Petraeus and Bush...
...If anything, opinion polls indicated antiwar fever was easing slightly...
...Nor had anyone on the president's staff brought up the notion of not speaking...
...Senator John McCain, among other Republicans, seized the moment...
...And Democrats already exuded an air of defeat...
...For Democrats, Petraeus Week was a wrenching ordeal...
...When Bush met over lunch at the White House with ten TV news anchors, he insisted the drawdown of extra troops deployed in the surge was not automatic...
...The commander in chief has to tell Americans what he's going to do," an aide said...
...In his nationally televised address from the Oval Office, Bush characterized his policy as "return on success...
...It's just inaccurate to say that, you know, all we're doing is letting this thing run out," he told reporters at the National Press Club...
...On the contrary, Bush said, he could have altered the withdrawal schedule...
...It turned out the president was...
...He opened his testimony by knocking down a Democratic canard...
...Bush said he's directed the general, along with Ambassador Ryan Crocker, "to deliver another report to Congress in March...
...This didn't appear to have crossed Bush's mind...
...Petraeus said he could have as well...
...Even without conferring last week, Bush and Petraeus echoed each other...
...He hadn't...
...The president may have provoked more trouble than he bargained for by endorsing "an enduring relationship" with Iraq...
...His testimony hadn't been drafted at the White House or the Pentagon...
...Levin pointed to Petraeus's response to his question whether the general would continue to favor troop withdrawals "as we get down to the pre-surge level" next summer...
...He said if Democratic senator Hillary Clinton isn't tough enough to denounce MoveOn.org, she's not tough enough to be president...
...In fact, Petraeus didn't hear from Bush last week until he'd finished two days on Capitol Hill and a day of Q&A with the press...
...Success there, he said, "will require U.S...
...Instead, they decided to push various proposals, some symbolic, some designed to make it more difficult for Bush to carry out his military plans in Iraq...
...The more progress in defeating al Qaeda and Iraqi insurgents, he said, "the more American troops can return home...

Vol. 13 • September 2007 • No. 2


 
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