Observing the testimony of Gen. David Petraeus and Ryan Crocker, the U.S.
ambassador to Iraq, before the Senate Armed Services Committee, one profound
truth came shining through. And it was Ambassador Crocker who uttered it, as
he summarized what the United States faces on two battlefields - the one in
Iraq and the political one at home, a major part of which is the
presidential campaign.
Crocker said, "Developments over the last seven months have strengthened my
sense of a positive trend. Immense challenges remain and progress is uneven
and often frustratingly slow, but there is progress." And then Crocker
added, "Sustaining that progress will require continuing U.S. resolve and
commitment. What has been achieved is substantial but it is also
reversible."
Critics who have demanded an immediate pullout of U.S. forces ought to say
whether they are prepared to shoulder the blame should the gains in Iraq be
reversed by a premature withdrawal.
Only those politically invested in the defeat of their own country - a sad
state to be in - would deny that progress has been made toward Iraq's
establishment as a functioning government and more stable country. As a Wall
Street Journal editorial noted recently, when the surge began last year,
"al-Qaida dominated large swaths of central Iraq, Baghdad was a killing
zone, Sunni and Shiites were heading toward civil war, and the Iraqi
government was seen as a failure. Today, al-Qaida has been cleared from
all but the northern reaches of Anbar and Divala Provinces, Iraqis feel safe
enough to resume normal lives, Sunni sheiks are working with coalition
forces, and the long process of Sunni-Shiite political reconciliation has
begun."
What's not to like about that? Apparently plenty, if you are a Democratic
presidential candidate, or part of the Democratic congressional leadership
that is an appendage of MoveOn.org and other far-left groups. These cannot
allow even the perception, much less acknowledge the reality of success,
lest voters reward John McCain for his good judgment to support the surge
and the objectives of the war or, heaven forbid, make the reviled George W.
Bush look good.
This is where polarized politics has taken us. Not even war is a good enough
reason to support a president of the other party, if opposition strengthens
the possibility of political victory, even if this opposition makes victory
on the battlefield more difficult for those doing the fighting.
Is there any doubt that, as in Vietnam, our enemies are encouraged by
domestic war opponents and believe that if they can just hang on through the
next inauguration, they might achieve victory? Continued... |