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Yglesias

Timing Is Everything

Looks like Democrats picked a great moment to blink in their confrontation with President Bush over Iraq. Fresh data: “Americans now view the war in Iraq more negatively than at any time since the war began, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.” If only there were an opposition congress or something:

A majority of Americans continue to support a timetable for withdrawal. Sixty-three percent say the United States should set a date for withdrawing troops from Iraq sometime in 2008.

While the troops remain in Iraq, the overwhelming majority of Americans support continuing to finance the war, though most want to do so with conditions. Thirteen percent want Congress to block all spending on the war. The majority, 69 percent, including 62 percent of Republicans, say Congress should appropriate money for the war, but on the condition that the United States sets benchmarks for progress and that the Iraqi government meets those goals. Fifteen percent of all respondents want Congress to approve war spending without conditions.

To me, the only real explanation for Democratic behavior is this. The party’s leadership and political thinkers simply can’t conceive of national security issues as anything other than a source of potential political problems to be coped with, never as a set of potential political opportunities. Since congress can’t unilaterally end the war, then, there’s no reason to have a confrontation with Bush; national security debates are just pure downside. Overwhelming polling data backing the liberal position isn’t a reason to go on offense, it’s a reason to think Democrats can succeed in slinking away.

Politics

72.

Percentage of Americans who believe “generally, things in the country are seriously off on the wrong track,” a higher number “than at any time since the Times/CBS News poll began asking the question in 1983. The figure had been in the high 60′s earlier this year.”

Media

Still Snapping

I like this guy:

I’m a high school student in Oakland, California. I have zero qualifications to write about anything of importance besides the fact that I have a computer, internet access and spend too much time reading. I am Mickey Kaus’ Worst Nightmare.

This is smart, too. I think the site would be better were it nymous (is that a word?) and it’s also easier to build an audience if you post more often. That said, good work anonymous whippersnapper!

Politics

Rove, Fielding pay ‘mysterious’ visit to Capitol.

“Senior White House aide Karl Rove and White House Counsel Fred Fielding were just spotted leaving a meeting room just off the Senate floor in the Capitol. But neither gave a reason for their trip to the Hill. Minutes later, Iraq War ‘Czar’ Lt. Gen Douglas Lute was also spotted leaving the Capitol. When asked what brought him down Pennsylvania Avenue, Rove remained mum, simply smiling and greeting the staffers who quickly surrounded him. ‘Something big must be happening‘ a startled Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) said as he watched Rove walk out the building.”

Politics

Pelosi: ‘This is not the end of the debate.’

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) gave the following remarks on the House floor today:

This is not the end of the debate. … We will have legislation to repeal the President’s authority for the war in Iraq. We will have that vote. We will have votes on Mr. Murtha’s defense appropriations bill, one of them the regular order defense appropriations bill, another one the supplemental that has been requested by the Bush Administration.

We could have taken a giant step in a new direction, instead we’re taking a baby step. But as I said, this is not the end of the debate.

As we think about all of this, I’d like to recall the words of a philosopher, Hannah Arendt, who once observed that nations are driven to an endless flywheel of violence because they believe that one last, one final gesture of violence will bring peace. But each time they sow the seeds for more violence.

UPDATE: The Gavel has video.

Read her full statement: Read more

Politics

Senate approves Iraq funding bill.

Following the House of Representatives, the Senate has passed the $100 billion Iraq war spending bill 80-14.

senatevote.jpg

UPDATE: Roll call is HERE. Voting no:

Boxer (D-CA)
Burr (R-NC)
Clinton (D-NY)
Coburn (R-OK)
Dodd (D-CT)
Enzi (R-WY)
Feingold (D-WI)
Kennedy (D-MA)
Kerry (D-MA)
Leahy (D-VT)
Obama (D-IL)
Sanders (I-VT)
Whitehouse (D-RI)
Wyden (D-OR)

Politics

Reid to support Iraq funding bill.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) has announced he will vote to support the Iraq spending bill despite its lack of timetable.

How to vote on the bill before us is a very difficult and personal decision for each member of this body. There are many thoughtful members of my caucus who believe we should vote “NO” — and continue to vote “NO” — until the President and his supporters come to their senses.

There are equally thoughtful members who believe we must vote “YES” because this bill does take a step forward in holding the President and the Iraqis accountable and that it does increase pressure on this Administration and its supporters to change direction in Iraq.

Although this is a very close call for me as I suspect it is for many Senators, I have decided to support this measure.

Read his full statement: Read more

Politics

John Boehner Breaks Down Again, Weeps Openly On House Floor During Iraq Debate

Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) broke down on the House floor today, sobbing uncontrollably as he urged his colleagues to vote in favor of the $100 billion Iraq war spending bill.

“Members on both sides of the aisle feel differently about our mission in Iraq and our chances of success there,” Boehner said, pausing to compose himself. As he continued, Boehner began to weep openly, crying out: “After 3,000 of our fellow citizens died at the hands of these terrorists, when are we going to stand up and take them on? When are we going to defeat them?” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2007/05/boehnerweepsagain.320.240.flv]

Boehner needs to channel his bottled up emotions towards a more worthy end — changing the course in Iraq rather than defending the status quo. Despite expressing limited patience and angst over Bush’s Iraq strategy, Boehner has been unable to put principle above party and demand a change in course.

In mid-February Boehner wept as he spoke about the need for a “solemn debate.” He then went to the House floor and proclaimed that escalation opponents were taking the “bait” of al Qaeda and using Iraq to “divide us here at home.”

A flashback to his last breakdown:

boehner

Digg It!

UPDATE: The Politico’s John Bresnahan writes: “While the issue was serious and somber, this is getting to be something of a habit for the Ohio Republican. One of his GOP colleagues noted that Boehner cries more often later in the day.”

Transcript: Read more

Yglesias

Let’s Hope This Is False

Steve Clemons has a heck of a tale to tell over it has blog. Roughly speaking, Clemons says Dick Cheney fears that George W. Bush is disinclined to start a war with Iran, and that he’s going to let Condoleezza Rice and her staff continue with a diplomatic approach that Cheney thinks is doomed to failure, but that has the support of Robert Gates, Mike McConnell, and Michael Hayden.

Cheney and his allies, the story goes, are trying to tell the Israeli government that they should find “some key moment in the ongoing standoff between Iran’s nuclear activities and international frustration over this to mount a small-scale conventional strike against Natanz using cruise missiles (i.e., not ballistic missiles).” That done, the political context in the United States will change, and Cheney believes it will set the stage for an abandonment of the diplomatic approach and the deployment of American military options.

Yglesias

More Lewis

Michael Hirsch here probably has the best take on Bernard Lewis in terms of contemporary foreign policy debates (I’m not going to try to denigrate his scholarship on the Ottoman Empire since, obviously, I don’t know a thing about it).

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