ThinkProgress Logo

Security

Yglesias

Arguing in Circles

Via Brian Beutler, Reuel Marc Gerecht wonders: “Do thoughtful Democrats really believe that the Middle East, America’s long fight against Sunni jihadism, and our standing in the world against potential aggressors and bullies will be improved by a precipitous and mandated departure from Mesopotamia?” I was tempted initially to give this a defiant yes, I do! but the truth is that I don’t, of course, think a “precipitous” departure from Mesopotamia is a good idea. Were the country run by reasonable people, I would think something like this would happen:

  • President informs Pentagon that we need to withdraw our troops from Iraq, and they need to study the question of what’s the best way to do this quickly but safely.

  • Based on the feedback POTUS gets about what’s feasible to do in a safe manner, he picks a target date.
  • With a provisional date chosen, POTUS shares his thinking with key partners in the British and Iraqi governments, and concedes to minor alterations in the schedule if said partners have strong feelings about the desirability of small changes.
  • The plan is announced at some public gathering with representatives of the Iraq, American, British, and other coalition governments.

The trouble is that the country isn’t being run by sensible people so the sensible thing can’t happen. Instead, since we have some sensible people in congress, they’re trying to do what congress can do. Congressional Iraq plans, meanwhile, have an air of arbitrariness about them since congress isn’t staffed properly to assess the relevant operational issues. And the administration won’t let the military do any planning for withdrawal. So, naturally, Democrats are left with non-optimal proposals to put forward. And this is then used as a reason to support the very administration whose terrible policy are forcing us into this corner in the first place.

Yglesias

After the Veto

This memo on Iraq funding strategy from John Podesta, Larry Korb, Scott Lilly, and Brian Katulis seems smart to me; about the right combination of politics and substance. It’s extremely frustrating that there doesn’t appear to be a viable way for anti-war congressfolk to simply use their authority to mandate both a beginning point for withdrawal and an endpoint but, well, there just isn’t one. This fight is going to need to keep happening — less in Washington than in members’ districts — over and over again for months until there’s more pressure and more votes.

Yglesias

Friends in all the Right Places

New Republic editor in chief Martin Peretz speaks up in defense of Paul Wolfowitz and the general principle of appointing unqualified, slightly corrupt people to important positions after they screw up their job at the Defense Department. Even the avowed conservative magazines don’t seem especially interested in flacking for Wolfowitz at this point.

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up