Jan. 16, 2007

Freshmen Proving Fickle On Iraq

Weekly Standard: Bush Will Find Few Allies Among The Dems' Centrist Newcomers

  • Play CBS Video Video Battle Over Plan For Iraq

    President Bush's plan to send more troops to Iraq is meeting strong opposition in Congress, but the president is adamant. Bill Plante reports from the White House.

  • Video Pres. Bush Candid About Iraq

    Scott Pelley interviews President Bush after he delivered a major speech to the nation on his new Iraq strategy. Bush traveled from the White House to Fort Benning and to Camp David.

  • Democratic Rep. Heath Shuler, D-N.C., is one of many Democratic House freshman who oppose President Bush's plan to send more troops to Iraq.

    Democratic Rep. Heath Shuler, D-N.C., is one of many Democratic House freshman who oppose President Bush's plan to send more troops to Iraq.  (AP)

  • Who's Who Congress Reacts To Plan

    Reaction to President Bush's new Iraq stategy, which includes an increase in troops.

  • Photo Essay In Session

    Democrats bask in newfound power as 110th Congress convenes.

  • Interactive 110th Congress

    The balance of power shifts and new leadership takes control as the latest session convenes.

(Weekly Standard)  This column was written by Duncan Currie
The Democratic freshmen in the House are said to be a moderate bunch — by some lights even conservative. It is probably safer to call them economic populists, with a few border hawks, pro-lifers, and gun owners sprinkled here and there. Beyond basic partisanship and amorphous cries for "ethics" reform, there were two issues that united these Democrats during the 2006 campaign. The first was free trade. They're against it. Indeed, it's striking how far left the party has shifted on globalization since Bill Clinton championed NAFTA in the early 1990s. The second was the Iraq war. They're against that, too. Almost to a man the Democratic House freshmen tore into President Bush's handling of the war.

Some Republicans have comforted themselves with the thought that Democrats who won "red" districts would want to keep their distance from liberal leaders such as Nancy Pelosi and soft-pedal their criticism of Bush, should they desire a second term. While this may be true on taxes, immigration, and some cultural issues, the war in Iraq is another matter. In fact, among those House Democrats who took over Republican seats, there is almost uniform opposition to the counterinsurgency plan and troop reinforcements that Bush announced last week.

"Every freshman I've spoken with is just disgusted with this," says a Democratic House aide, who claims one of his party's freshmen mocked the Bush speech as "blabbering buffoonery." Even Joe Donnelly of Indiana, who has publicly hedged on the troop surge, is reportedly more critical in private. According to a Democratic source, Donnelly left a meeting at the White House shortly before Bush's speech believing that even some administration officials had lost confidence in our Iraq policy.

Democratic complaints take several forms. Iraq is in the throes of a civil war, they say. The only solution is political, not military. Adding over 20,000 U.S. troops will make Iraqis more dependent on American forces, not less. Past troop surges have not curtailed violence in Baghdad. Either way, top U.S. generals oppose the surge. Shouldn't Bush listen to his senior military advisers? Doesn't he realize his latest plan will only strain our armed forces further, and make them less capable of responding to contingencies elsewhere in the Middle East and East Asia? And whatever happened to the Iraq Study Group recommendations? Has Bush completely ignored them?

These are the typical gripes. The irony is that Democrats were once the folks advocating a bigger U.S. deployment to Iraq, citing the wisdom of such generals as former Army chief of staff Eric Shinseki. Now they've changed their tune.

The freshmen Democrats in the House are particularly curious. They ran on explicit pledges to investigate or question the administration's conduct in Iraq. As such, they might have been expected to support a new policy — but not this new policy. Most of them knocked off GOP incumbents or won previously Republican seats, but show little fear of alienating their constituents by attacking Bush on the war. This offers further evidence that even traditional GOP voters are souring on Iraq and itching for a U.S. withdrawal.

Even the two most conservative Democratic freshmen, Brad Ellsworth of Indiana and Heath Shuler of North Carolina, are following the party line. "He failed to convince me that sending more troops fits into a new, successful strategy," Ellsworth said of the Bush speech. "We've heard time and time again that as the Iraqis stand up, the U.S. will stand down. But we have yet to see the Iraqis take responsibility for their future. Now is the time for them to fulfill their commitment as we fulfill ours."

Shuler, the former NFL quarterback, was even more disparaging. "The president has asked us to send more of our brave young men and women into harm's away, against the advice of his generals and the Iraq Study Group," he said. "We heard a call for escalation and continuation — an escalation of the number of our troops fighting in Iraq and a continuation of the same failed policies and reckless optimism."

It's worth noting that, in the 2004 election, George W. Bush carried Ellsworth's district by 24 points (62-38) and won Shuler's district by 14 points (57-43). He carried Democrat Steve Kagen's Wisconsin district by 11 points (55-44). Kagen, though, offered an acerbic denunciation of the surge strategy: "This administration's policies make no sense. Clearly it was bad judgment to have invaded Iraq, and it will be even worse judgment if we stay. Simply put, we do not belong in Iraq, and we're still heading in the wrong direction."

Another significant group of Democratic critics includes those House freshmen who served in Iraq or other wise boast a military background. Tim Walz of Minnesota, a retired Army national guardsman who was stationed in Italy during part of the Iraq war, called the Bush speech "showmanship at its worst." Patrick Murphy of Pennsylvania, a former Army captain and Iraq veteran, sided with "military experts like General Colin Powell and General Abizaid who say we need a political solution, not a military escalation." Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania, a former three-star Navy admiral, insisted that "the way forward is not to add more troops, but to set a deliberate timetable for redeployment from Iraq — at least by the end of this year — to serve as a catalyst for the Iraqis to accept responsibility for their country."

A third Pennsylvania freshman, Navy reservist Chris Carney, approaches Iraq from a unique vantage point: He served as a senior counterterrorism official at the Pentagon from 2002 to 2004, where he worked for Rumsfeld undersecretary Douglas Feith (a bête noire of the antiwar left) and collected intelligence on the relationship between al Qaeda and Baathist Iraq. "This is a Yogi Berra strategy: déjà vu all over again," Carney said last week of the new Bush plan. "We should be changing our focus in Iraq. Instead of sending more American troops overseas, we should be training Iraqis to handle the jobs themselves. For every Iraqi battalion we train, we need to bring an American battalion home. This should be our focus."

I spoke with Carney last Friday. "The leadership of the party," he says, "is looking to me to give some guidance on this issue." If the White House thought someone with Carney's background and avowed commitment to forging a nonpartisan Iraq strategy would give guidance sympathetic to the president's position, they were wrong. That's just one more sign of how difficult it will be for the White House to find even grudging supporters of the troop surge among Democrats on Capitol Hill.


By Duncan Currie
© Copyright 2007, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.



"Arguably the most influential opinion journal at the White House" - The New York Times

For more information and to subscribe, click here.

Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 12 Comments
by fascistusa January 18, 2007 4:54 AM EST
feelfree:

You keep missing the whole point. The RICH, The Illuminati, Skull & Bones, ect people RUN BOTH PARTIES.

BOTH PARTIES. BOTH.

America was never meant to ONLY HAVE 2 PARTIES.

John Kerry is just another puppet for the Illuminati.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 January 17, 2007 3:37 PM EST
marcodele,

Re: "Is there a source to this 'fact?' - ""The irony is that Democrats were once the folks advocating a bigger U.S. deployment to Iraq...."

The pro-war Democrat Party candidate of 2004, John Kerry, proposed adding 40,000 additional U.S. troops to the illegal and disgraceful bloodbath in Iraq.

Many prominent Democrats have done their part to legitimize the U.S. abomination in Iraq, I am soory, but not surprised, to say. This was a tragic mistake, in my opinion.

The Democrat Party is very lucky that the Bush regime stole the 2004 Presidential election, in my opinion. If Kerry had won, there is little reason to believe that our current situation in Iraq would be much different, and the Democrat Party would be receiving the full blame for the ongoing disaster there.

There were anti-war Democrat Presidential candidates, but they were shouted down by the chicken-hawks.
Reply to this comment
by marcodele January 17, 2007 3:08 PM EST
Is there a source to this 'fact?' - ""The irony is that Democrats were once the folks advocating a bigger U.S. deployment to Iraq...."

Or is it just another one of those facts that are facts because someone on Fox said it was a fact?
Reply to this comment
by observantx January 17, 2007 12:42 PM EST
here's a juicy litle tidbit.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales says federal judges are unqualified to make rulings affecting national security policy, ramping up his criticism of how they handle terrorism cases.

In remarks prepared for delivery Wednesday, Gonzales says judges generally should defer to the will of the president and Congress when deciding national security cases. He also raps jurists who %u201Capply an activist philosophy that stretches the law to suit policy preferences.%u201D

It would be better for Mr. Gonzalez to change his last name to Goering or maybe Goebbels. It would be more appropriate for the insidious assault he undertakes on our basic freedoms and checks and ballances.

And who is in thrall to an "activist philosophy", Mr. G(fill in the blank)? Is indefinite detention, isolation and torture of uncharged detainess an inactive enterprise?

Mr. G(fill in the blank), you need to reread the Preamble of the Constitution. Pay very close attention to the first three words.

Reply to this comment
by rafterman1 January 17, 2007 5:15 AM EST
"God forbid they have a different position on how to handle an invasion vs how to handle an occupation."

Don't you know, with the righties, changing an opinion or a strategy based on new information is flip-flopping. You should never change course once you decide something, even if that course takes you off the edge of a cliff.

By the way, notblue, since the color of the Republican party is red, I have to say - Isn't red the color of...communism? Isn't red the color of the international socialist? I'm not implying anything, I'm just sayin'...
Reply to this comment
by feelfree1 January 17, 2007 3:34 AM EST
Duncan Currie,

I hate to break this to you, but you and your fellow Weekly Standard propagandists are a laughing stock. Considering that the bloodthirsty eunuchs at the Standard are among the more prominent fools who trumpeted our way into this horrific mess, the chances that anyone cares about your thoughts concerning a way out, are next to none.

Your ideology is an abject failure and a deep and painful disgrace. If we need advice on failure, pain, and disgrace, we'll let you know.
Reply to this comment
by fascistusa January 16, 2007 9:29 PM EST
LORD BUSH IS A FASCIST. A NAZI. A DICTATOR.

I don't care what the Democrats think. I don't CARE.

Get our military OUT OF IRAQ. Stop the WAR PROFITEERS.

STOP OUR FASCIST GOVERNMENT and PROPOGANDA NEWS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by marcodele January 16, 2007 5:48 PM EST
I heard Bush's mom has already disavowed him for jumping ahead of Jeb to the White House. No wonder Poppy Bush is running around all over the country sobbing.

Do you think the Republicans could crawl out from Barbara Bush's skirt for a change?
Reply to this comment
by kreuz4 January 16, 2007 5:48 PM EST
"The irony is that Democrats were once the folks advocating a bigger U.S. deployment to Iraq, citing the wisdom of such generals as former Army chief of staff Eric Shinseki. Now they've changed their tune."

God forbid they have a different position on how to handle an invasion vs how to handle an occupation. The need for more troops initially was to destroy the Iraqi army when they were still a uniformed regular army and not let it dissolve into the populus where it could become an insurgency in the first place rather than focusing solely on Hussein. Now that we're in the full throes of an insurgency, we need a very different response. This isn't playing politics or any of the other nonsense you imply, this is about the proper strategy to make Iraq succeed, and more troops at this stage will only make matters worse. Maybe if you conservatives would actually learn something about military strategy and the proper uses of national power in international relations rather than just domestic politics, you guys might have some credibility on these issues.
Reply to this comment
by notblue January 16, 2007 5:43 PM EST
Shingles 1 and bluebastard, you should actually read the article before spewing the same old ***. What a hoot!
Reply to this comment
by shingles1 January 16, 2007 4:38 PM EST
At this point, Bush is so unpopular that the only people left who like him are the criminally insane, the mentally "slow", the crackheads, and his Mom.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad January 16, 2007 4:30 PM EST
Anyone who is not now smoking Crack can see that America does not belong in Iraq and Bush in only listening to people who speak what he wants to hear is only reading the Weekly Standard and drinking coffee with the rest of the Neocons that have not moved to Bolivia to live in fear for their lives.
Reply to this comment
See all 12 Comments

Exclusive Webshow

The road ahead in Afghanistan, and the crucial decision Obama faces.
Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: