Posted on 08/24/2007 6:40:44 PM PDT by blam
Democrats demonised for backing Bush in Iraq
By Alex Spillius in Washington
Last Updated: 2:19am BST 25/08/2007

A US military patrol guards a street corner during a weapons search in Baghdad
Two of the Democratic partys most influential strategists have been transformed into hate figures of the American Left after daring to support President George W. Bushs tactics in Iraq.
Michael OHanlon and Kenneth Pollack, military analysts at Washingtons liberal Brookings Institution, declared themselves as unlikely allies of Mr Bush when they wrote an article in the New York Times titled A War We Might Just Win".
The article was a godsend to the Bush administration, which is embroiled in a struggle with the Democrat-controlled Congress to retain control of the war - the single most important issue for the president in his final 18 months in office.
The piece was written following an eight-day visit to Iraq by the authors. It concluded that Americans needed to understand we are finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms.
Mr Bushs surge of 30,000 extra US troops was bearing fruit, with civilian fatality rates down and order returning to some parts of Baghdad, the authors said.
They also enthused about conditions in the town of Ramadi, a war zone just six months ago, where Sunni tribes have now turned against al-Qaeda and co-operated with the American military.
The day after the article was published the vice-president Dick Cheney seized on it as being something positive written by critics of war.
It has since turned Mr OHanlon and Mr Pollack into objects of hate for some Democrats and in the liberal blogosphere. Salon.com accused them of shameless pro-administration propaganda and called their article a rank deceit.
Other critics said they ignored or under-played high casualty rates, sectarian cleansing, the power of militias and political stagnation.
Most significantly the emergence of Mr OHanlon and Mr Pollack as cheerleaders for the surge strategy proved that senior Democrats are unable to present a united front of opposition to the war.
Such was its impact that the presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton acknowledged that the surge is working in it efforts to improve security, even if Iraqs government was failing.
The political battlefield is heating up ahead of what is likely to be a mixed progress report from senior officials in Iraq next month. Mr Bush will nonetheless use it - and corroboration from other sources such as Brookings - to justify maintaining the surge and persuading wobbling Republicans not to back Democrat legislation for a timetable for withdrawal.
General Peter Pace, the outgoing chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, was reportedly poised to urge Mr Bush to cut US force levels in Iraq by nearly half next year to ease the strain the war has placed on the military.
David Warner, a leading Republican senator, this week called for 5,000 troops out of 160,000 in Iraq to be sent home by Christmas, a suggestion rejected yesterday by a senior commander as a giant step backwards.
A formal report by the 16 US intelligence agencies has painted a grim assessment of Iraqs future, warning the leadership is unable to govern effectively, but warned that a drawdown of US forces could increase sectarian violence.
Mr OHanlon, a senior fellow with 20 years experience, agrees that leaving too soon would be disastrous. He denied that his trip, funded and organised by the Pentagon, was a public relations stunt that he had fallen for, saying he and Mr Pollack conducted dozens of interviews with US and Iraqi officials, often without a chaperone, and were free to ask what they wanted.
Our critics said were taking momentum away [from the anti-war lobby] just as it was building up. But we were merely at the leading edge of an argument that would have happened anyway, he said.
I hope John Warner doesn't call for the invasion of Britain based on the Telegraph getting his name wrong.
THEY set the goal posts for what "is" is, and when the goal is reached, they lash out, smear, and try to dance away from what THEY claimed the standard for success was.
I could never bring myself to vote for a democrat again, under any circumstances.
The political Left is incapable of dealing with reality. Any good news from Iraq will be discounted by them.
Time to roll out a new tag line...
I voted for Goldwater in '64. I gave serious consideration to voting for Carter in '76 -- but eventually voted for Ford without any enthusiasm.
I voted for Perot in '92. And have regretted it ever since, vowing never to throw away my vote like that.
But I have never allowed myself to vote without consideration of party. I voted for Dole, then Bush twice. But, each time, I considered the Democrat nominee (well, not Kerry). Or, put another way, each time, the Democrat nominee could've won my vote...if he had seemed at all sane.
No more. I will never vote for a Democrat. I'll not even consider it.
They are all insane. And, not to mention, socialists. They may be Americans -- but they are unreliable Americans.
Same here. I was a registered Dem up until Reagan.
I have NEVER voted for Democrat since, and probably never will again.
rats eating their own....
btt
The Rats might just eat enough of their own HHockey to do them in! If not then we will need more ROPE!
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