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Two Decades of Classic Bidenisms [Victor Davis Hanson]
pajamasmedia.com ^ | February 15, 2010 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 02/16/2010 4:30:19 AM PST by Tolik

Joe Biden's zig-zagging odyssey on Iraq is a variable primer on how the political class reinvents itself depending on the current pulse of the battlefield, both overseas and in D.C.

“I am very optimistic about — about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration.”

Joe Biden, February 12, 2010.

 

Just Politics?

All politicians hedge and backtrack, as the daily news proves their previous assertions and boasts wrong. That somersaulting is part of American politics. But even the most astute triangulators know when to go silent, especially in the age of the Internet when one’s past statements are so easily juxtaposed with present reality.

Consider for a minute the Joe Biden odyssey on Iraq, because it has proven a variable primer on how the political class reinvented itself depending on the current pulse of the battlefield. Biden, like others, did not merely “evolve” on the war, but at each stage of his metamorphosis, emerged as a vehement, loud advocate of an entirely new position usually at odds with his prior assertions.

He apparently felt that either his charisma might delude us, or his apparent instability might earn from us  an exemption along the lines following his unhinged statement that  FDR addressed the nation on TV as President in 1929 —“Ah, that’s just Ol’ Joe being Ol’Joe,”  or that we all suffer  from collective amnesia:

Biden’s Timeline —”Dead, flat wrong”

1990: Biden votes against the first Gulf War and Bush I’s efforts to get Saddam out of Kuwait.

1998: Biden supports Bill Clinton’s call for regime change and “to dethrone Saddam Hussein over the long haul.”

2002: Biden asserts that Saddam has biological and chemical weapons and is seeking a nuclear arsenal, proclaiming, “We have no choice but to eliminate the threat.” He then votes in October for 23 writs authorizing President Bush to remove the dictator by force if need be.

2005: Joe Biden reassures the country that we must stay in Iraq: “We can call it quits and withdraw from Iraq. I think that would be a gigantic mistake. Or we can set a deadline for pulling out, which I fear will only encourage our enemies to wait us out – equally a mistake.”

2006: Biden declares that a sovereign Iraq is not sustainable, calls for trisecting Iraq into three separate entities and demands that President Bush “must direct the military to design a plan for withdrawing and redeploying our troops from Iraq by 2008.”

He adds that “Mr. Bush has spent three years in a futile effort to establish a strong central government in Baghdad, leaving us without a real political settlement, with a deteriorating security situation — and with nothing but the most difficult policy choices.”

2008: Joe Biden forecasts, “The surge isn’t going to work either tactically or strategically. … Tactically it isn’t going to work because … our guys go in and secure a neighborhood, but because we don’t have enough troops, we have to turn it over to the Iraqis, and they can’t hold it or won’t hold it.”

Joe Biden votes for legislation to oppose the surge, declaring that, “It’s an attempt to save the president from making a significant mistake with regard to our policy in Iraq.” He reiterates that the surge will not only fail, but make things worse: “I believe it will have the opposite — I repeat — opposite effect the president intends.”

Biden later elaborates on that: “The purpose of the surge was to bring violence in Iraq down so that its leaders could come together politically. Violence has come down, but the Iraqis have not come together. …There is little evidence the Iraqis will settle their differences peacefully any time soon. I believe the president has no strategy for success in Iraq.”

Biden then tells Gen. Petraeus that he is  “dead, flat wrong.” He later concludes there is “no end in sight” in Iraq and staying is “killing us.”

2009: A Vice President Biden accepts the Bush-Petraeus plan of continuing a U.S. combat presence in Iraq, and accepts the status of forces agreement and timetable of withdrawal as negotiated with the Iraqis by the Bush administration to remove U.S. combat troops as envisioned by the end of 2011.

2010: Biden claims credit for winning Iraq: “I am very optimistic about — about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration. You’re going to see 90,000 American troops come marching home by the end of the summer. You’re going to see a stable government in Iraq that is actually moving toward a representative government.”

Obamism

This general timeline of “adjustments” could be applied to a number of politicians and beltway pundits, and in some regards to Obama himself.

After all, in 2002 as a state legislator Obama said he opposed the war.

But by 2004 Obama also said he did not know how he would have voted had he been in the Senate in 2002.

In 2004 Obama also asserted that “there is not much of a difference between my position on Iraq and George Bush’s position at this stage.”

Accordingly, he voted in 2004-6 to continue to fund the war.

But in 2007 a now presidential candidate Obama proclaimed that he wanted all U.S. combat forces out of Iraq by March 2008.

Then in 2008 he announced that the surge “was not working.”

But then again in 2009, he accepted the Bush status of forces agreement on Iraq, and kept U.S. policy there unchanged.

The Logic of it All

If one were to factor in four outside variables — a) proximity of presidential elections; b) current polls regarding Iraq; c) current polls regarding George Bush’s popularity; d) current level of violence in Iraq — one could pretty much have predicted all of Biden’s seemingly incoherent positions and many of Obama’s.

That is, they are not illogical, but simply shadow the above four considerations at any given time.

E.g., Bush polling well, election way off, majority support for the war, progress in Iraq = bipartisan, statesmanlike support for an ongoing American war in Iraq.

But Bush not polling well, presidential or congressional elections coming up, majority of Americans polling against the war, deadlock in Iraq = shrill, partisan attack on ongoing American war in Iraq.

We expect this from most of our politicians on most issues. But in times of war, when thousands of Americans are executing a policy abroad at great risk to their lives, it is a dangerous thing to predicate support almost entirely on politics.

Try All That with WWII?

Imagine a “what if?” with WWII. We would support the war after Midway, but then lose confidence given the later cost of Tarawa and Iwo Jima?

Call off the B-17 attacks in 1942-3, but praise them to the skies in late 1944?

Damn the billion-dollar B-29 program for its relative failure in China; proclaim it awe-inspiring after the leveling of the Japanese cities?

Proclaim invading France impossible after the Dieppe raid, but not so after Normandy Beach?

Praise Eisenhower to the skies for a successful landing, but damn him for the hedgerow catastrophe in the ensuing weeks?

Bradley and Hodges were saints after the breakout of summer 1944? But soon to be demons for being surprised at the Bulge? And so on.

Of course, this is precisely what nations — that after all are merely collections of fickle people — did with Hitler from 1936 to 1945. Spanish, Portuguese, Italians, and most of Eastern Europe wanted to join him or praise his genius, brought on by his apparent success; but by the end of 1945 not a man in Europe could be found who ever supported Hitler’s Nazis.

Anti-Churchillian

Winston Churchill had many flaws, but of all the men of the 20th century he will probably prove to be its greatest. He sized Hitler up when few could or would. He saw the danger when it was unpopular to do so, and when there was little hope in stopping him. The British people were with him only after Poland was the proverbial straw that broke the appeasing camel’s back and France was later invaded; the Russian people came in only after the June 1941 invasion of Russia; the American people only after the Pearl Harbor attacks and Hitler’s December 1941 declaration of war on the U.S.

In contrast, Churchill, among his own and those abroad, was continually resolute, constant, and neither depressed by adversity nor artificially animated by success.  He was there in the beginning, unchanged through it all, and the same when it ended.

In other words, Churchill was the ultimate un-Biden.

No wonder Obama removed his bust the moment he entered the Oval Office.

A footnote:

Despite his earlier criticism of Bush for terrorizing Afghans through Predator missile launches, now a President Obama has vastly increased the number of Predator drone attacks along the Afghan-Pakistani border. But note the silence of the hard Left that went after Bush on everything from waterboarding to Guantanamo.

One can only draw the conclusion that the last eight years of acrimony were always just about politics and power, never principles.

Why? Consider — the liberal critic of Bush was angrier about a conservative president ordering the waterboarding of three known terrorists in a relatively comfortable facility in Guantanamo than a liberal president ordering the execution of dozens of suspected terrorists in mud brick compounds abroad.

What a strange time we live in.


TOPICS: Editorial
KEYWORDS: biden; bidenism; obamism; vdh; victordavishanson
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1 posted on 02/16/2010 4:30:20 AM PST by Tolik
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Victor Davis Hanson:

Just a partial list: http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/victordavishanson/index:

Why Did Rome Fall—And Why Does It Matter Now?
Why Fear Big Government? The more of it, the more dangerous and creepy our lives become
The Trouble With Elitist Theories. Nobody likes to be lectured by those claiming superior wisdom but lacking common sense
Victory — How Quaint an Idea! Defeating Islamic terrorism is not only definable and possible, but closer than ever before
Partisanship, Then and Now
Civilization’s Lies [Victor Davis Hanson on the West embracing noble lies not squaring with reality]
America Rides Off into the Sunset. The only people excited about the “change” in America's foreign policy are the world’s bad actors
Mr. President, Words Matter. Obama, the rhetorician, forgot that people might actually take seriously what he said
Our Obama Saga [Victor Davis Hanson dissects Obama, painfully, again]
The Obamarang. [Victor Davis Hanson dissects, deconstructs, ridicules and demolishes Zero’s lies]
Trashing the Job Makers. The Obama administration’s tax-talking frenzy has left business owners feeling uncertain
Post-election Thoughts (Liberals do not understand populist outrage. Bloodletting will Continue)
Our Philosopher-King Obama. He doesn’t mind pushing noble legislation that most people oppose
Why The Great And Growing Backlash? What Scott Brown’s election portends for the Obama agenda
"Let me be perfectly NOT clear" & "Make lots of MISTAKES about it" [Victor Davis Hanson on Obama's lies]
Truths We Dare Not Speak. Five propositions that simply have become taboo
2010: Our Year of Decision
Beating the Dead Terrorist Horse. September 11 taught us many lessons. To our peril, we have forgotten them
A Humpty-Dumpty View of the World
2009 Chickens and Their 2010 Roost
Where Did These Guys Come From? The Origins of Obamism
The War Against the Wannabe Rich. Why attack the productive classes who want to be rich?
The Long March From California to Copenhagen [Hanson on debate between capitalism and socialism]
The Palin Wonder
Why Are We Tiring of Obama?
If Iran Refuses To Cooperate, Block Its Ports
Riding the Back of the Tiger [Victor Davis Hanson on Obama not understanding What Causes Wars...]
What Bush Inherited, and What He Left Left Behind
Who Are ‘They’? To Obama, “they” are responsible for all our troubles. Problem is, “they” are most of us
Afghan Mythologies. We have everything we need to defeat the Taliban.
The Discreet Charm of the Left-wing Plutocracy
Truman and the Principles of U.S. Foreign Policy. Jimmy Carter rejected the postwar consensus. President Obama appears to be following a similar path
Dr. Barack and Mr. Obama - The backlash is sharp as voters learn that Obama is not the man they thought he was
Obama and "Redistributive Change". His real agenda
The War Against the Producers
President Palin’s First 100 Days. Imagine if Sarah Palin had Obama’s record
Thoughts About Depressed Americans
Our Battered American [gets angrier - Must Read Rant]
Just a partial list. Much more at the link:  http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/victordavishanson/index
2 posted on 02/16/2010 4:31:39 AM PST by Tolik
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To: neverdem; Lando Lincoln; SJackson; dennisw; kellynla; monkeyshine; Alouette; nopardons; ...

 

  Ping !

Let me know if you want in or out.

Links:   

FR Index of his articles:  http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/victordavishanson/index
NRO archive: http://author.nationalreview.com/?q=MjI1MQ==
Pajamasmedia:  http://pajamasmedia.com/victordavishanson/
His website: http://victorhanson.com/

3 posted on 02/16/2010 4:32:39 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik
Of course I'm biased, but I certainly see the Democrats focused on power. They want control and they will say anything and do anything to get it. Republicans are hardly perfect, and they do a lot of things that I dislike but I generally don't see them seeking power over all else. Bush and McCain bent over backwards to work with the opposition -- quite the opposite of a selfish focus on power gathering.

Both parties need to improve, but the Democrats are the ones who care for nothing but control.

4 posted on 02/16/2010 4:47:24 AM PST by ClearCase_guy (I was born in America, but now I live in Declinistan.)
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To: Tolik

ping


5 posted on 02/16/2010 4:59:13 AM PST by BruCru (I think, therefore I am conservative!)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Yes. It was remarkable to hear one of the Dems congressional leaders to say that success of the surge in Iraq won’t be good for them. Them meaning Dems. At least he was honest.

Dems are quick to point out that Rush and conservatives were calling for Obama’s failure as well. But it does not match on so many levels. Wishing for failure of the internal policies geared to fundamentally changing the country is not the same as a party positioning itself that a military defeat abroad would benefit it. The human and monetary cost of war would’ve been much smaller if our enemies did not see us divided and were not motivated by it.


6 posted on 02/16/2010 5:13:07 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik

Joe “Whoops, I Crapped My Mouth - Again!” Biden is a drooling, senile a**clown, and gets a pass daily from an Obama Chorus media that foams at the mouth that “Palin is STOOPID”, every minute on the minute.


7 posted on 02/16/2010 5:35:47 AM PST by an amused spectator (The money vampires fear garlands of lead & brass)
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To: Tolik

JoeBama Biden is dumber than the third squirt of goose chit. He has no principles. These guys lie like we are all as stupid as they are. No one likes to be disrespected and I believe the majority now feels like this administration and congress don’t respect the people. November will be a blood bath of epic proportions.


8 posted on 02/16/2010 5:40:38 AM PST by IamConservative (Liberty is all a good man needs to succeed.)
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To: Tolik
What a strange time we live in.

Everything about socialism is sham and affectation. 23.11 Ch23 Evil; "Economic Harmonies"; Frederic Bastiat 1801-1850

Bastiat was pointing this out BEFORE The Communist Manifesto was written.

Nothing strange about a statist's methods to acquire, hold and keep power. Biden is a POS statist. Examine him, his family, the president that picked him as a running mate, the rest of the members of his collective. Draw a conclusion. Buy a clue.

9 posted on 02/16/2010 5:43:05 AM PST by PGalt
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To: Tolik

Another slap down from Victor Davis Hanson

Man has a way with words


10 posted on 02/16/2010 5:44:18 AM PST by njslim
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To: an amused spectator

They are all about power and will do and say anything to win it/ keep it. That is why they ragged on George Bush incessantly during his tenure — not because he was working against principles they held dear, but because they were laying the groundwork for getting a Dem into office.

Despicable swamp rats.


11 posted on 02/16/2010 5:45:08 AM PST by bboop (We don't need no stinkin' VAT)
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To: ClearCase_guy

The Logic of it All

&&&&&

Liberals do not use logic. They base all action on emotion, and one of their major emotions is the craving for power above all else.

VDH is extremely logical and can explain all the reasons behind leftists actions, but it makes no difference in their behavior. It is only useful in helping us know our opponents.


12 posted on 02/16/2010 5:46:40 AM PST by maica (Freedom consists not in doing what we like,but in having the right to do what we ought. John Paul II)
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To: Tolik
In contrast, Churchill, among his own and those abroad, was continually resolute, constant, and neither depressed by adversity nor artificially animated by success. He was there in the beginning, unchanged through it all, and the same when it ended.

The ultimate un-Obama too.

13 posted on 02/16/2010 6:20:17 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: it's not about Iraq anymore, it's about the USA!)
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To: Tolik
In contrast, Churchill, among his own and those abroad, was continually resolute, constant, and neither depressed by adversity nor artificially animated by success. He was there in the beginning, unchanged through it all, and the same when it ended.

The ultimate un-Obama too.

14 posted on 02/16/2010 6:20:17 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: it's not about Iraq anymore, it's about the USA!)
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To: ClearCase_guy

As Ann Coulter said the other day, there are bad Republicans yes, but there are no good Democrats.


15 posted on 02/16/2010 6:21:35 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: it's not about Iraq anymore, it's about the USA!)
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To: maica
Liberals do not use logic. They base all action on emotion, and one of their major emotions is the craving for power above all else.

About sums it up.

16 posted on 02/16/2010 6:23:49 AM PST by bcsco (Obama is the navel of his own universe.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Democrats as a group don’t know anything except government power and control. Republicans often have been successful in other areas - medicine, business, etc.


17 posted on 02/16/2010 6:53:18 AM PST by FreedomPoster (No Representation without Taxation!)
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To: Tolik
Winston Churchill had many flaws, but of all the men of the 20th century he will probably prove to be its greatest.

Maybe a close second to Ronaldus Maximus...

18 posted on 02/16/2010 7:17:54 AM PST by Onelifetogive (Flame away...)
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To: Tolik

When can we tell or know that Biden is lying?


19 posted on 02/16/2010 7:18:53 AM PST by Grampa Dave (Does 0b0z0 have any friends, who aren't traitors, spies, tax cheats and criminals?)
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To: Tolik









20 posted on 02/16/2010 7:22:26 AM PST by SparkyBass
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