Let’s stop giving votes of confidence to Al Qaeda:
“The Bush administration has begun exploring ways of offering Congress a compromise deal on Iraq policy to avert bruising battles in coming months, U.S. officials said.
With public support of the war dropping, President Bush has authorized an internal policy review to find a plan that could satisfy opponents without sacrificing his top goals, the officials said.
The president and senior officials “realize they can’t keep fighting this over and over,” said one administration official, who along with others declined to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly or because decisions were pending.
The Republican White House has not opened formal negotiations with the Democratic-controlled Congress. But some senior administration officials — including Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and U.N. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad — have been quietly talking with lawmakers about how to adjust policy in the months ahead. Among other ideas, they have discussed whether the United States should advocate a sharply decentralized Iraq, a notion that has seen a resurgence on Capitol Hill.
Bush was victorious last month in the most recent round of his battle with congressional Democrats over Iraq. He forced them, after weeks of struggle, to accept a $120-billion emergency war spending bill that did not require reductions of U.S. troops in Iraq. But future White House battles with Congress are looming.
Leading congressional Republicans have signaled that they expect a new U.S. course by September, when a key military assessment is due. Democrats, meanwhile, intend to use other legislative measures to push Bush toward a troop withdrawal, beginning as early as this week’s deliberations on a Defense authorization bill.
An accord with Congress could save the White House from refighting the issue every few months. But the odds of a compromise are long.”
How about we let General Patraeus and the troops continue to take care of business and see what developes by September? Why short-change that support by second guessing the outcome when it’s still 90 days away?
Do our politicians really think Al Qaeda is so strong that our military can’t handle it? Are they really so taken with the insurgent’s ability that we think the surge will be a great big failure and all the lives sacrificed by our men and women worthless?
If not, stuff like this is a really crappy way of showing support.
No Response
CommentGuy
June 25th, 2007 at 8:48 am
1Mac
If you don’t do anything else today, read this article.
It’s one of the best written summaries of the issues in play I have seen in a long time.
markg8
June 25th, 2007 at 1:37 pm
2With Mitch McConnell saying Repub senators may be ready to pull the plug in September on one of the Sunday morning gabfests a week ago and Gates putting a team in place who all disdain the surge, Repub legislators and the DOD might just be telling Bush the truth, the jig is up. The US Army is breaking down and can’t sustain the occupation let alone the harebrained surge, not that it’s working anyway.
The Republican party is going to be in the same shape soon if they are forced to remain on the deck of the Titanic and shouting in unison with Bush the ship isn’t sinking while the party slips into the inky depths of electoral oblivion because of Iraq.
If Bush announces a phased withdrawal over two years or something like that my guess is they hope they can make the war a non issue politically for ’08.
Repub House reps and Senators are the key here. Dems did all they could in May but without the veto override numbers Bush won’t change. Behind the scenes maybe this signals Repub votes are shifting and Dems will get those votes in September. Or the US Army is falling apart, one of the two.
Bobby
June 26th, 2007 at 9:01 am
3Don’t fall for fifth-column propaganda. Someone might mistake you for one of them. The surge is working better than predicted. That’s what’s got the anti-Bushies worried and noisy. But nothing works like success. Michael Yon has excellent reports. So does this site: http://billroggio.com/
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