No wonder Barack Obama got such a tepid reception this week at the Veterans
of Foreign Wars' convention. The better the United States does in Iraq, the
worse he looks.
If only his strategy had been followed. His presidential campaign would be
sitting pretty at this point instead of struggling to maintain a once
comfortable lead. Iraq would still be Issue No. 1 instead of the economy,
and he would be making the most of it - instead of events in Iraq working to
his political disadvantage.
It's been a long McGovern summer for Sen. Obama as his lead in the polls has
dwindled down, and he's been obliged to wiggle out of - excuse me, refine -
one position after another. (Some of us are old enough to remember when he
was still a left-winger instead of a waffler.) That he's quite good at
shifting his political stances can't quite disguise the fact that he's doing
it. And it's costing him his credibility. Especially when he insists that
he's not changing his stance at all, not at all, just giving it some, uh,
needed nuance.
Without the Surge in Iraq that, lest we forget, Sen. Obama strongly opposed,
and whose success he still tries to deny, Iraq would be in chaos, America's
enemies crowing, terrorism revitalized, our allies demoralized and the rest
of the Middle East quaking.
But the growing prospect of victory in Iraq has tended to remove it as a
political issue. Nothing unites like success. The brigades devoted to the
Surge are now out of Iraq, the Iraqis are moving into political
confrontations rather than civil war, and victory is in sight, not that
Barack Obama is prepared to accept it.
There are few things sadder in this presidential campaign than General
Obama's trying to depict himself as some kind of realist. When he does, as
before the real vets this week, even his legendary smoothness deserts him.
Sen. Obama bridles when it's pointed out that, not to put too fine a point
on it, he favored failure in Iraq. If this president and commander-in-chief
hadn't finally followed John McCain's advice, changed secretaries of
defense, and replaced his incompetent generals with an effective commander,
America would now be confronting another Vietnam-era defeat - this one in
the heart of the Middle East.
All of which might have been good for the Democratic presidential
candidate's chances in this election, but it would have been disastrous for
America and freedom everywhere.
At that infamous congressional hearing when the Surge was still largely an
abstraction rather than an accomplished fact, Sen. Obama's co-star at next
week's Democratic convention, Hillary Clinton, said it would take a "willing
suspension of disbelief" to back General David Petraeus' new strategy. Which
may have been the most memorable misjudgment in contemporary military
history. And the junior senator from Illinois seconded her motion.
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