
In the 2006 elections, the Republicans didn't lose because of corruption within the party, because they spent money like drunken sailors, or because they inflated our national debt to an almost unfathomable extent. They lost because of Iraq. As terrible as the Republican party's apparent desertion of it's fiscal conservative heritage may have been, mismanaged money just doesn't have the same emotional impact on the voting public as thousands of American men and women coming home in boxes. After decades (perhaps centuries) of government corruption, we expect waste, debt and bribery, but no amount of jading can make the citizens of America emotionally dead to death itself, especially if it's for a vague cause that very few actually care about or support.
So it's not exactly surprising that ending, or at least decreasing U.S. involvement in Iraq remains the #1 pillar of the Democratic party's presidential platform. When the vast majority of American citizens oppose a war, leading the fight against that war is generally a sure-fire way to win the support of the vast majority of American citizens.
But what if election day '08 rolls around and the Iraq war is virtually over? And what if the force behind the American pull-out is none other than George W. Bush and his "war-mongering" Republican party?
A GOP U-turn on the issue of Iraq makes a lot of sense from a political standpoint. No matter how many people lean towards the Republican party's positions on social and economic issues, the seemingly never-ending conflict in Iraq is causing millions of voters (especially the so-called "swing voters") to migrate to the anti-war Democrats. If the obstacle of Iraq is removed, and if Republicans play a key role in removing it, they can regain millions of votes, help George W. Bush salvage an almost-positive legacy, and pave the way to a Republican victory in '08 by demolishing the foundation of the Democratic party's new-found popularity. In other words, if the Republicans can beat the Democrats at their own game and end the war, Republicans win.
Is this a little far-fetched? Yes. But not entirely implausible. The first step Republicans need to take in order to bring the war to an end is to find a way to change their position without ever admitting that they were wrong in the first place. Over the past few months, Republicans have been doing just that. How? By slowly shifting blame for the current situation in Iraq from the incompetent U.S. government to the incompetent Iraqi government. The Republicans have ceased preaching unconditional support for the democratic government we helped create, and are now sending a clear message to the Al-Maliki administration: if we don't see any results, you won't see our men dying to prop up a failed system:
(From the Reuters News Service)
The top-ranking Republican in the U.S. Senate on Sunday expressed frustration with the Iraqi government, saying Republicans were "overwhelmingly disappointed" with the lack of political progress.
"The Iraqi government is a huge disappointment," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told CNN'S Late Edition on Sunday.
"So far, they've not been able do anything they promised on the political side," the Kentucky Republican said, citing the Iraqis' failure to pass a new oil revenue bill, hold local elections and dismantle the former Baath Party of Saddam Hussein. "It's a growing frustration."
"Republicans overwhelmingly feel disappointed about the Iraqi government," he added.
McConnell spoke as the Senate is trying to approve funding for the Iraq war with a compromise that President George W. Bush can sign. Bush has threatened to veto a bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives that provides only enough money to continue combat for two or three months.
McConnell said there was a growing sense of frustration across all political divides in the U.S. Senate with failures of the Iraqi government.
"I don't know what their problem is but this country has made an enormous investment in giving the Iraqis a chance to have a normal government after all of these years of Saddam Hussein and his atrocities," he said.
Citing media reports, McConnell said some lawmakers in Iraq's parliament wanted a vote to ask the United States to leave.
"I want to assure you, if they vote to ask us to leave, we'll be glad to comply with their request," he said.
This kind of rhetoric sets the stage for a possible scenario in which the Republican party can support a pull-out in Iraq while placing the blame for the collapse of Iraq squarely in the lap of the Iraqi government. The Iraq war will be seen as a just cause undermined by forces beyond our control, allowing Republicans to emerge relatively unscathed from the wreckage of a failed policy.
In another indication of a shift in the Republican party's Iraq policy, the last line in the article hints at another path that could allow the Republicans to support a troop withdrawal without looking like they're supporting a "cut-and-run" strategy. Although there are still some hard-liners like John McCain who want to stay in Iraq even if the Iraqis ask us to leave, several prominent Republicans, including the president, are now pledging to get our soldiers out of Iraq as soon as we're no longer wanted. For quite some time, polls have suggested that the majority of Iraqis want us out of their country, and if these dissatisfied citizens pressure their representatives to support legislation requesting an end to the American presence in Iraq, the Iraq issue could be settled far sooner than anyone imagined.
And in the midst of Republican promises to pull out at the request of the Iraqi people, Muqtada Al-Sadr, the powerful Shiite cleric at the helm of the massive Mahdi army and de facto ruler of Sadr city has emerged from hiding to resume preaching against the "American occupation". Marketing himself as a nationalist who wishes to unify the country, protect the Sunni and Christian minorities, and provide Iraq's ailing slums with a functioning public service infrastructure, his words have already found a receptive audience in many segments of Iraqi society:
(Taken from Al-Jazeera)
Muqtada al-Sadr, the hardline Shia cleric, has come out of hiding to deliver an anti-American sermon at a local mosque in the city of Kufa, his first since last October.
"No, no for the devil! No, no for America! No, no for the occupation! No, no for Israel!" al-Sadr chanted at the start of his speech.
About 6,000 worshippers in the mosque were present to hear the speech.
In recent months, al-Sadr's group have been trying to shake off its image as a Shia sectarian movement and portray the cleric as a unifier and Iraqi nationalist by reaching across the divide to Sunnis and other factions.
Al-Sadr said: "I say to our Sunni brothers in Iraq that we are brothers and the occupier shall not divide us. They are welcome and we are ready to co-operate with them in all fields. This is my hand I stretch out to them."
Al-Sadr's call came a few days after Shia leaders from his east Baghdad stronghold met with Sunni tribal heads from western Iraq.
Both sides promised to work together for national reconciliation and against extremism.
Al-Sadr's supporters in the Iraqi national assembly have also gathered support from Sunni and Christian deputies for a motion that would compel Nuri al-Maliki, Iraqi's prime minister, to set a timetable for US troop withdrawal.
Al-Sadr also promised to protect Iraq's Sunni and Christian minorities from hardline Sunni factions, or Nawasib, such as al-Qaeda, if US forces would allow his fighters to deploy.
He said: "I received complaints from brother Sunnis and some Christians about the aggressions of the Nawasib. I am ready to defend them and will be a shield for them, although the occupier would not accept that."
"I say that our houses and cities are open for them and that for Iraqis to kill Sunnis and Christians is a sin. What the Nawasib are doing to compel the Christians to embrace Islam is despicable."
Al-Sadr also had tough words for al-Maliki's goverment over its failure to provide public services in Iraqi cities, four years after Saddam's fall.
He said: "There is an abundance of cries and complaints calling for democracy in Iraq. Despite these calls, the Iraqi people remain deprived of services like water and electricity and even communications.
"If the government won't help, we will have another word with it."
Along with his verbal assaults on American involvement in Iraq and the incompetence of the Iraqi government, Al-Sadr is putting his money where his mouth is and building an alternative network of social services in Iraq, providing education and humanitarian aid to Shiite Iraqis who would otherwise go without. If Iraqi's begin to perceive that Al-Sadr and his ilk can protect and provide for Iraqi citizens better than the Americans, we could quickly become irrelevant as a force for stabilization (at least among the Shiite majority), removing one of the key reasons for our continued presence in Iraq. Al-Sadr is already an extremely influential figure in the Shiite community, and if he can succeed in bringing together
all of the Iraqi's who have become disillusioned with the status quo (this may be unlikely, due to Al-Sadr's connection to much of the anti-Sunni violence in Iraq), the likelihood of U.S. forces voluntarily withdrawing at the request of the Iraqi people could significantly increase.
And to add yet another indication of a possible Republican about-face in Iraq, it appears that there are now internal forces in the White-House pushing for troop reduction:
(From the New York Times)
The Bush administration is developing what are described as concepts for reducing American combat forces in Iraq by as much as half next year, according to senior administration officials in the midst of the internal debate.It is the first indication that growing political pressure is forcing the White House to turn its attention to what happens after the current troop increase runs its course.
The concepts call for a reduction in forces that could lower troop levels by the midst of the 2008 presidential election to roughly 100,000, from about 146,000, the latest available figure, which the military reported on May 1. They would also greatly scale back the mission that President Bush set for the American military when he ordered it in January to win back control of Baghdad and Anbar Province.
The mission would instead focus on the training of Iraqi troops and fighting Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, while removing Americans from many of the counterinsurgency efforts inside Baghdad.
Essentially, after years of "staying the course", it appears that the Republican party and the president are beginning to realize that change in Iraq is priority
numero uno for American voters. The only question is the level of change they're willing to enact, and whether they can enact such change without making themselves look like Kerry-esque flip-floppers. If the Republican's new focus on complying with the will of the Iraqi people is anything more than empty rhetoric, there's a chance that we
could be seeing the groundwork for massive changes in Iraq being laid by the current administration. As ironic as it may seem, if Bush and the rest of the Republican party do exactly what the Democrats say they want them to do, it could end up destroying the Democratic party in the upcoming elections by stealing their strongest selling point.
Of course, I have major doubts that we'll
actually be seeing the Republican party doing a 180 on the issue of Iraq any time soon, but it's certainly an intriguing possibility. We'll just have to wait and see what General Petraeus has to say when he testifies about the progress of the surge at the end of the Summer. If the news is good, "stay the course" may continue to be (and should be) the administration's policy of choice. But if the news isn't so good, and if Iraqi opinion towards our presence sours even more, we could find ourselves on our way out the door in Iraq by 2008.