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Republican John Murthas Needed to Rethink Iraq
by W. James Antle III
19 November 2005
Despite
the antics of both parties’ congressional leadership, the question of war
and peace shouldn’t be a red team versus blue team event.
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The debate over the
Iraq war has become partisan and predictable. Republicans spout slogans
like “stay the course” and “cut and run” while confusing support for the
administration with support for the troops. Democrats take positions
that are less antiwar than anti-Bush.
Case in point is former Sen. John Edwards (D-NC). Writing last week in the Washington Post, Edwards said
his past support for the Iraq war was wrong and based on flawed and misleading
intelligence. “Had I known this at the time,” he wrote, “I never would
have voted for this war.”
Never mind that others had the foresight
to oppose the war from the beginning. Forget also that while many policymakers
were convinced -- erroneously as it turned out -- that Saddam Hussein possessed
weapons of mass destruction, only a minority actually favored launching a
pre-emptive war against him in 2002-03. As the Democratic vice-presidential
nominee in the 2004 campaign, Edwards repeatedly reaffirmed
his vote, confining his criticism to the Bush administration’s handling of
the occupation. By this time, the absence of WMD was well known.
Edwards understood that every Democratic senator who voted against the first
Gulf War took himself out of the running for president in 1992, including
men of such stature as Georgia’s Sam Nunn. The ambitious North Carolinian
did not repeat their mistake before launching his own presidential bid.
But as 2008 approaches, Edwards’ pro-war vote has become a liability.
It may be more accurate to say if Edwards knew then how unpopular the war
would be now, he never would have voted for it.
But Congressman John Murtha (D-PA) is no John Edwards. A decorated
Vietnam combat veteran with 37 years of service in the Marine Corps, Murtha
has long been one of the most pro-defense Democrats in the House of Representatives.
He also voted to authorize the use of force in Iraq. When he calls
for the withdrawal of American troops, conservatives would be wise to consider
his arguments rather than condemn them.
Instead House Republicans floated a straw-man resolution calling for an immediate
withdrawal that was not Murtha’s proposal and was overwhelmingly voted down.
Bryan Preston, guest-blogging on columnist Michelle Malkin’s website, sneered
that the congressman’s statement “would be news if he hadn’t said the exact
same thing a year ago.” Actually, there is a pretty big difference
between advocating increased troop levels and favoring withdrawal.
The anti-Murtha juggernaut will fail. The Pennsylvania Democrat may
not be Scoop Jackson but he is certainly not Michael Moore, no matter how
much some in the White House might want to link the two. A majority of Americans are now entertaining second thoughts about the Iraq war, not just a far-left fringe.
Yet by refusing to question the war or respond to changing circumstances
on the ground, Republicans risk driving the country into the left’s arms.
An inability to rethink military action while combat is ongoing prevents
a realistic assessment of our current policy -- a policy that a recent NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll found 52 percent of Americans no longer believe to be worthwhile.
It does no disservice to our troops to question the policies of their civilian
leaders. It is not surrender to abandon a course if it was misconceived
from the beginning. We must not continue to spend blood and treasure
in Iraq based on premises as faulty as those which led us into war in the
first place.
The University of Chicago scholar Robert Pape noted
that while Iraq never had a suicide bombing prior to the U.S. invasion, “Every
year that the United States has stationed 150,000 combat troops in Iraq,
suicide terrorism has doubled.” The main thing that unites insurgents
from different political, religious and ethnic factions is opposition to
the American military presence.
Would the removal of this source of unity cause the factions to split?
Does our open-ended commitment diminish Iraqi self-sufficiency? Are
we tying down our military? Does Congressman Murtha have a valid point?
Republicans would do well to contemplate such questions without partisan
blinders. Despite the antics of both parties’ congressional leadership,
the question of war and peace shouldn’t be a red team versus blue team event.
The GOP shouldn’t be afraid of acquiring a few John Murthas of its own.W. James Antle III is a primary columnist for Intellectual Conservative.com. He works as an assistant editor of The American Conservative magazine and is also a senior editor of EnterStageRight.com. The views expressed here represent his alone.
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