Tuesday, November 29, 2005

"A Truman-JFK Democrat in a McGovern-Carter Party"

In an article titled "Our Troops Must Stay: America Can't Abandon 27 Million Iraqis to 10,000 Terrorists", Senator Joe Lieberman reminds readers of the good news in the Middle East in today's Wall St. Journal:

Progress is visible and practical. In the Kurdish North, there is continuing security and growing prosperity. The primarily Shiite South remains largely free of terrorism, receives much more electric power and other public services than it did under Saddam, and is experiencing greater economic activity. The Sunni triangle, geographically defined by Baghdad to the east, Tikrit to the north and Ramadi to the west, is where most of the terrorist enemy attacks occur. And yet here, too, there is progress.

Before going to Iraq last week, I visited Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Israel has been the only genuine democracy in the region, but it is now getting some welcome company from the Iraqis and Palestinians who are in the midst of robust national legislative election campaigns, the Lebanese who have risen up in proud self-determination after the Hariri assassination to eject their Syrian occupiers (the Syrian- and Iranian-backed Hezbollah militias should be next), and the Kuwaitis, Egyptians and Saudis who have taken steps to open up their governments more broadly to their people. In my meeting with the thoughtful prime minister of Iraq, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, he declared with justifiable pride that his country now has the most open, democratic political system in the Arab world. He is right.

The question is whether the American people and enough of their representatives in Congress from both parties understand this. I am disappointed by Democrats who are more focused on how President Bush took America into the war in Iraq almost three years ago, and by Republicans who are more worried about whether the war will bring them down in next November's elections, than they are concerned about how we continue the progress in Iraq in the months and years ahead.

Two-thirds say they are better off than they were under Saddam, and a resounding 82% are confident their lives in Iraq will be better a year from now than they are today. What a colossal mistake it would be for America's bipartisan political leadership to choose this moment in history to lose its will and, in the famous phrase, to seize defeat from the jaws of the coming victory.


Take that, Dean, Sheehan and Moore.

5 Comments:

At 12:15 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

I don't think JFK would have welcomed Moore as Carter did.

 
At 12:18 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Exactly how do Cindy Sheenan and MM figure into the Democratic Party? That is a cheap criticism. They fight cultural battles, not the real ones

 
At 12:23 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

Well, Moore squeezed into the guest of honour seat at the Dem convention last year, for starters. Sheehan is a buddy of many congressional Democrats and other activists in the moveon wing of the party.

 
At 3:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Carter is nothing like Kennedy. Kennedy had balls when it came to international politics.

Carter seems to think that there is no problem a group hug can't solve.

 
At 3:17 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Kennedy had balls? The Bay of Pigs seems a text book case of performance anxiety and a bad run of the blue balls. Stop the Carter bashing. When the GWOT is over, your gonna have to tell your grandchildren and history of the horrid things you supported in the name of your country.

 

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