McCain’s Political Quagmire
The maverick must explain his support for Bush’s war polic
Within the next two weeks, the
number of American troops killed in Iraq is likely to reach 4,000,
assuming that the average number of fatal casualties per day remains
steady. It is an arbitrary number, given meaning by the fact that the
nation may briefly take notice, but a day will come in this
presidential campaign when Sen. John McCain must explain what he thinks
we have gained by the sacrifice of those men and women.
Anticipating
that prospect must make McCain uneasy. Speaking to reporters on his
campaign bus the other day, he worried aloud that unless he can
persuade voters that current policy is succeeding in Iraq, “then I
lose. I lose.”
Almost immediately he regretted his candor and
asked for a quick rewrite. “If I may, I’d like to retract ‘I’ll lose.’
But I don’t think there’s any doubt that how they judge Iraq will have
a direct relation to their judgment of me, my support of the surge,” he
said. As the presumptive Republican nominee—representing the
continuation of a presidency that has fallen from favor with as many as
eight out of 10 Americans— McCain has ample reason to worry. His
forthright support of President Bush, the war and the escalation of
troop numbers in the past year is unlikely to endear him to independent
voters who otherwise admire his maverick image and reform record.
They
still feel betrayed by the exaggerations and lies that led us into
war. They don’t want to spend any more lives or money on this
misadventure. Against that overwhelming public sentiment, McCain
insists that he can see “a clear path to success in Iraq,” with
American and civilian casualties declining and Iraqis assuming
responsibility for their own security. The Arizona senator evidently
realizes that his recent prediction of a century-long American
occupation did not go over well. “All of us want out of Iraq,” he told
the Associated Press on Feb. 25.
“The question is how do we want out of Iraq.”
Forestalling the Inevitable Until Election Day
Yet,
even while he uttered those soothing words, the Pentagon was preparing
a new deployment schedule that proves the path to success is far from
clear. The “surge” in U.S. combat forces has not led to stability, but
to a terrible dilemma for American commanders in Iraq. The current
level of combat troops is not sustainable, but reducing that level is
likely to provoke increased violence. For the moment, the White House
hopes to maintain enough force strength to forestall the inevitable
reckoning until some time after Election Day.
Certainly the
troop escalation helped to revive McCain’s fortunes in the Republican
primary contest, quelling any dissent among his rivals (except for the
indefatigable, unelectable Rep. Ron Paul). Yet the escalation appears
to have had little political impact outside the GOP, despite all the
promotional hype. If McCain is truly depending on the surge to elect
him in November, he won’t find the data reassuring.
In
national surveys, many Americans agree that sending more troops has
improved conditions in Iraq. But those same surveys show that the
temporary improvement has not changed their opinions about the war. A
substantial majority believes that invading Iraq was a mi st ake, that
we s ho u ld br ing t h e troops home within a year and that the Bush
administration has handled the war badly, or very badly. For months we
have heard little discussion of the war, as the primaries diverted us
with the ephemera of push polls, plagiarism and Fred Thompson. Sooner
or later, the debate over the war will intensify again, offering its
leading senatorial advocate an opportunity to tell us: why the invasion
was justified, given the absence of weapons of mass destruction; what
he expects the continuing occupation to accomplish; when those
objectives will be achieved; and why the installation of a Shia regime
so closely linked with the mullahs in Iran is worth the sacrifices that
we all mourn.
So far, McCain has preferred angry sound bites
to substantive argument. He regularly accuses Barack Obama, Hillary
Clinton and the Democratic leadership in Congress of wanting to “wave
the white flag of surrender,” a demagogic cliche that ought to be
beneath him.
But it is important to remember that on the
subject of military conflict, the venerable veteran is not always
rational. He has said we should have pursued “victory” in Vietnam,
although we lost 10 times as many Americans there as we have to date in
Iraq.
Perhaps someone will eventually ask him a simple question: How many dead is too many in this war? 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com.



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