Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Bush’s Resignation: It’s a Start

Yesterday’s Iraq hearing told us a lot about what we already know: Iraq is a mess and the “progress” there is uneven at best. But it told us little or nothing about what we don’t know: How do we know when to get out, and, if not now, when?

The questions morally and strategically are: (1) whether our exit would leave the Iraqi’s worse off—and how much extra Iraqi violence and misery would be justified by the decline in death and suffering by U.S. troops? (2) What effect would the departure of U.S. forces have on our “interests” in the Middle East? Both questions are blurred by the desire for “victory” or the fear of “defeat.” It’s not clear now what we stand to win, nor what we might lose.

While these are hard questions, it seems clear that the president has no interest in studying them. Bush is so totally invested in his war—and in his desire not to “lose” it—that he will never change strategy: he will continue with the war, while allowing for the drawdown advocated by Gen. Pretaeus, which, as many have noted, is not a decision but an inevitability. The Democrats, meanwhile, control Congress, but not by enough votes to force the president to change. Thus we have a quagmire—not just in Iraq, but here at home.

Bush, of course, has no credibility on Iraq. To his credit, he has stopped talking about victory, I think, but without acknowledging that his previous course had failed and that his rhetoric was destructive. Still, he now must hide behind the general, who, after all, was selected presumably because he is largely in agreement with the president. (Whether the White House shaped or vetted Petraeus’ testimony is not the point. They chose the man who would give the testimony.) But he does have blocking power.

The only way out is for Bush to resign and leave office now, not waiting until 2009. Cheney, of course, would have to quit, too. The president’s departure would not sole the problem. But it would permit an honest reassessment of what, if anything, we owe the Iraq and what policies are best for us.

1 comment:

Angel310 said...

I have nothing against our president, let me start off by saying that. I agree however that a change in the presidency seems to be more welcomed at the thought of ending this messy " war on terror". It is hard to see so many people going to war, as they have been since I was only 11 years old. Now my 18th birthday is right around the corner, I just want it to be over and have the world move forward. It seems that since 9-11 the world ended as I knew it and time has been frozen. Thanks for the post, it was really interesting to know whats going on.