Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Afghanistan’

Petraeus: Surge Worked (and the President agrees)

December 6th, 2009

On Fox News Sunday today, General David Petraeus, Commander of US Central Command, responded to a pointed question from journalist Chris Wallace with a surprising answer. To the question, “Did the President ever acknowledge that the surge in Iraq was successful?” Petraeus answered “He did, in fact”.

Having seen this with my own eyes, I went in search of other media outlets that have reported on the exchange, knowing the desire of some readers to question any Fox News attribution. A wide collection of conservative blogs cite the interview, all with variations on the theme that this is the “first time” President Obama has admitted the surge worked. Politico, the widely read political blog that may be less offensive to some reader’s sensitive Source-o-Meter, reports the original answer and even reported the follow-up:

“Although I would also tell you we haven’t spent a lot of time looking at the rear-view mirrors of the bus,” Petraeus said, adding that they talked about how reconciliation worked in Iraq and how they achieved population security there.

Is this really the first time Mr. Obama has admitted the surge worked?

The unpopular war in Iraq was a potent political issue in the primary campaign leading up to the last presidential election. By summer of 2008, the declining violence was seen as validating the efficacy of the surge among its supporters. The likely Republican nominee, Sen. John McCain, had been an early critic of President Bush’s handling of the war, and had long advocated a surge to bring the war to an end. By late July 2008, it was evident the tide had turned in Iraq, and most political observers thought this would work to the Republican’s favor.

But signs of then-Sen. Obama’s acceptance of the surge’s success can be found. ABC News reported on July 28, 2008:

Petraeus declined to comment about his meeting with the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, beyond saying that in their private talks, Obama conceded that progress had been made in Iraq.

By September 4, 2008, MSNBC was reporting candidate Obama’s stronger approval:

Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama said Thursday that the escalation of U.S. troops in Iraq, which he had opposed, has succeeded in reducing violence “beyond our wildest dreams.”

While the indications where there that Candidate Obama recognized the success of the counter-insurgency tactics of General Petraeus in Iraq, he tempered his remarks with a warning that political reconciliation was still out of reach, and ending the war in Iraq quickly was still his goal. But after the election, he has proven smart enough to not abandon a successful strategy, and continues on the path illuminated by General Petraeus.

It is no surprise, then, that the plan for Afghanistan is described by mainstream media op eds as a borrowed model. The Baltimore Sun’s Op Ed pages notes:

In crafting his Afghanistan troop surge, President Obama has borrowed liberally from an unlikely source: the playbook of his predecessor, George W. Bush.

Testifying Wednesday before the Senate, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates wryly drew some comparisons between the two deployments–including the need to explain the strategies in front of skeptical lawmakers.

“This is the second surge I’ve been up here defending,” Gates said.

Conservative bloggers are calling the adoption of the COIN strategy for Afghanistan validation of President Bush’s approach, and are pointing to today’s “admission” as further proof. But the ice is thin under the claim: it must be remembered that the surge happened only after President Bush finally gave up the failed “small footprint” policy, fired the generals in charge of it, and installed General Petraeus. Fumbling into a successful strategy after several years of failure is hardly a notable achievement.

But Sen. McCain was there ahead of all of us.

Cross posted to Donklephant

Politics , , ,

Nobel Peace Box

October 13th, 2009

Along with the head scratching regarding President Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize came quite a few humorous quips. Including from the President himself:

After I received the news, Malia walked in and said, “Daddy, you won the Nobel Peace Prize, and it is Bo’s birthday!” And then Sasha added, “Plus, we have a three-day weekend coming up.” So it’s good to have kids to keep things in perspective.

The President reflected the general feeling that the Nobel Peace Prize award was, at best, premature. He chose to turn the attention to the country itself, and the hopes and dreams of all people. Good on you, Mr. President.

But look closely at the text of the speech. The President recognizes another fact, that the Nobel Committee awarded this prize on the eve of the decision to expand the war in Afghanistan:

And even as we strive to seek a world in which conflicts are resolved peacefully and prosperity is widely shared, we have to confront the world as we know it today. I am the commander in chief of a country that’s responsible for ending a war and working in another theater to confront a ruthless adversary that directly threatens the American people and our allies.

Ego is one of the core character traits of any world leader, and some have noted that our President is in possession of one himself, to put it mildly.

His frustration with a single media outlet that does not genuflect at the altar of his personality, Fox News Network, leads to a public spat, crossing a line not even the ego-mania of President Nixon would breach: shooting downhill. Fox News can only benefit from the attention, and gain even more viewers as they realize only one media outlet is catching the attention of the administration.

His speeches are peppered with self references, and his “World Apology Tour” found him apologizing on our behalf. Yet, I don’t recall that he ever apologized for saying the Cambridge Police Department “acted stupidly”, even though his subsequent actions showed he knew he blew it. Ego gets in the way of many things with our leaders. And the Nobel Committee knows that.

Can a man who accepts the Nobel Peace Prize live with the diminished reputation as the only winner to immediately escalate a war, sending tens of thousands of troops into harm’s way?

The Nobel Committee sent the Peace Prize in a box large enough to house our President. Mr. Obama’s immediate response indicates that perhaps he won’t climb into the box. Let’s hope not.

Cross posted to Donklephant

Politics , ,