The X Factor in 2008 – Iran
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
After a weekend
in which 29 Americans died and the 82nd Airborne deployed in Baghdad,
what the Iraq war will mean to the politics of 2008 becomes clear.
Hillary
Clinton's early Saturday announcement of her exploratory committee
was brilliantly executed and captured front page, cable and network
coverage all weekend. But it was a decision forced upon her.
Barack
Obama, the "rock star," has been poaching on Hillary's donor lists
and offering Democrats, in the style of New York mayoral candidate
John V. Lindsay in 1965 ("He is fresh, and they are all tired"),
a post-Bush-Clinton-Bush politics that says, "Good-bye to all that."
John Edwards
has pitched his tent in the Cindy Sheehan camp. The Sunday preceding
Dr. King's birthday, he rose in New York City's Riverside Church,
where King had denounced the Vietnam War, to decry President Bush's
surge as "the McCain Doctrine," called for immediate withdrawal
of 40,000-50,000 U.S. troops and threw down the gauntlet to Hillary,
declaring, "Silence is betrayal."
By midweek,
Hillary was out with her own plan for redeployment.
The Democratic
nominee will likely be one of these three. In every national or
Iowa-New Hampshire poll, they are first, second or third. But there
is a wild card.
On Feb.
25, America will watch the Academy Awards, where the Oscar for best
documentary will likely go to An
Inconvenient Truth. If Al Gore wins the Oscar, addresses
the nation for two minutes on global warming and the war, then appears
on Oprah, Leno, Letterman, Stewart and Colbert, a subsequent declaration
of candidacy would put him in the top tier. And unlike Edwards and
Hillary, Gore opposed the war in Iraq.
In the
Democratic Party, the Iraq war is a lost cause that ought never
to have been begun and any candidate who has not come to that position
by February 2007 will not be in the hunt.
In the
Republican Party, the war is less likely to bring about the unity
Democrats will have achieved by year's end. For by summer's end,
the surge will be over. While there may have been a temporary reduction
in massacres by then, no one believes an additional 21,500 troops
in a Texas-sized nation of 26 million can turn around a war Gen.
Colin Powell says we "are losing" and Bush concedes "we are not
winning."
Already,
near a fifth of the Republicans in the Senate, including Chuck Hagel
and presidential candidate Sam Brownback, have come out against
the surge. The front-runners, Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and Mitt
Romney, however, still back the president.
But while
McCain is far out in front in raising money and lining up support,
he is also the single national figure, beyond Bush and Dick Cheney,
most identified with the least popular war in U.S. history. If McCain
wishes to be president, it would be best for him for this war to
be in its final act, one way or the other, by 2008.
If the
war has been lost by then, as many believe it is already, McCain
can say: Rumsfeld lost it because he fought it the wrong way, and
we shall never do that again. But if the war is still going on,
it will be the issue of 2008, and it is hard to see America voting
to continue or embrace the "McCain Doctrine" and escalate by sending
in 100,000 more troops.
The GOP
is thus looking at a situation in 2008 where the party will be as
divided as Democrats were with Eugene McCarthy, Hubert Humphrey,
Bobby Kennedy and LBJ in 1968, while Democrats will be as united
as the GOP was under Nixon. Had George Wallace, who got 13 percent,
been out of the '68 race, Nixon would have won in a landslide.
Is there
anything that might alter the course of events and affect the war
picture by 2008? Indeed: a pre-emptive strike on Iran.
Should
it occur, writes Wayne White, an intelligence officer at the State
Department until 2005, "such action would likely involve not only
taking out widely dispersed nuclear-related targets and nearby anti-aircraft
defenses, but also portions of the Iranian air force assigned to
defend these targets. And that's just for starters.
"In order
to reduce Iran's ability to retaliate in the Persian Gulf, such
a plan probably would also include taking out Iran's array of anti-ship
missiles along the northern coast of the Gulf, its Kilo-class submarines,
other naval assets and even some targets related to Iran's long-range
missile capacity."
Is
such an attack being considered? Nick Burns, No. 3 at State, was
at the Herzileah Conference this weekend. "Iran is seeking a nuclear
weapon – there's no doubt about it," Burns told the Israelis. "The
policy of the U.S. government is that we cannot allow Iran to become
a nuclear weapons state."
Burns was
cheered and echoed by ex-Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz: "The year
of 2007 is the year of decisiveness. ... The free world doesn't
have the privilege to drag its feet on Iran and hope for best."
Democrats
failed to stop this war. Can they stop the next one? Or do they
suspect and support what they think is coming?
January
24, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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