A 'Cut-and-Run' Decision Cooking?
by Jude
Wanniski
by Jude Wanniski
Memo:
To Website Fans, Browsers, Clients
From: Jude Wanniski
Re: Bob Novak Breaks the Ice
Novak's
column yesterday isn't quite conclusive, but you can bet he
is ahead of the pack in sniffing out the Bush team's recognition
that it will have to pull all the U.S. troops out of Iraq next
year. All of them: "Inside the Bush administration policymaking
apparatus, there is strong feeling that U.S. troops must leave
Iraq next year. This determination is not predicated on success
in implanting Iraqi democracy and internal stability. Rather,
the officials are saying: Ready or not, here we go."
Novak is
correct that Team Bush will have to deny a "cut-and-run"
decision is in the early planning stages, but behind all the happy
talk from the President about the progress being made, it looks
like the "insurgents" have won.
There is
still happy talk of national elections in January, but it should
be clear from the current level of violence that the chances of
safe polling places being open in the Sunni triangle are dwindling
to zero. The nationalist fervor that is fueling the insurgency
will not in any case recognize elections being run by the handpicked
"interim government" of Iyad Allawi. There is now a
civil war in Iraq, with the Iraqi people on one side and the Allawi
puppet government, backed by the U.S., on the other. Novak writes:
Whether
Bush or Kerry is elected, the president or president-elect will
have to sit down immediately with the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The military will tell the election winner there are insufficient
U.S. forces in Iraq to wage effective war. That leaves three
realistic options: Increase overall U.S. military strength to
reinforce Iraq, stay with the present strength to continue the
war, or get out.
Well-placed
sources in the administration are confident Bush's decision
will be to get out. They believe that is the recommendation
of his national security team and would be the recommendation
of second-term officials. An informed guess might have Condoleezza
Rice as secretary of state, Paul Wolfowitz as defense secretary
and Stephen Hadley as national security adviser. According to
my sources, all would opt for a withdrawal.
Getting
out now would not end expensive U.S. reconstruction of Iraq, and
certainly would not stop the fighting. Without U.S. troops, the
civil war cited as the worst-case outcome by the recently leaked
National Intelligence Estimate would be a reality. It would then
take a resolute president to stand aside while Iraqis battle it
out.
Condi Rice
as SecState and Paul Wolfowitz as SecDef in a second Bush administration?
That prospect alone should scare folks into voting for Senator
Kerry and I would assume Republican leadership in the Senate would
tell the President to forget about it. Chairman Richard Lugar
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday pronounced
the Bush administration's handling of Iraq "incompetent."
The Novak
column says "the Kerry campaign is not equipped to make sober
evaluations of Iraq. When I asked a Kerry political aide what
his candidate would do in Iraq, he could do no better than repeat
the old saw that help is on the way from European troops. Kerry's
foreign policy advisers know there will be no release from that
quarter." My guess is now that Novak has broken the ice,
there will be further recognition in the political class that
the neoconservative dream of an imperial outpost in Baghdad has
gone up in smoke.
September
22, 2004
Jude
Wanniski [send him mail]
runs the financial/political advisory service Wanniski.com.
(If you subscribe,
and check LewRockwell.com in the referring website pull-down,
LRC gets 10%.)
Copyright
© 2004 Jude Wanniski
Jude
Wanniski Archives
|