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23 Aug 2008 12:02 pm
Biden On Iraq, In 2004
From TNR, 6/28/04:
Much has been said about the potential
consequences of failure in Iraq--how it would provide a new haven for
terrorists, deal a blow to reformers and modernizers throughout the
region, and encourage radicals in Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. But
perhaps failure's most pernicious legacy will be a further hardening of
the Democratic Party's Vietnam syndrome--its distrust of government and
the use of American power.
That syndrome is one reason why, from day
one, many of us in Congress pressed the president to level with the
American people about what would be required to prevail in Iraq. But he
didn't. He didn't tell them that well over 100,000 troops would be
needed for well over two years. He didn't tell them the cost would
surpass $200 billion--and far exceed Iraq's oil revenue. He didn't tell
them that our children and grandchildren would pay the bill because of
his refusal to rescind even a small portion of the tax cut he gave to
the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans. He didn't tell them that, even
after paying such a heavy price, success was not assured, because no
one had ever succeeded at forcibly democratizing a nation in the Middle
East, let alone an entire region.
As a result, today those who recognize that
we must persevere in Iraq risk losing public support.
Americans sense
that our policy is adrift and that we do not have a plan for success.
Worse, they may conclude that this is what happens when we venture
abroad. Someday, probably sooner rather than later, there will be
another Slobodan Milosevic or another Saddam, and the profound mistakes
in Iraq will make it harder to generate domestic and international
political support for the use of force. That is a legacy we can ill
afford.
Maybe, as some argue, so many mistakes have
been made in Iraq that it is impossible to turn the corner.
Anti-American attitudes and a nascent warlordism may already be so
deeply entrenched that there is little we can do to succeed. It would
be foolhardy to deny that possibility. But it would be even more
foolhardy, and dangerous, to accept failure as inevitable and move to
cut our losses. Despite the naysayers, it is not too late. But only the
president can alter our course in Iraq. As he did when Congress first
authorized him to use force, the president has the choice of using his
power effectively or squandering it to satisfy ideological
predilections. Let us hope he has grown wiser in the past year.
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