I received an interesting press release today from House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel. The headline read: “Emanuel Statement On White House Iraq Report.”
Washington, D.C. – House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel issued the following statement today regarding the forthcoming report from the White House on the status of the war in Iraq:
“From the inaccurate prediction that we would be greeted as liberators, to the claim about weapons of mass destruction, to the ‘Mission Accomplished’ banner, the war in Iraq has seen too many reports and rosy assessments that put spin first and facts second. Unfortunately, the White House intends to continue this pattern. The American people have had four years of spin and slogans. Now, they are ready for the truth — the good, the bad and the ugly. The President’s report should provide a complete picture of Iraq’s security and political progress.”
Now, I know what you’re thinking. “So? It looks pretty routine. Emanuel is repeating the Democratic line. No biggie.”
But I thought it was interesting anyway, in part because of what it didn’t say. The mid-September report has, for a while, been referred to as Gen. Petraeus’ report, or sometimes the Petraeus/Crocker report. Emanuel is shifting the rhetoric here — he’s now calling it the “White House Iraq Report,” as an apparent way of undermining its reliability.
Obviously, with yesterday’s news that the White House, not Petraeus, will prepare the report on current conditions in Iraq, Emanuel and other Dems are hoping to take advantage of the opportunity. Petraeus has credibility; the Bush White House does not. Petraeus’ opinions are taken seriously; the Bush White House’s are not. Petraeus has the stature to change people’s minds; the Bush White House stopped even trying to persuade people quite a while ago.
So, Emanuel is subtly (or, some might say, not so subtly) reframing the debate, which is probably why Petraeus’ name isn’t in today’s press statement at all. Why debate the General’s perspective if a) he’s not writing the document; and b) the administration wants to keep him hidden from view anyway?
Petraeus’ credibility is not the issue; the White House’s is.
And while we’re on the subject, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is pushing back against the White House’s proposal to limit what the American people are told in the September progress reports:
“The White House’s effort to prevent General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker from testifying openly and candidly before Congress about the situation in Iraq is unacceptable. Not only does it contradict the law President Bush himself signed in May, but it appears to be yet another politically driven attempt to avoid giving Congress and the American people an honest and open assessment of a war we can all see is headed in the wrong direction.
“From the very beginning of this war, the Bush Administration has refused to level with the American people about its flawed policy. It has instead done everything in its power to escape accountability and mislead us about the reality on the ground. The result: an open-ended civil war that has taken nearly 4,000 American soldiers’ lives and an Iraqi government that refuses to take responsibility for its own country.
“If the President is going to continue to ask American soldiers to fight in this civil war, ask taxpayers to spend $10 billion each month to fund this war and ask the American people for patience as he conducts this war, then those closest to the situation on the ground must give Congress and the American people a frank and honest account of this war free of White House political spin.”
At a minimum, you can’t say the Dems are failing to swing at these pitches.