‘Bush has found his exit strategy’

In a variety of instances and contexts, the president has described his responsibilities with heartening phrase: “We have an obligation and a duty to confront problems and not pass them on to future generations.”

Of course, we’ve known for a quite a while that Bush doesn’t mean a word of it. On the environment, the president is desperate not to confront problems and to absolutely pass them off to someone else. On the budget and fiscal policy, Bush wants to spend and cut taxes with impunity, leaving someone else to make tough choices later.

And when it comes to Iraq, as soon as his policy deteriorated and it was obvious that success wasn’t going to happen, the president’s plan became clear: figure out a way to hand this mess off to someone else.

Indeed, Bush admitted this way back in December, telling Robert Draper his goal was to get to this fall, at which point he can “get us in a position where the presidential candidates will be comfortable about sustaining a presence,” so U.S. forces can “stay…longer.”

In light of this week’s testimony from Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker, the LAT drives the point home that Bush has no intention of ending this war before leaving office. It’s a welcome development; most news outlets have avoided mentioning this altogether.

The talk in Washington on Monday was all about troop reductions, yet it also brought into sharp focus President Bush’s plans to end his term with a strong U.S. military presence in Iraq, and to leave tough decisions about ending the unpopular war to his successor. […]

“Bush has found his exit strategy,” said Kenneth M. Pollack, a former government Mideast specialist now at the Brookings Institution.

That would be Bush’s exit from a position of responsibility; not the nation’s exit from a civil war.

According the vague assessments from Gen. Petraeus yesterday, probably more than 100,000 U.S. troops will be in Iraq when the next president is inaugurated in 16 months.

As Petraeus met with lawmakers and unveiled chart upon chart showing declining troop levels, the U.S. commander seemed to have opened a new discussion about how the United States would wind up its commitment to Iraq. Yet viewed more closely, his presentation, and that of U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker, were better suited to the defense of an earlier strategy: “stay the course.”

And, in a twisted kind of way, some GOP leaders believe that as long as troop deployments drop in 2008, the party may not suffer negative consequences in next year’s elections.

Bush’s approach also gives some support to Republican allies on Capitol Hill who have been anxious about entering the 2008 election season carrying responsibility for the war.

Now the Republicans will be able to claim that the war is winding down and the troops coming home, even if fewer than 20% are scheduled to return in the next year.

The GOP shouldn’t count on this. If there are 100,000 pairs of U.S. boots on the ground in Iraq on Election Day 2008, and Republicans are applauding this as a success story, there’s no reason in the world for them to feel confident about their chances.

And is anyone surprised by this?????? Anybody with half a brain or can read should have already known that Bush’s policy has always been to push everything onto whomever follows him as president.

If anybody thinks this is new news they have been living with their heads in the sand.

  • Bush’s approach also gives some support to Republican allies on Capitol Hill who have been anxious about entering the 2008 election season carrying responsibility for the war.

    Well, I guess that explains why so many liberal blog commenters are saying that the only people they hate more than the Republicans are the Democrats- the Republicans are getting their points around, and making us go after ourselves as always.

    Well, anything for money!

  • History is somewhat reassuring: folks still blame Johnson for getting us into Vietnam more than they blame Nixon for getting us out. (Nixon can be damned for his own deviltry.)

  • John Dean has it right in his new book “Broken Government” – from the closing chapter (read the whole thing in Salon today):

    As I was writing this closing section an old friend from the Nixon White House called. Now retired, he is a lifelong Republican who told me that he voted for Bush and Cheney twice, because he knows them both personally. He asked how my new book was coming, and when I told him the title, he remarked, “I’ll say the government’s broken.” After we discussed it, he asked how I planned to end the book, since the election was still a good distance away. I told him I was contemplating ending midsentence and immediately fading to black — the way HBO did in the final episode of the Sopranos, but that I would settle for a nice quote from him, on the record. He explained that he constantly has to bite his tongue, and the reason he does not speak out more is because one of his sons is in an important (nonpolitical) government post, and we both know that Republicans will seek revenge wherever they can find it. How about an off-the-record comment? I asked. That he agreed to.

    “Just tell your readers that you have a source who knows a lot about the Republican party from long experience, that he knows all the key movers and shakers, and he has a bit of advice: People should not vote for any Republican, because they’re dangerous, dishonest and self-serving. While I once believed that Governor George Wallace had it right, that there was not a dime’s worth of difference in the parties; that is not longer true. I have come to realize the Democrats really do care about people who most need help from government; Republicans care most about those who will only get richer because of government help. The government is truly broken, particularly in dealing with national security, and another four years, and heaven forbid not eight years, under the Republicans, and our grandchildren will have to build a new government, because the one we have will be unrecognizable and unworkable.”

  • From the above quote:

    He explained that he constantly has to bite his tongue, and the reason he does not speak out more is because one of his sons is in an important (nonpolitical) government post, and we both know that Republicans will seek revenge wherever they can find it.

    Don’t take it from me.
    Take it from them.

    They are not about logic.
    They are brutes who swing clubs.
    That is the language they speak in…

    Understand this in 2008… or get the back of your skull caved in.

  • Isn’t this just what Bush has done his entire life? Messed up everything he’s ever put his hand to and expected somebody else to clean up the mess?

    I’m not surprised.

    I wonder what will happen when his sycophants are no longer around him and don’t give him the narcissistic feed he needs? When the confirmation of his world-view with himself at the center has fallen away?

    I guess nobody ever taught Bush to clean up his messes. I think he has no idea how to make anything right before or after the fact — just how to screw things up by insisting on his own agenda. I don’t want to be around him when he finally understands what he’s done. History WILL throw it all up in his face during his lifetime.

  • Leaving this man in office means it will take 50yrs to get rid of all the roaches his hire-ees have hired who have it in their mind to undermine our government for personal and corporate gain.

    The GOP hasn’t a chance in ‘08…Democrats will win elections by default. But because they have allowed Bush to push His war off on them they will be blamed for all problems associated with ending it. Waiting around for republicans to “see the light” I want the dems to know that repubs have seen the light…push Bush’s disaster off on them to end…blame them for ending it so they can win back the WH in 2012. The number of dead soldiers in the mean time are just a necessary sacrifice.

    I and others have been saying this since the announcement of the “splurge”. Keep the profits coming till Bush is out of office. Bush knows he has blown it and his party doesn’t have a chance in ‘08 anyway, Petraeus was set up to keep it going till Bush can push it off on the Dems.. It’s the ONLY way of giving the GOP a chance to win elections in 2012…blame dems for problems ending Bush’s war…Especially if he attacks Iran.
    Only 2 ways to force Bush out of Iraq. 1) Impeachment…Pelosi has blocked that; 2) withhold the funding…Reid blocks that. And they say ending the war in Iraq is the most important issue yet they will not do what is necessary to end it. It should not be seen that dems can’t get enough votes to withdraw the troops but rather that republicans can’t get enough votes to continue the funding. The dems have what Bush wants…not the other way around. If he vetoes anything that has a withdrawal timeline…then dems should veto anything without a timeline for withdrawal. Supporting the troops means protecting them from being “forced” to fight and die policing a civil war. Bush has been holding them hostage as blackmail to get the funding he wants for his war profiteers.

    All but 30% of America knows this and demans congress and the senate do what is necessary to stop Bush from sacrificing more of our soldiers. Americans have known this for 6 mos and now one paper has the nerve to write about it. Progress in congress and the media is just too fucking slow.
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  • The only exit strategy that I care about from the Coward-In-Chief is either by removal from office for treason (and criminal trial for capital crimes) or that glorious day of January 20, 2009.

  • “People should not vote for any Republican, because they’re dangerous, dishonest and self-serving.”

    Being non-partisan myself, I have to wonder how it’s possible that all the dangerous, dishonest, and self-serving people would align with one particular party. Maybe the brain research reported in the LA Times has the explanation.

    Or, maybe John Dean made up the quote. ‘Cause, man, that’s just way too convenient.

  • Re Tom at #4, yet the SOB still took the time and erffort to go out and vote for Bush/Cheney in 2004. Sheeesh. Blood is on the hands of folks like that. I honeslty do not know how they live with themselves.

  • “I have to wonder how it’s possible that all the dangerous, dishonest, and self-serving people would align with one particular party.”

    I don’t necessarily believe the person means all dangerous, dishonest and self-serving people are in the GOP, just that those who are largely and broadly in charge meet such criteria. It would make sense that Americans who tend to be dangerous, dishonest and in particular self-serving would also tend to gravitate to the party where they can best “take care of number 1,” him- or herself, and the party that has best exemplified these ‘values’ and that has been most tolerant and supportive even of people fitting such description, since at least the mid-90s, has been the GOP.

  • GAH!! I can’t abide Bush’s improper use of the English language. It’s a better reason to dislike him than his governing / political decisions. What a jerk- there are barely any other lousy spellers out there, none of them good people- just a bunch of crappy, flop-house-dwelling, people with crap jobs.

    No need to go on about this ‘exit strategy’ nonsense.

  • Dean’s “lifelong Republican” friend: “People should not vote for any Republican, because they’re dangerous, dishonest and self-serving.”

    I would add that they’re also generally too chicken to say what needs to be said in person.

    I guess the guy would rather save his kid some trouble than defend the nation from a bunch of fascists.

    Thanks, creep. Now die and go to hell.

  • Here is my comment on Washington Monthly on this very topic:

    I guess I can’t say I am at all surprised about his strategy. People have been bailing him out of his messes and fixing things he f**ked up his entire life. It’s just this time it isn’t daddy’s friends/allies but the next president – quite likely a Democrat – whom he can promptly blame for messing up what was improving when he left. The GOP that still apologizes for the pResident, will go with this and beat it into the ground. It will become conventional wisdom and no one will have learned a damn thing – least of all Dubya. He can continue to lie to himself and people will let him and he will go to the grave thinking he was the injured party and it was everyone elses fault Iraq went to hell in a handbasket.

  • Tom,

    Funny that Dean would mention The Sopranos since the quote he ended with sounded decidedly like a scared witness in need of protection from organized criminals.

    I guess ultimately the Republican party is essentially the organized crime of politics.

  • Wow. Thank you so much for this article. It has put to words what I have felt is true for a long while now- that the Bush folks are obviously gearing the timing of troop level changes in a way that they believe will best benefit their party (and hurt the dems) in the upcoming election(s). Nothing else matters to them, NOTHING, but power. That is what arrogant, evil dictator-bullies have always been about. Who can we dominate, who can we control, who can we browbeat into submission, who can we trick, manipulate, con, use, screw over, torture, kill, that will gain us more, and more, and MORE power?

    Every day I wake up and absolutely cannot believe what has become of this country; what this administration has done to us, and to the world. It’s positively maddening, and it also makes me incredibly sad. Just think, less than 10 short years ago, the biggest scandal around was the president lying about the fact that he cheated on his wife !

    I weep for the future, I truly do.

  • “… a duty to confront problems and not pass them on to future generations.”

    Which will happen if I can just get Armageddon underway.

    Armageddon will put an end global warming (sneer), wastage of the ‘viro’ment (heh-heh), criticism of my valiant war (smile), paying off the biggest economic debt ever accumulated (snort). Oh yeah, it’ll solve all my problems. And it’ll fulfill prophecy.

    An’ ah’m okay with Jeeesus, too. Unlike you. Suckers.

  • 10. On September 11th, 2007 at 11:50 am, Grumpy said:

    “People should not vote for any Republican, because they’re dangerous, dishonest and self-serving.”

    Being non-partisan myself, I have to wonder how it’s possible that all the dangerous, dishonest, and self-serving people would align with one particular party.

    Because that party espouses their ideals on a daily basis?

    Because that party encourages and rewards them for being dangerous, dishonest, and self-serving? And engages in scorched earth campaigns against them if they aren’t?

    Because that party has abandoned anything but dangerous, dishonest, and self-serving political methods?

    Being non-partisan myself, I have to wonder how it’s possible that anyone can buy into their bs these days. Especially considering that they’ve been considerably more open and more ruthless about it since they took over all branches of the government, the courts, and the media.

  • Re: 18. On September 11th, 2007 at 1:25 pm, Ed Stephan

    You left out the most important part, at the end: “I’d like an ice cream! Please!”

  • I see from the posts here that the Democrats self-serving lies are begininning to turn into self-dilusion. They would rather lapse into insanity than face the horrifying reality that President Bush might not be the moron their leaders made him out to be, that he might actually prevail in the most important military conflict of their lifetimes. The truth is fast catching up with them. Better hide the sleeping pills on November 11, 2008.

  • Bill, you’re a bit off in your analysis. Bush is indeed the moron we all see, and his Iraq venture has already failed dismally. More time just means more death and destruction, but of course we all know Bush doesn’t care who dies for his ego.

    That said, apparently the Democrats aren’t a whole lot better, given their support of Bush. You’d probably better wish that the Democrats win the majority of the 2008 elections instead of a wild 3rd party that’s truly liberal. That’s when we’ll hear wails, lamentations, and the gnashing of teeth from the conservative corner and the middle.

  • 22. On September 11th, 2007 at 3:30 pm, Bill said:

    I see from the posts here that the Democrats self-serving lies are begininning to turn into self-dilusion. They would rather lapse into insanity than face the horrifying reality that President Bush might not be the moron their leaders made him out to be, that he might actually prevail in the most important military conflict of their lifetimes. The truth is fast catching up with them. Better hide the sleeping pills on November 11, 2008.

    I see from your thoughtful (cough) analysis that at least one Reich wing Putsch fellators still thinks that his opinion about the honesty of others would matter more than pissing into the wind, and his delusions blind him to the rank hypocrisy that sane humans seem to recognize more and more often these days when they hear this mindless claptrap. He still refuses to view the traitorous psychopath that he helped install as anything but the Invisible Sky Fairy’s gift to the world, so far has his self-hatred gone, instead of facing the horrifying reality that he is among those responsible for bringing the Worst pResident Ever into DC, the ruination of thousands of american soldiers’ families, the destruction of a major american city, and the obliteration of america’s reputation throughout the rest of the free peoples of the earth. Not to mention the clustercheney that is Operation Iraqi Liberation, which he also continues to delude himsef about. What ever will he do when he finally has to confront the realization that he is the embodiment of the evil he pretends to object to? Better hide the Glocks on January 21, 2009…

  • Note the timing of General Petreaus speech.
    The horrible tragedy of 9/11 is used once again by the republican party to boost its public relations image and I’m no fan of the democratic party. I’ll probably be monitored now for exercising my right to freedom of speech just like many freedom loving people in communists countries were monitored by the communists governments. General Petreaus should not allow politicians to use him so easily.

  • Did all the people responding to this ridiculous article some how miss 9-11? Did they forget that we are in the war on a bi partisan vote that included their criminal Hillary Clinton (who broke into Foster’s office to obstruct a federal investigation)? Does everyone want to pretend that we are not a war with the fanatical Muslims? Bush doesn’t have an exist strategy because there isn’t one. We are and should be their taking the fight to them until that part of the world becomes stable. If they truly mean there rhetoric, bring home our solders, why aren’t they also demanding that we bring home our police and fire fighters? If you want to stick your head in the sand and hope it all goes away then good luck. The real truth is that the democrats have come up with an issue that lets them really take to the republicans and they won’t hesitate to use it to the determent of our country, if it means they can get into power. Unfortunately the republicans would do the same back.

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