Minority Leader Boehner downplays U.S. sacrifices in Iraq

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), whose bizarre comments on Iraq have stirred controversy before, went off the deep end yesterday with remarks that undermine any shred of credibility he claims to have on the war. First, he connected Iraq and 9/11.

House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), in a conference call from Iraq, told reporters Wednesday that it is fair to draw a link from the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to the current fight in Iraq because of the continued presence of al Qaeda and other Islamic extremists in the country.

“If you look at where 9/11 came from, it clearly was from al Qaeda, [and] when you look at the violence in Iraq, it’s from al Qaeda [and] radical jihadists,” Boehner said.

In reality, al Qaeda represents as little as 2% of the Sunni insurgency, and is responsible for 8%, if not less, of attacks in Iraq. As a 20-year intelligence veteran who has worked with military and intelligence units tracking al-Qaeda inside Iraq concluded, the terrorist network “is a microscopic terrorist organization.” It seems like the kind of thing the House Minority Leader might want to know before making bogus claims. Five years into a war, what does it say when the top Republican in the House doesn’t even understand the enemy?

But Boehner’s absurdities were just getting started. After the conference call, the Minority Leader dismissed the significance of U.S. sacrifices in Iraq as “a small price” to pay.

It’s the kind of exchange that should be a fairly big deal. If a Democratic leader dismissed U.S. sacrifices in Iraq as “small,” one suspects it would be the lead news story on every network for a week. Indeed, it would be proof, the right would say, that Dems don’t value the service of those in uniform.

Here’s the transcript of the exchange:

BLITZER: How much longer will U.S. taxpayers have to shell out $2 billion a week or $3 billion a week as some now are suggesting the cost is going to endure? The loss in blood, the Americans who are killed every month, how much longer do you think this commitment, this military commitment is going to require?

BOEHNER: I think General Petraeus outlined it pretty clearly. We’re making success. We need to firm up those successes. We need to continue our effort here because, Wolf, long term, the investment that we’re making today will be a small price if we’re able to stop al Qaeda here, if we’re able to stabilize the Middle East, it’s not only going to be a small price for the near future, but think about the future for our kids and their kids.

Based on the specific question, Boehner wasn’t just talking about financial price; Blitzer specifically asked about the “loss in blood.”

Everything about Boehner’s bizarre response was either offensive, wrong, or both. We’re not “making success,” al Qaeda isn’t the central problem in Iraq, the Middle East isn’t being stabilized at all, and U.S. sacrifices are anything but “small.”

Given the political climate, I don’t imagine we’ll be getting any kind of apology from Boehner anytime soon, but here’s a thought: how about some enterprising political reporters asking the Republican presidential candidates: “Your party’s leader in the House of Representatives dismissed U.S. sacrifices in Iraq as a ‘small price.’ Do you agree? Are you prepared to condemn the comments? Will you vow not to campaign with or for John Boehner in the future?”

I guess this is right up there with “it’s just a number,” which was the framing and comment when the death toll reached – I think – 2,500 – since then, almost 1,300 more “numbers” have been added to the total.

There are times when I struggle to understand why it is that people like Boehner cannot admit that the policy was wrong, why they cannot look at the situation devoid of the politics and just admit that after thousands have died, and billions of dollars have been spent, not only is there is no peace, there is no stability, there are terrible living conditions, and the sacrifices we asked our military members and their families to make have not been justified – and may never be justified.

People like Boehner seem to think that we have to maintain the fiction that the cause was just because that is easier than facing the military and admitting that they were sent into battle for the wrong reasons – that their commander-in-chief failed in his responsibility to them and to the American people – and he would rather continue to send young men and women home in flag-draped caskets to protect what? – the president’s giant ego? The fiction that Republicans are the foreign policy and military experts? That only Republicans can keep you safe?

At this point, as the death toll continues to rise, it seems like Republicans are the ones who place a lower value on the lives of the military and their families than they do on their own ego and their own power; the cost will always be seen as small and justified if they can walk away without making any sacrifice of their own.

  • As we peel back the layers of that sordid smelly onion we call the Bush Administration, we seem to be getting closer to the core reasons Mr. Bush will not budge in his insistence to prosecute this ill-begotten war: oil and religion. As I drive to work today, I will be praying for more sanity among us all. -Kevo

  • At some point it would be interesting if a major news outlet like AP or CNN tested that theory and mistakenly attributed something like the small price quote to Hoyer. How long would it take for right-wing blogs to go nuts, and how silent would it be after the remark was correctly attributed to their own House leader?

  • Let’s be fair and keep it in context guys:

    “the investment that we’re making today will be a small price if we’re able to stop al Qaeda here, if we’re able to stabilize the Middle East, ”

    If the Middle east were stabilized, the 3000+ lives lost MIGHT be called a small price (for our country, not for those soldiers loved ones, mind you).

    But that’s one honker of an IF, though!

    And if… we could have world peace, no hunger, a spacebase on Mars, and a pony for every child, 5000+ lives would be a bargain too. Can we deal with a smidge of pragmatism here or were the unicorns on Patreus’ chart more to Bush and Boehner’s liking?

  • It is more like “the wrong price to pay,” seeing that Iraq has been a huge distraction from the real al qaeda, has allowed al qaeda breathing room to get its act together, has allowed al qaeda to expand, has allowed al qaeda to train, and as Iraq, prior to the war, had no al qaeda presence located within its borders.

  • Boehner is well named. He seems perfectly content to live in his fantasy world of tax cuts, AQ and Saddam did 9/11, Con competence and masculinity. Problem for the rest of us is that we live in the shit reality of his and his ilk’s fantasyland.

  • While BetrayUs was selling the Congress and the public a $50 billion bill of goods, two army sergeants — Sgt. Yance T. Gray, 26, of Ismay, Montana and Sgt. Omar Mora, 28 of Texas City, Texas — were billing killed in Baghdad. The army says the cargo truck they were driving simply turned over, noncombat-related, they say, killing those two along with six other soldiers and two detainees.

    After the Pat Tillman affair and coverup, needless to say I smell a rat.

    The two were members of the 82nd Airborne Division and joined the military out of a sense of duty and selflessness, people who knew them said. Both were married and leave behind young daughters.

    Another co-author, Staff Sgt. Jeremy Murphy, was shot in the head Aug. 12 while the op-ed was being written. The Army Ranger and reconnaissance team leader was flown to a military hospital in the United States and is expected to survive.

    Meanwhile, what Boehner described as minor sacrifices — US military deaths in Bush’s Iraq Quagmire — continue at their recently accelerated rate. The “normal” 2.1 US deaths per day are currently hitting 3.1. This, according to BetrayUs is “success”.

  • “…it’s not only going to be a small price for the near future, but think about the future for our kids and their kids.”

    He thinks it’s a small price because he doesn’t have to pay it. How cavalier these fools are with others’ lives and our tax dollars.

    I do think of the future of the kids–the children who will grow up without parents, parents who were just small change in this hideous fiasco.

  • I honestly don’t believe that a politician needs to have been in the military in order to be an effective leader. For me to blame anyone for trying to get out of the war in Vietnam would be hypocritical. I do think that every politician should see the aftermath of violence – war, hurricane, gangland – and see it in an unsanitized manner. Only if you’ve led an insulated life would you think that the death of so many – ours and theirs – is inconsequential.

  • Everytime Boehner opens his mouth he spouts emotional stupidity. If we can stop al qaeda here?…WTF…it amounts to 850 members on the high end…when are we gonna stand up and take ’em on?… excuse me but is there any doubt that these are ridiculously stupid remarks. Is Boehner always drunk? Talk about someone who is overly impressed with himsel…the man is one step away from being incoherent. He has built al qaeda up as some massive world wide force which should drive us under our beds in fear. Based on everything this Bohener has said publicly one wonders why he is allowed to speak for republicans or how he got into an elected position. Hide the scotch here comes Boehner and Bond. Just pathetic. Our children’s children…WTF…the blackmail of fear spread to those not even born yet. What an idiot.

  • Every time I’ve heard Bohner say anything, I have always been left afterwards with the nagging question of how this guy not only got elected in the first place but had managed to get re-elected and rise to the position he now holds. The man obviously suffers from Intelligence Deficit Disorder. His latest pearls of wisdom thrown out to the public, again, only reinforce the diagnosis.

  • Troops are attacked 175 times a day
    ( data from Reuters 7.20.07)

    Medics go out sometimes with buckets to bring back remains of our IED victims. And….to date we have actually accomplished nothing, not one thing of a positive nature in Iraq.
    Having accomplished nothing, then, each death and all the deaths are grotesquely enormous…horrendous costly consequences for continuing incompetent leadership and policies.

    “If you’re not afraid, you’re a coward” Rudi Giuliani GOP Bumper Slogan

  • And the Right accuses the Left of not respecting the military. He will of course insist that wasn’t what he meant to say or he did mean what others say he meant, but however unintentional, he actually slipped and said the truth.

  • It’s worth pointing out that the first and for a conspicuously long time today the only Dem pol to come out with a response to Boehner’s egregious equation was John Kerry, who started off the day by posting an angry diary about it on HuffPo: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-kerry/boehners-small-price_b_64259.html

    It’s also discussed in an expanded entry on his eponymous blogsite, though that essay wasn’t written by Kerry himself:
    http://www.johnkerry.com/2007/9/13/a-single-life-is-a-large-price-to-pay

    Howard Dean eventually followed Kerry’s lead and did send out an email to TPM this afternoon demanding an apology from Boehner for his tone-deaf, casually-callous comment as well:
    http://tpmelectioncentral.com/2007/09/dems_demand_boehner_apologize_for_small_price_troop_deaths_remark.php

    But where are all the other non-warhawk pols & pundits who should rightly be outraged? The silence of the lumps is deafening…

  • This shows that the Republican Party is full of thugs. As gangsters have no regard for the lives of their gang members at the bottom, so too the Republicans has show little or no regard for the lives of not only of our soldiers but also for the lives of the poor who in the end makeup most of the soldiers in the military. Boehner’s remarks have clearly showed the true nature of the Republican Party. And in closing this also shows why the rich will not send their sons and daughters to die for this country.

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