For weeks, all we’ve heard from the GOP is that anyone who has the gall to consider troop withdrawals from Iraq right now is “waving the white flag” against [tag]terrorists[/tag]. They’re cowards, [tag]Republicans[/tag] say, who are tacitly siding with al Queda with a “[tag]defeat and retreat[/tag]” and “[tag]cut and run[/tag]” attitude.
There’s no word yet on what those same far-right critics have to say about Gen. [tag]George Casey[/tag].
The top American commander in Iraq has drafted a plan that projects sharp reductions in the United States military presence there by the end of 2007, with the first cuts coming this September, American officials say.
According to a classified briefing at the Pentagon this week by the commander, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the number of American combat brigades in Iraq is projected to decrease to 5 or 6 from the current level of 14 by December 2007.
Under the plan, the first reductions would involve two combat brigades that would rotate out of Iraq in September without being replaced.
Why does this plan sound familiar? Because it’s the plan that most congressional [tag]Democrats[/tag] have endorsed — and which congressional Republicans have condemned. As John Kerry put it, the Casey plan looks “an awful lot like what the Republicans spent the last week attacking. Will the partisan attack dogs now turn their venom and disinformation campaign on General Casey?”
In the broader context, the [tag]Bush[/tag] [tag]administration[/tag] seems, well, rather confused.
On the one hand, the Bush gang says, “No [tag]troop[/tag] [tag]withdrawal[/tag]s before ’09.” On the other hand, the Bush gang says, “We’ll listen to the commanders in the field.” On yet another hand (yes, we’re running out of hands here), the administration wants to start pulling troops before the November elections, and on the final hand, they don’t actually want to embrace the Democratic plan. All the while, no Republican on either end of Pennsylvania Avenue wants to comment at all on whether Casey’s [tag]plan[/tag], which admittedly still lacks key details, has any merit at all.
As Josh Marshall put it, “They can’t keep their story straight because they don’t have any plan or sense what they’re doing. Who can trust them to get it right after they’ve gotten it wrong so many times?”
I don’t know; maybe someone who isn’t paying attention?