If you caught today’s press briefing from White House Press Secretary Tony Snow, you saw the president’s spokesperson in rare form.
Unprompted, Snow offered the White House’s official response to the Connecticut Democratic Senate primary (the video is worth watching, just to see the self-righteous earnestness with which Snow delivered his comments).
“Take a look at the blogs today, they’re pretty hot. And the real question for the American people to ask themselves is, do you take the war on terror seriously? With all the developments around the world — and, if so, how do you fight it to win? There seems to be two approaches, and in the Connecticut race, one of the approaches is ignore the difficulties and walk away. Now, when the United States walked away, in the opinion of the Osama bin Laden in 1991, bin Laden drew from that the conclusion that Americans were weak and wouldn’t stay the course and that led to September 11th.”
That’s right, a vote for Ned Lamont is a vote for terrorist attacks. The Lieberman/Bush approach — the one that has increased terrorism around the globe, the one that has undermined the nation’s credibility and standing in the world, the one overwhelmingly rejected by the electorate — is, as far as the Bush White House is concerned, the only credible way to view the world. You’re either with them or against them.
I read a lot of far-right blogs for one of my other gigs, and this is a remarkably common sentiment. If you oppose the war in Iraq — believe it was a mistake, argue that an open-ended commitment is irresponsible, recognize that that it is not helping to make the U.S. any safer — than, in the minds of too many conservatives, you are objectively pro-terrorism.
It’s what leads them to feel justified calling progressives “traitors,” and casually throwing around words like “appeasement” and “treason.”
Consider how Snow concluded his thought on the matter:
“And it’s really up to Democratic candidates and the Democratic Party to figure out how they want to stand in the war on terror. Do they want to have the sort of time-table approach, leave by a date certain? Do they not want to have something constructive to say about gathering threats from Iran and elsewhere? Or do they want to acknowledge the fact that in a dangerous world it takes commitment, it takes persistence?”
It was painfully obvious before, but the White House has completely lost touch with reality.
Why did Joe Lieberman lose yesterday? Because had he been in Crawford today for Snow’s briefing, he likely would have been nodding his head, agreeing with every word.