Wall Street Journal editorial board member Robert Pollock explained on Fox News Channel recently that we need not worry about the burdens of a troop escalation in Iraq. To hear Pollock explain it, all the president has to do is push the military and the troops to the breaking point.
On the December 16 edition of Fox News’ Journal Editorial Report, after Wall Street Journal editorial board member Jason Riley claimed that it would be “very difficult,” politically, for President Bush to increase troop levels in Iraq, fellow Journal board member Robert Pollock countered: “[A]ll that means is decreasing the length of some breaks from tours of duty and increasing the lengths of some tours of duty.” Pollock added: “That’s not a hard thing to do.”
Isn’t that easy?
There was a point, in the early 1970s, when the electorate generally began to perceive the left as unreliable on national security issues. Stemming from opposition to Vietnam, and up through the Iranian hostage crisis, liberals garnered a reputation for failing to be “tough.” If you wanted a party you could trust to stand up to our enemies, voters were told, you needed to back the GOP. The doubts continue to linger.
I’m curious to see if we may soon be approaching a point in which the pendulum swings back and the public begins to reject the right on these issues. If Vietnam was an albatross for the Democratic Party, Iraq has to be an equally serious burden on the Republicans for this generation.
If not, I’m not sure what more it’ll take.