Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), soon to be the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made it clear this week that he’s heard all he needs to hear about a plan for a military escalation in Iraq.
It’s an idea Biden made clear that he deplores, setting the stage for a bitter political battle between the new Democratic-controlled Congress and the White House over the proposal.
“I totally oppose the surging of additional American troops,” he said. “I think is the absolute wrong strategy.”
For the last six years, the Bush White House had no reason to care either way about whether Biden or other congressional Dems liked an idea or not. But with Biden about to take the gavel of a key Senate committee, the Bush gang is no longer in a position to reject Democratic positions as trivia. And, apparently, White House aides weren’t thrilled with Biden’s concerns.
The White House responded sharply Wednesday to a senior Democratic senator’s criticism of possible increases in the U.S. military deployment in Iraq as the president prepared to discuss the war today with top advisors.
Deputy White House Press Secretary Scott Stanzel took issue with Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.), the incoming chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who said Tuesday that any troop increase would be “the absolute wrong strategy.”
“I hope that Sen. Biden would wait to hear what the president has to say before announcing what he’s opposed to,” Stanzel said.
The more I think about this, the less sense it makes.
The idea of sending tens of thousands of additional troops to Iraq has been a major part of the policy debate for weeks. Biden is going to be chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and has been active in the debate over the future of the war for years.
Asked about the subject, Biden isn’t supposed to have an opinion? He shouldn’t make clear what he believes are good ideas or bad ideas?
Indeed, as the debate has unfolded in recent years, the president routinely expresses his support or opposition to ideas for Iraq, before formal proposals are unveiled, all the time. So what is the White House complaining about?
As Atrios put it:
According to the White House, no one is allowed to comment on hypothetical plans for Iraq until the Decider has Decided.
We are ruled by children.
Sad, but true.