According to a front-page article in the Washington Post, Bush has suddenly embraced many of the ideas about Iraq’s future that he’s been rejecting. I read the speech — and I’m not all sure the Post is right.
President Bush vowed for the first time yesterday to turn over most of Iraq to newly trained Iraqi troops by the end of this year, setting a specific benchmark as he kicked off a fresh drive to reassure Americans alarmed by the recent burst of sectarian violence.
Bush, who until now has resisted concrete timelines as the Iraq war dragged on longer than he expected, outlined the target in the first of a series of speeches intended to lay out his strategy for victory.
It sounds like something of a breakthrough, right? Benchmarks and target dates have been a Bush anathema for years now. Did the president suddenly join the cut-and-run caucus? Reviewing the president’s remarks, it doesn’t seem like it.
“As more capable Iraqi police and soldiers come on line, they will assume responsibility for more territory — with the goal of having the Iraqis control more territory than the coalition by the end of 2006. And as Iraqis take over more territory, this frees American and Coalition forces to concentrate on training and on hunting down high-value targets like the terrorist Zarqawi and his associates. As Iraqis stand up, America and our coalition will stand down.”
This is boilerplate war rhetoric, except for maybe the reference to the end of this calendar year. But even that isn’t quite what the WaPo suggests. The New York Times explains why (via Eric Umansky).
Mr. Bush set a loose goal of training enough Iraqi police and soldiers to control a majority of Iraq’s territory by the end of this year. The target could be misleading, however, because the sectarian violence is concentrated in small but strategically crucial parts of the country.
Alas, yesterday was not a front-page breakthrough. Same old Bush.