In The Note today, ABC News’ gang said there were a number of factors to consider when analyzing what might happen in 2006 and beyond, but chief among them was:
* Whether there is a Democratic position on Iraq by September 25, 2006 (or not).
Tim Russert posed a similar question to Howard Dean on Meet the Press yesterday. Is it a fair question? I’m not sure.
It’s reasonable to say there is no “Democratic position on Iraq.” I’m also fairly comfortable with the idea that there’s no “Republican position on Iraq” either. There’s a fairly wide gulf between, say, Russ Feingold’s position on Iraq and Joe Lieberman’s, but isn’t there an equally significant difference between Chuck Hagel and Donald Rumsfeld?
What’s the official Dem line on the war? I have no idea. What’s the official GOP line? I suspect it’s some combination of “stay the course” and “freedom is on the march,” but beyond tired sloganeering, I don’t see a real policy. And yet, one party is labeled with the side with no coherent strategy — and it’s not the party that launched the war under false pretenses, with too few troops, and with no exit strategy.
In a speech in Philadelphia late last week, Sen. Rick Santorum, the third highest ranking Republican in the Senate, criticized how the war has been presented by the White House. In talking with reporters later, Santorum said the war has been “less than optimal” and “maybe some blame could be laid” at the White House. Is this the Republican position on Iraq? Probably not, but I haven’t seen a rush of GOP officials storming their way to microphones to express their disagreement, either.
To his credit, Harry Reid is trying to respond to the charge that Dems are without a policy (which, as far as I’m concerned, puts him one up on his Senate Republican counterparts).
Democrats have developed a very clear path forward. There are three areas we believe need to be addressed:
* First, 2006 should be a significant year of transition to full Iraqi sovereignty, with Iraqis taking more and more responsibility for their own security. It’s time to take the training wheels off the Iraqi government. Iraqis must begin to run their own country. In 2006, the US and our allies must do everything we can to make that possible.
* Second, the Administration must advise the Iraqi people that U.S. military forces will not stay indefinitely in Iraq, and that it is their responsibility to achieve the broad-based and sustainable political environment essential for defeating the insurgency.
* Third, the President needs to submit — on a quarterly basis – a plan for success to Congress and the American people. This plan must specify the challenges and progress being made in Iraq, timetables for achieving our goals and estimated dates for redeployment from Iraq as these goals are met.
Reid, Durbin, and Levin unveiled this in legislative form today as the “United States Policy on Iraq Act,” adding it as an amendment to the Defense Authorization Act.
The Dems’ position, which seems to cover wide ground between competing approached (Feingold, Lieberman example), is pretty detailed for a party that has no position on the war. Take a look and let me know what you think.