If you’re unmoved by the national security arguments against the war in Iraq, and the strategic arguments, the military arguments, the moral arguments, the personal arguments, the practical arguments, and the diplomatic arguments, there are always the economic arguments.
Senator Barack Obama linked the fragile American economy to a “careless and incompetent execution” of the Iraq conflict, imploring voters in [Charleston, W.Va.] today to weigh the trickle-down, pocketbook consequences of the war as they choose a successor to President Bush.
“When you’re spending over $50 to fill up your car because the price of oil is four times what it was before Iraq, you’re paying a price for this war,” Mr. Obama told an audience at the University of Charleston. “When Iraq is costing each household about $100 a month, you’re paying a price for this war.”
This strikes me as both good policy and good politics — it helps make these costs personal.
At the same time, this approach builds on the arguments from Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, who recently explained, “For a fraction of the cost of this war, we could have put Social Security on a sound footing for the next half-century or more.” For that matter, Robert Hormats, vice chairman of Goldman Sachs International, noted that the money spent on the war each day is “enough to enroll an additional 58,000 children in Head Start for a year, or make a year of college affordable for 160,000 low-income students through Pell Grants, or pay the annual salaries of nearly 11,000 additional border patrol agents or 14,000 more police officers.”
In Obama’s speech, he also went after John McCain, while “barely mentioning his Democratic rival.”
“No matter what the costs, no matter what the consequences, John McCain seems determined to carry out a third Bush-term. That’s an outcome America can’t afford,” Mr. Obama said. “Because of the Bush-McCain policies, our debt has ballooned.”
Mr. McCain, who was in London on a leg of his week-long tour through Europe and the Middle East, quickly responded with his own forceful criticism of Mr. Obama’s plan to remove combat troops from Iraq.
“On national security, Senator Obama would rather rehash the past than look forward with resolve to address fundamental challenges and opportunities we have today to secure our future,” said Jill Hazelbaker, a spokeswoman for Mr. McCain.
First of all, I’m glad Obama targeted McCain, not Clinton. My only quibble with Obama’s speech yesterday was that it included a few too many shots at his Democratic rival, some of which seemed unnecessary.
Second of all, McCain thinks Obama wants to “rehash the past”? Putting aside McCain’s obvious attempts to avoid responsibility and accountability, isn’t the McCain candidacy based almost exclusively on his “experience”? And if so, doesn’t that necessarily mean McCain is all about rehashing the past?