Two months ago, the WaPo reported that policy and intelligence experts do not believe that those committing violence in Iraq would, as the president insists, “follow us home” after we withdraw. “[U]nlike Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda organization in Pakistan, U.S. intelligence officials and outside experts believe, the Iraqi branch poses little danger to the security of the U.S. homeland,” the Post explained.
And yet, the notion that Iraq’s civil war will spill over onto the streets of the United States seems to be the president’s only argument against withdrawal. It’s certainly his favorite, repeating it ad nauseum at yesterday’s press conference: “If we were to fail, they’d come and get us.… If we let up, we’ll be attacked.… It’s better to fight them there than here.”
I kind of thought we were past this point, but as long as Bush continues to repeat nonsense, it’s probably a good idea to keep debunking it. Fred Kaplan, calling the president’s argument “nonsense,” once again sets the record straight.
First, the vast majority of the insurgents have nothing to do with al-Qaida or its ideology. They’re combatants in a sectarian conflict for power in Iraq, and they have neither the means nor the desire to threaten North America.
Second, to the extent that the true global terrorists could attack us at home, they could do so whether or not U.S. troops stay or win in Iraq. The one issue has nothing to do with the other.
Third, what kind of thing is this to say in front of the allies? If our main goal in bombing, strafing, and stomping through Iraq is to make sure we don’t have to do so on our own territory, will any needy nation ever again seek our aid and cover? Or will they seek out a less blatantly selfish protector?
I’d only add that Bush’s nonsensical argument also happens to be a blast from the past.
Josh Marshall noted yesterday:
According to a 2003 article from Knight-Ridder, LBJ also said: “If we quit Vietnam,” President Lyndon Johnson warned, “tomorrow we’ll be fighting in Hawaii, and next week we’ll have to fight in San Francisco.”
Digby added:
That’s just as crackled as Bush’s nonsensical statement that the “oceans don’t protect us anymore” and that kind of dumbass reasoning is why Johnson was booted out. Jesus. The truth is that we lived under the possibility of nuclear annihilation with intercontinental ballistic missiles for decades. All it would have taken was one little slip-up or a bad moment of judgment and most of the planet could have gone up in smoke.
There is no existential threat today that comes close to that, short of being hit by an asteroid, which means we have already proved that we can handle the problem of terrorism without turning into a bunch of hysterical ninnies squealing that they are coming to kill the children every five minutes.
I’d enjoy the policy debate over the future of Iraq so much more if the White House could bring itself to be coherent once in a while.