TNR BLOGS

July 04, 2009 | 8:16 AM
July 03, 2009 | 7:55 PM
July 03, 2009 | 7:37 PM

March 09, 2009 | 5:19 PM
March 09, 2009 | 5:16 PM
January 07, 2009 | 12:20 PM

July 01, 2009 | 10:33 PM
June 30, 2009 | 8:42 AM
June 29, 2009 | 9:09 AM

July 26, 2008 | 2:24 PM
July 23, 2008 | 1:55 PM
July 17, 2008 | 3:56 PM

July 03, 2009 | 10:13 PM
July 02, 2009 | 12:57 PM
July 01, 2009 | 7:02 PM
COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
08.04.2008
Petraeus in a Time of Primaries

Sitting in the Senate Foreign Services hearing with General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker, it's striking how much more downbeat it is than the hearings last September -- the press hasn't filled its reserved seats, Code Pink is muted, the Republican senators aren't wasting too much breath defending Petraeus or Bush, and even John Kerry's and Joe Biden's speeches lack passion. The whole hearing just doesn't feel very urgent.

Remember when David Petraeus was everything? When the course of Iraq and the two parties' political prospects seemed to hinge on what he could do? When his testimony squelched the imminent Republican defection to Jim Webb's high-stakes troop rotation bill, and when we could think it was worth our time to spend a week talking about the political fallout of MoveOn.org's insult to his honor? 

How things have changed. Today even Petraeus looks less like the great protagonist and more like another ensemble player in a drama that he didn't author, in which Maliki's follies in Basra, the shifting allegiances of the Sunnis, and the outcome of our own presidential race have just as much power to shape the plot. Petraeus himself is promoting this interpretation: "It [Iraqis turning against Al Qaeda] will be a local thing," he emphasizes, "not the flipping of a national light switch." Not very reassuring from the man who was supposed to reverse the disaster in Iraq, but looking back, should we really have expected much more from him?

I'll have more in a bit, but for a sharp look at how Petraeus and Crocker are trying to finesse the language of their testimony (hint: everything hinges now on the "special groups"!), check out Dana Milbank's "Rough Sketch" blog.

--Eve Fairbanks

Posted: Tuesday, April 08, 2008 4:43 PM with 2 comment(s)

Comments

You must be logged-in to comment.

Not a subscriber? Click here to get a digital or print and digital subscription to The New Republic!

teplukhin2you said:

"The whole hearing just doesn't feel very urgent."

The situation in Afghanistan is far more "urgent" than the one in Iraq, and has been so for quite some time. We're not going to either "win" in Iraq or withdraw from Iraq anytime soon. But we are in very serious danger of losing the war against the Taliban, against whom our troops and those few allies who actually deign to put their troops in combat have repeatedly been outmanned in recent months.

Which is probably why IIUC Petraeus has sought the Afghan command as his next post. (If I'm correct, a pity TNR's not on top of that story... batter up)

Also, it's been obvious to anyone not blinkered by partisan hatred of OtherSide re this war that the American public checked out at least two years ago. Pew has polling evidence re. Americans' views of the urgency and importance of various news topics going back for s.t. like 18 months now that indicate that mere INTEREST in news re Iraq fell off a cliff sometime in 2006 and has never come back.

It's only the clueless MoveOnners and their patriotically correct soulmates at Weekly Standard etc who believe that Iraq was or ever will be the dominant campaign issue.

April 9, 2008 2:40 AM

roidubouloi said:

Leaving aside its potency as a campaign issue, it is only the clueless who think there is some outcome that can be achieved in Iraq other than stability based on de facto partition and a close relationship with Iran.  We continue to fight there only to delay the inevitable from happening, an utterly morally, strategically, and bankrupt posture born of the original deceit by Bush and cowardice of the Congress that led to this pointless invasion.  Young Americans die so that Bush and the Republicans and the complicit Democrats, most prominently Hillary Clinton, need not publicly confess their error.  But, hey, it took Robert McNamara about 40 years to do so.  How many more lives will be lost or blighted, both American and Iraqi, before this ends?

If we lived in a just world, George Bush, Richard Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Douglas Feith, George Tenet, and Condoleeza Rice would be in the dock in the Hague standing trial for the war crime of waging aggressive war.  Powell, the cowardly toady, would get a bye for his willful blindness.  

Is that blinkered hatred?  So be it.  The hatred is deserved.

The reason that no one pays attention to this war anymore is that 1) there is no draft so it is largely the children of the underclasses who fight and die and 2) like the dog in the famous experiment that stops responding to electric shocks when there is no way out, it is easier psychologically to ignore the whole thing when, due to the corruption of American "leadership" we are consigned to no way out.

What an utter, shameful disgrace for America.

April 9, 2008 10:26 AM