May 24, 2007
Why Congress Caved to Bush
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
The antiwar Democrats are crying betrayal—and
justifiably so.
For a Democratic Congress is now voting to fully fund
the war in Iraq, as demanded by President Bush, and
without any timetable for a U.S. troop withdrawal. Bush
got his $100 billion, then magnanimously agreed to let
Democrats keep the $20 billion in pork they stuffed into
the bill—to soothe the pain of their sellout of the
party base.
Remarkable. If the Republican rout of 2006 said
anything, it was that America had lost faith in the
Bush-Rumsfeld conduct of the war and wanted Democrats to
lead the country out.
Yet, today, there are more U.S. troops in Iraq than
when the
Democrats won. More are on the way. And with the
surge and retention of troops in Iraq beyond normal
tours, there should be a record number of U.S. troops in
country by year's end.
Why did the Democrats capitulate?
Because
they lack the courage of their convictions. Because
they fear the consequences if they put their antiwar
beliefs into practice. Because they are afraid if they
defund the war and force President Bush to withdraw U.S.
troops, the calamity he predicts will come to pass and
they will be held accountable for losing Iraq and the
strategic disaster that might well ensue.
Democrats are an intimidated party. The reasons are
historical. They were shredded by
Nixon and
Joe McCarthy for FDR's surrenders to Stalin at
Tehran and
Yalta, for losing China to
Mao's hordes, for the "no-win war" in Korea,
for being
"soft on communism."
The best and the brightest—JFK's New
Frontiersmen—were held responsible for
plunging us into Vietnam and proving incapable of
winning the war. A
Democratic Congress cut off aid to Saigon in 1975,
ceding Southeast Asia to Hanoi and bringing on the
genocide of Pol Pot.
Democrats know they are distrusted on national
security. They fear that if they defund this war and
bring on a Saigon ending in the Green Zone, it will be a
generation before they are trusted with national power.
And power is what the party is all about.
Yet, not only does the situation in Iraq appear
increasingly grim, with rising U.S. and Iraqi
casualties, other shoes are about to drop that will
reverberate throughout the region.
Support for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, with his war
in Lebanon a debacle and his leadership denounced by a
commission he appointed, is in single digits. Waiting in
the wings is Likud super-hawk "Bibi" Netanyahu,
the most popular politician in Israel, who compares
today to Munich 1938 and equates Iran's Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad with Hitler.
If and when Bibi comes to power, he will use every
stratagem to provoke us into attacking "Hitler."
Also drumming for war on Iran are the floundering
neocons and the Israeli lobby. Under orders from the
lobby, Nancy Pelosi stripped from a House bill a
stipulation that Bush must come to Congress for
authorization before launching an attack on Iran.
With
Democratic contenders reciting the mantra,
"All options are on the table," and Iran defying
U.N. sanctions, pursuing nuclear enrichment and
detaining U.S. citizens, Bush has a blank check to
launch a third war.
Lebanon is ablaze. Gaza is ablaze. The Afghan war is
not going well. The Taliban have a privileged sanctuary.
The NATO allies grow weary.
In Pakistan, the most dangerous country on earth—one
bullet away from an Islamic republic with atom bombs—our
erstwhile ally, President Musharraf, is caught in a
political crisis over his ouster of the chief justice.
Presidents Musharraf in Islamabad, Kharzi in Kabul
and Siniora in Beirut, and Prime Minister Maliki in
Baghdad, sit on shaky thrones. No one knows what follows
their fall. But it is hard to see how it would not be
crippling for America's position.
With such volatility in this crucial region of the
world, with such uncertainty, it is easy to see why
Democrats prefer to be the "dummy" at the bridge
table and let Bush play the hand.
The congressional Democrats are cynical, but they are
not stupid. If the surge works and U.S. troops are being
withdrawn by fall 2008, they do not want it said of them
that they "cut and ran" when the going got tough,
that they played Chamberlain to Bush's Churchill.
And if the war is going badly in 2008, they know that
the American people, in repudiating the party of Bush
and Cheney, have no other choice than the party of
Hillary and Pelosi and Harry Reid.
That is why congressional Democrats are surely saying
privately of the angry antiwar left what has often been
said by the Beltway Republican elite of the right:
"Don't worry about them. They have nowhere else to go
And that is why the antiwar left was thrown under the
bus.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.