President-elect Barack Obama, on "60 Minutes," defended the financial bailout package.
Yes, said Obama, the economy continues to suffer, but "I think the part
of the way to think about it is things could be worse. … So part
of what we have to measure against is what didn't happen and not just
what has happened."
Interesting. Why not apply the "what didn't happen" standard to the unpopular Iraq war?
Obama calls the Iraq invasion a "dumb war." Never mind that all of his
Democratic presidential nomination Senate opponents -- Sen. Chris Dodd,
Sen./VP-elect Joe Biden, Sen. Hillary Clinton and former Sen. John
Edwards -- voted for the war. At the time of the invasion of Iraq, more
than 70 percent of Americans supported the war. Intelligence agencies
of the United Kingdom, Jordan and Egypt -- just to name a few --
assumed that the dictator of Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction.
So, but for the Iraq war, what would have happened?
After 9/11, polls show that between 80 and 90 percent of Americans
expected another hit within six months to a year. It didn't happen. One
could argue that deposing Saddam Hussein staved off another 9/11 or
perhaps even something bigger. Our government dispatched "weapons
hunter" David Kay to Iraq, a caricature of whom appeared in Oliver
Stone's anti-Bush movie, "W." Kay found no stockpiles of WMD. He did,
however, say that Saddam retained the intention and the capability of
resuming his WMD program, a resumption that seemed likely upon the
removal of the then-imposed economic sanctions.
Kay said he and his team discovered: "A clandestine network of
laboratories and safehouses within the Iraqi Intelligence Service that
contained equipment subject to UN monitoring and suitable for
continuing (chemical and biological weapons) research. A prison
laboratory complex, possibly used in human testing of (biological
weapons) agents, that Iraqi officials … were explicitly ordered
not to declare to the UN. Reference strains of biological organisms
concealed in a scientist's home, one of which can be used to produce
biological weapons. New research on (biological weapon)-applicable
agents … and continuing work on ricin and aflatoxin were not
declared to the UN. Documents and equipment, hidden in scientists'
homes, that would have been useful in resuming uranium enrichment by
centrifuge and electromagnetic isotope separation."
But for the Iraq invasion, Libya's Moammar Gadhafi would not have
renounced his WMD program. He reportedly stated that he did not want to
suffer the same fate as Saddam. As a result of Libya's renunciation and
transfer of its WMD program -- now under lock and key in Tennessee --
the State Department removed Libya from its official list of
terror-sponsoring states. But for the Iraq war, we would not have
uncovered intelligence about the work of Dr. A.Q. Khan, the so-called
father of the Islamic bomb.
What about Bush's alleged ineptitude and use of illegal procedures in prosecuting the war?
The President-elect's transition team suggests that Obama might keep
Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a proponent of the Bush surge strategy
-- a strategy that Obama criticized and predicted would make things
worse. That didn't happen. The surge and the change in
counterinsurgency strategy successfully brought about long-awaited
Iraqi political reconciliation, along with a dramatic reduction in
American casualties. And Iraq and America appear ready to finalize a
deal to have all the troops out by the end of 2011. Yes, it is a fixed
-- reportedly not conditions-based -- timetable, but a timetable that,
pre-surge, was unthinkable.
According to Siobhan Gorman, writing in The Wall Street Journal:
"President-elect Barack Obama is unlikely to radically overhaul
controversial Bush administration intelligence policies, advisers say,
an approach that is almost certain to create tension within the
Democratic Party. … (Obama) recently voted for a White
House-backed law to expand eavesdropping powers for the National
Security Agency. … The new president could take a similar
approach to revising the rules for CIA interrogations, said one current
government official familiar with the transition. Upon review, Mr.
Obama may decide he wants to keep the road open in certain cases for
the CIA to use techniques not approved by the military, but with much
greater oversight."
So was the Iraq war, as Obama insisted, a mission that "never should have been authorized and never should have been waged"?
A Rasmussen poll released a week ago finds voter confidence in the War
on Terror at 60 percent -- its "highest level ever." As for Iraq, 42
percent of voters say that, long term, the mission will be judged a
success, with 34 percent believing history will judge it a failure
(down from 54 percent in March). At the war's beginning, President Bush
said when the Iraqi government and military can stand up, we will stand
down. Victory, he said, will be achieved when the country can defend
itself against its enemies, foreign and domestic, and has established a
democratic government in the region that will serve as a reliable ally
in the War on Terror.