It’s tough being a member of Congress. Even if you’re in the majority, as is Rep. Nancy Boyda, Kansas Democrat, you never know when your ears may be assaulted by outrageous and offensive ideas.
Like what? At a recent hearing of the Armed Services Committee, retired Gen. Jack Keane said “progress is being made” by U.S. military forces in Iraq; “We are on the offensive and we have the momentum.” The first-term congresswoman was so distressed by these remarks that she walked out.
There was “only so much” she could take, she said, so she “had to leave the room… after so much of the frustration of having to listen to what we listened to.” She said she was worried, too, that Gen. Keane’s remarks “will in fact show up in the media and further divide this country.” Hey, that could happen.
Lucky for Mrs. Boyda, Congress in August goes on vacation. One hopes she can rest and recover, while blocking out any unwelcome and divisive news about American military successes in Iraq resulting from the new strategy pursued by Gen. David Petraeus and his troops.
For example, let’s hope she never hears what Gen. Petraeus’ top deputy, Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, recently reported: A “growing list of cities” that until recently were under al Qaeda control have now been “liberated.” Gen. Odierno added that “greater than 50 percent of Baghdad is currently in control of coalition or Iraqi security forces…. I can think of no major population center in Iraq that is an al Qaeda safe haven today.”
If Mrs. Boyda is careful about which television stations she watches, she need never learn who is primarily responsible for the carnage in Iraq. Fox News’ Chris Wallace recently asked Gen, Petraeus if most of the violence is the result of a Sunni-Shia civil war. The general replied that, in fact, al Qaeda is “carrying out the bulk of the sensational attacks, the suicide car bomb attacks, suicide vest attacks, and so forth… all of the individuals in the intelligence community, Gen. [Stanley] McChrystal, the head of our Joint Special Operations Command, all of us feel that the central front of al Qaeda’s terror war is focused on Iraq.”
Nor does she need to know that, according to Brig. Gen. Mick Bednarek, in Iraq today “al Qaeda is on the run…. We are going into places that the coalition has not had the sufficient troop strength and force size to go before, and we’re going after them, and they will not find safe haven in this country.”
With a little effort, the congresswoman can remain ignorant of the likely consequences if Congress forces the administration to withdraw U.S. troops before their mission is completed. Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, told CNN’s Jamie McIntyre: “Those surge forces are giving us the capability we have now to take the fight to the enemy, and the enemy only responds to force and we now have that force…. If those surge forces go away, that capability goes away… if you did that… you’d find the enemy regaining ground, re-establishing a sanctuary…. Over time we can turn the area over to Iraqi security forces, and then we’ll be ready to do something that looks like a withdrawal…. People keep wanting to put a timeframe on this. It’s just not possible.”
Surely you can see how possessing such information would make it more difficult for Mrs. Boyda to do her job — second-guessing military commanders. And she’s right that such information can divide Americans. It might even stimulate serious debate — a frightening thought.
As House Majority Whip James Clyburn, South Carolina Democrat, suggested this week, success in Iraq also would be awkward for those who have bet politically on U.S. failure. To be precise, Mr. Clyburn said it would be “a real big problem for us” if Gen. Petraeus returns to Washington next month and presents a positive report on progress in Iraq. Moderate Democrats might listen and decide that for America to be defeated in Iraq by al Qaeda and Iranian-backed militias is neither inevitable nor in the national interest. These same moderate Democrats also might decide that, for them, the national interest trumps the partisan interest.
Were Mrs. Boyda to hear that, she wouldn’t leave the room — they would have to carry her out.
Clifford D. May, is president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
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