While
it is apparently important for President Bush's critics to
characterize his Sunday night speech as "an important
turn in his administration's approach to Iraq," it was
no such thing.
Democrats and the major media, after being wrong on just about
everything concerning the war, would love to show that the
difficulties we are now experiencing in Iraq somehow vindicate
their naysaying and discredit President Bush. But no matter
what happens, nothing is going to change the fact that they
were extraordinarily and consistently wrong.
And, contrary to their premature triumphalism, President Bush
has no egg on his face concerning Iraq. But that isn't stopping
his critics.
They are saying that Bush spoke too soon in May when declaring
a military victory in Iraq. As I see it, the president was
precisely correct in that declaration. We had won a decisive
victory. The objective was to change the despotic, murderous
regime of Saddam Hussein, and we accomplished it unequivocally.
The fact that since that time terrorists both inside and outside
that defeated regime have been committing postwar acts of terror
with increasing frequency against our troops does not alter
the reality of our victory.
Think of it this way: We won the war, and now terrorists of
all stripes, united by a common goal of thwarting the United
States and democracy, are trying to reverse our victory. That's
what terrorists do. That is their reason for being.
It is not as if we are still fighting a sovereign nation that
has refused to surrender, like Japan before the end of World
War II. The terrorists occupy no real estate in Iraq beyond
the moments they skip through on their way to their next act
of mayhem. They have no control over Iraq's infrastructure.
They have no input in its new government. They have no fixed
base of command. They are just roving disruptors and murderers.
And the
critics' charge that Bush made Iraq "a central
front in the war on terror" is exceedingly spurious. Of
course the terrorists are going to gravitate to any area where
they can further their goals.
The idea that we could prevent all terrorism on Iraqi soil
following the war is insultingly ludicrous. Until you kill
everyone who values our destruction more than they do their
own lives, you won't entirely eliminate acts of terrorism in
Iraq or anywhere else in the world. Ask Israel.
The critics
are also saying Bush has changed his tune on the cost of
the
war and the requirements for sacrifice. Nonsense.
You just can't satisfy the critics. They pilloried Bush when
he refused to predict the "unknowable," and now that
he has made an educated estimate of $87 billion based on our
recent experience, they excoriate him for spending too much.
Nor is
the president changing his tune about the desirability of
United Nations'
participation. From day one he has been
falsely accused of unilateralism because he didn't get the
final blessing of the United Nations or other nations. But
the fact is, he tried – repeatedly. The U.N. refused,
despite Saddam's repeated violations of its resolutions.
That the U.N. chose to side with tyranny over liberation is
a reason for it to apologize, not the United States or President
Bush. Bush's decision to go forward despite the inexcusable
intransigence of the U.N. and our so-called allies in Europe
does not mean he's a unilateralist, but a leader who places
the best interests of America over our international popularity.
Besides, the idea of requesting U.N. participation in the
postwar effort is nothing new. The administration has talked
about that from the outset. We are not asking it to do the
dirty work, just to support our humanitarian efforts to procure
sovereignty and peace for the Iraqi people. Isn't that the
very thing the United Nations is supposed to do?
Why aren't our critics focusing their vitriol on the shameful
United Nations? Answer: because that would make Bush look good.
Finally,
Bush has nothing to apologize for with respect to the lack
of proper
postwar planning, if by that it is meant
that we should have been able specifically to foresee all of
the desperate acts of sabotage by terrorists to disrupt the
new regime. No one – not even the omniscient Bush-haters – can
predict the unpredictable.
We all realize that it's campaign season, but surely some
things are more important than partisan politics. Isn't it
time for Democrats and the mainstream media to quit undermining
president Bush and get on board in this war on terror?