Booman Tribune

Dems Finally Do Something Right

by BooMan
Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 12:05:22 PM EST

Congress has gone home for a two-week break with most of their business incomplete. They can't pass any appropriations, they can't pass the Farm Bill, they can't pass a new Iraqi supplemental bill. Yet, it looks at though the Democrats may have finally found their footing. Activists have been pointing out for a long time that we can end the war by refusing to pass more supplemental funding to fight it. That's obviously a less than ideal way of conducting U.S. foreign policy, but it is better than a never ending sinkhole of federal dollars and human lives. The Democrats have finally taken our advice.

After senate Republicans filibustered the latest supplemental bill, the Democrats said 'fine, then no more money for you.'

Now, Democratic leaders say they won't send President Bush a war spending bill this year. They calculate the military has enough money to run through mid-February.

Responding to the congressional blockage, Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Friday signed a memo ordering the Army to begin planning for a series of expected cutbacks, including the layoffs of as many as 100,000 civilian employees and another 100,000 civilian contractors, starting as early as January, Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said.

Naturally, this provides the Republicans the opportunity to say the Democrats are abandoning the troops in the field.

"We ought to get the troops the funding they need to finish the mission without restrictions and without a surrender date," said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky...

..."We'd rather see the Department of Defense, the military planners and our troops focusing on military maneuvers rather than accounting maneuvers as they carry out their mission in the field," [deputy WH press secretary] Fratto said...

..."Sen. Schumer only wants to fund pay, body armor and chow for the troops if he can put conditions on the money so that they cannot do the mission they have been ordered to do," said [Heather] Wilson, R-N.M.

But, this time, the Democrats were willing to take the heat and fire back.

Republicans said there were appalled by Sen. Chuck Schumer's comment, reported by The Associated Press on Thursday, that the Bush administration wouldn't get a "free lunch." Schumer, D-N.Y., had told reporters that unless Bush accepted the restrictions, the Defense Department would have to eat into its core budget. "The days of a free lunch are over," he said...

..."We need to do more than say to the Iraqis that our patience has run out and that they need to seize the opportunity that has been given them," said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. "Their dawdling will only end when they have no choice."

I have to compliment the Democrats when they show courage and do what we ask of them. As the New York Times says:

Democrats say they will continue to push the president and his Republican allies to concede their failed war policy and change course. They must keep at it. It’s far past time to begin a swift and orderly withdrawal of forces from Iraq’s civil war and to refocus on Afghanistan, where America’s win over the Taliban and Al Qaeda is in danger of being reversed.

The decision to withhold funds and tell the president to pound sand is a first step in the right direction.



Display:
Your compliment should be conditional Mr Boo. If, after they return from their latest vacation,the dems have to follow this up with a passing vote regarding the immunity situation!
 At the same time, what excited me the most was Reids claim that he would keep the Senate in session in order to stymie the piece of garbage from making recess appointments. Now, That would be something, wouldn't it?
by billjpa (billjpa@aol.com) on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 12:31:56 PM EST
i REALLY hope it's for real this time.  I'm getting sick of having the rug pulled out.
still, I will call with sugar on monday for a number of dems. not shcumer or difi, but the rest.

John Mccain Called his wife WHAT??
by brendan on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 01:08:11 PM EST
  Now would be the time to go. The Sunnis have turned on Al Qaeda. That was the biggest demon that followed us to Iraq. Now force Maliki's hand and tell him we are gone in one year. BTW where the hell is Sadr? What does the Mahdi army do after the six month stop of operations? Setting a timeline will help quell any violent resurgence of the Mahdis. We are the only thing they hate more then the Sunnis.

"We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; now we know that it is bad economics;" - Franklin Delano Roosevelt
by Salunga on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 01:51:27 PM EST
and consolidating his power and influence:
Muqtada moves to stop a Sunni 'surge'
By Sami Moubayed

DAMASCUS - The world is seemingly too busy these days to mind the day-to-day news coming out of Iraq - much to the pleasure of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. With the spotlight off him, Maliki gave an interview to the Saudi television channel al-Arabiyya, in which he asserted that "There is no civil war in Iraq." He added, "We don't have a militia problem in Iraq anymore." He wrapped up by noting that Iran does not have a decision-making influence on the Prime Minister's Office in Baghdad.

Maliki knew that he was, to put it politely, not telling the truth. In addition to spreading false public relations about his administration's effectiveness in combating terrorism, the Iraqi premier was also doing something very important. He was reconciling with the Mahdi Army of Muqtada al-Sadr. Or at least, he was trying to find common ground with his former allies, recently turned enemies. Muqtada quit the government this year.

This week, Muqtada called for a renewal of his truce with both American forces and those of the Iraqi government. It is a gesture of goodwill towards Maliki. Another six months of peace and quiet from the Mahdi Army, giving the prime minister more room to concentrate on other pressing issues, like the looming war between Turkey and Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq.

Meanwhile, along with the Iraqi Accordance Front, which joined him in walking out on the prime minister earlier this year, Muqtada is calling for a dissolution of Parliament and early elections.

Some claim that this will lead to a vote of no confidence against the prime minister and bring down his government. But if that happens, it might be a blessing for Maliki, who if re-allied to Muqtada would again win parliamentary elections and have a chance to create a cabinet free of all the luggage from his first tenure. Instead of facing Maliki and the Iraqi Accordance Front, Muqtada would face the Iraqi Accordance Front with Maliki.

On the surface, the truce renewal seems to serve Muqtada well, as a man working for collective security - even if it means putting controls on his own supporters. While the world observes his "truce", however, many of his men have flooded into the Iraqi security services, under a plea from none other than Maliki.
.
.
asia times [highly recommended reading, btw]

and this is very interesting as well...it's just luck

lTMF'sA



the revolution will not be televised...

by dada on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 02:31:05 PM EST
[ Parent ]
  Remember when the coalition tried to arrest Sadr for murder? Now his private army is one with the Iraqi Security Forces. If we keep surging maybe Muqtada will get Maliki's job.

"We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals; now we know that it is bad economics;" - Franklin Delano Roosevelt
by Salunga on Sat Nov 17th, 2007 at 10:48:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]


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