Friday, February 27, 2009

Obama's second command performance of the week

I thought President Obama's speech to the Marines at Camp Lejeune today was almost as impressive as the address to Congress earlier this week. After all, his opposition to the Iraq war was what gave him his initial opening in the Democratic primary; today, as President, he had to explain how he would end the war without belittling his audience's service and sacrifice in it. He pulled it off with the perfect tone, drawing a distinction between the controversial decision to invade and the military's accomplishment of most of the various tasks it was assigned in Iraq.

The most impressive part of the Obama's speech, and the only part that really surprised me, was the thematic link to one of the central themes of his address earlier in the week, American's shared responsibility for the economic crisis, which he contrasted with the sacrifices made by the servicemen and women:

You make up a fraction of the American population, but in an age when so many people and institutions have acted irresponsibly, so many of you did the opposite. You volunteered to bear the heaviest burden.

To put it simply, he was a very credible Commander-in-Chief.

"Text of Obama's speech on the Iraq war" [MSNBC]
Video: "Combat Troops to Leave Iraq by August 2010" [C-SPAN]

Monday, February 23, 2009

Truth commission finds an unlikely ally in Jones

The media and punditry have paid a lot of attention to where the Republican party goes from here, in the wake of that party's losses in 2006 and 2008. But one of the most interesting stories involving a Republican elected official has largely been ignored. Two weeks ago, Rep. Walter Jones (R-NC) signed on as a co-sponsor of John Conyer's bill to create a National Commission on Presidential War Powers and Civil Liberties (the 3rd district, which Jones represents, is shaded green in the map shown above).

What makes Jones' support for the bill especially surprising is that he has a very conservative voting record, and was actually the original sponsor of the bill that renamed french fries as "Freedom Fries" in the House cafeteria just before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. But as the country learned more about pre-war intelligence, Jones became a harsh critic of the war, and in 2005, he joined Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) and Ron Paul (R-TX) to co-sponsor a bill calling for a withdrawal from Iraq by 2006. When a reporter asked him to explain why he changed his mind about Iraq, he said: "If we were given misinformation intentionally by people in this administration, to commit the authority to send boys, and in some instances girls, to go into Iraq, that is wrong."

To understand Jones' perspective, it is important to understand that his district is one of the most military-oriented congressional districts in the country, as it is home to several Marine bases: Camp Lejeune and the New River Air Station in the Jacksonville area, and Cherry Point Air Station in Havelock. Of the 17,000 troops President Obama recently announced he would be sending into Afghanistan, 8,000 of them are Marines shipping out of Camp Lejeune. So there only a few other districts where the human costs of the two wars have been felt as much as they have in North Carolina's 3rd. I spend a lot of time at the area's beaches, and on a recent trip, the folks at the seafood market asked me if I had been in Iraq. I was confused at first, and then realized that was a good assumption since I was wearing cargo shorts and a buzz cut, and I said, "no, no, I'm just a wannabe."

It is going to be interesting to see what comes out of the current push for a commission or other investigation into the Bush administration's war on terror policies. The NY Times has a great article about the different forms this commission could take. While I definitely support the idea in principle, the Democrat and Obama supporter in me fears that it could backfire if there isn't enough support from key Republicans. If the Republican leadership successfully blocks major parts of Obama's policy agenda between now and the 2010 midterm elections (think health care and clean energy/climate change policies), and the truth commission ends up dominating the headlines, it would give the GOP an opening to claim that Obama and the Congressional Democrats are stuck in the past, and don't have bipartisan solutions to the problems we face. I think this is what Obama fears, and that's why he's saying he is more interested in "looking forward" than in "looking backwards" at Bush's war on terror.

That said, there's another scenario where a truth commission could help everyone. I don't think the GOP will be able to take the presidency again until its leaders admit that many of the problems we face require some sort of federal regulation/intervention (like health care and climate change), and separate themselves from Bush and Cheney, who will continue to represent the party in the minds of a whole generation of voters for the foreseeable future. So from that perspective, supporting a truth commission might be the smartest thing McCain, Graham, Steele and other prominent Republicans could do right now. But I won't be holding my breath.

"To Investigate or Not - Four Ways to Look Back at Bush" [New York Times]


UPDATED 2/26/08: It turns out that Obama's going to announce his Iraq withdrawal plan from Camp Lejeune on Friday.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Obama orders Afghanistan surge

President Obama's sending 17,000 more troops to Afghanistan, including 8,000 Marines from Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, NC. When you consider that a new UN report found that civilian casualties jumped by 40% in 2008 over 2007, it really seems like Afghanistan is right on the verge of slipping out of control, and that a surge could help stabilize things. And with the strong Al Qaeda/Taliban presence in the tribal areas around Afghanistan's mountainous border with Pakistan (and increasingly, in areas of Pakistan beyond the border), Obama's campaign line about Afghanistan being the center of the war on terror seems truer than ever.

A friend of mine from DC, who is a good friend of my roommate's, is in the Navy Reserve and was recently recalled to active duty in Kabul. He's been blogging about his experiences over there, and it's definitely an interesting read. Also, the MIT International Review just published a fascinating paper on applying biogeographic theories to find Bin Laden (as seen on Rachel Maddow): PDF.