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O'Reilly let Obama off easy on Iraq

While O'Reilly was most likely the most aggresive interviewer that Obama has ever faced, O'Reilly let Obama off on the question that if it was up to Obama and Biden, there would have been no surge. O'Reilly also should have followed up by saying that if there had been no surge, Iraq would be lost now, and then ask the question:
 "Senator Obama, if there had been no surge as you proposed, Iraq would have been lost. Is defeat in Iraq acceptable to you?"
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More subtle but blatant media bias by a CNN reporter

Check out this article in CNN.com today, written by Barbara Starr, CNN's Pentagon correspondent. In discussing whether a troop "surge" would work in Afghanistan, Ms. Star wrote the following:

"In 2007, as part of the surge strategy, President Bush sent roughly 30,000 additional troops to Iraq in an attempt to improve security. That effort COINCIDED with a drop in violence, and, now that the troops in Iraq are returning to pre-surge levels ..." (emphasis added).
 
"Coincided"??? Looks like Ms. Starr wants to join the one member club of individuals who think the surge was not succesful. Obama is the charter member. Ms. Starr can be the second member. And remember, this is not an op-ed piece. This is supposed to be reporting!!
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McCain blunders ... running horrible campaign in my opinion

"Pretty good timetable" ...
 
Surge was about "counter-insurgency tactics"  and not about "more troops."
 
John, what in the world are you talking about? Rest assured that in the next few months, we are going to be hearing these words over and over and over again -- especially the "pretty good timetable" comment by McCain in reference to Obama's 16 month withdrawal timetable. And it will not matter what McCain's explanations are. It will be what the American people perceive what those comments were meant to say.
 
Obama has made so many blunders of his own, and yet, in my opinion, the McCain campaign has failed to capitalize and expose those blunders to the American people. As noted in my blog before, Obama's proclamation of being "correct" about a 16 month withdrawal timetable is only "correct" because of the stability in Iraq brought upon by the surge in American troops. In other words, Obama's self-validation is totally baseless. Recall that Obama's original expressed intent to withdraw the troops was because he thought we should not be in Iraq at all, and that the war was lost. The timetable was certainly NOT advocated because the situation in Iraq is good enough for the U.S. to withdraw its troops. Why hasn't McCain come out and explicitly pointed that out? Instead, not only does Obama have Maliki on the record talking favorably about the 16 month timetable, but Obama also has McCain saying that it is a "pretty good timetable." In the same statement, McCain also said that conditions on the ground should still control the rate of troop withdrawal, but those words are not enough to combat the implication that McCain endorsed Obama's 16 month timetable. McCain ought to know better than that. McCain could have said that it's a "pretty good timetable, but it's only a pretty good timetable THANKS TO THE SURGE!"
 
Similarly, McCain has been trying to hammer Obama on opposing the surge of troops. McCain's point has been that the increase of American troops brought about stability. Now McCain mentions that the surge was about "counter-insurgency strategy" and not about "more troops." What in the world??
 
The McCain campaign really needs to step it up. And McCain really needs to think before saying stuff. Obama can afford to make bone headed remarks, because the mainstream media and his "likeability" allow him some wiggle room. McCain has no wiggle room. He needs to run the perfect campaign. So far, McCain's campaign is far from perfect.
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Master of the obvious Obama: trip confirmed MY strategies

In a recent interview with Bill Hemmer during this European tour, Obama told Hemmer that the trip overseas "confirmed my strategies." On the preview clip that Fox News aired this Saturday morning, Obama goes on to describe the strategy: (1) send more troops to Afghanistan; (2) Iraqis are willing to take more responsibility over the security of their country; and (3) Iran is a grave threat.
 
Isn't Obama just stating the obvious? Yet, Obama likes to talk about the obvious as if he was the first one to think of it. Send more troops to Afghanistan ... is that anything new? Iraq's security by Iraqis ... is that anything new? Iran is a grave threat ... is that anything new? These are positions that others have advocated for months if not years.
 
Not to beat on a dead horse any more than I already have in my blog, but Obama conveniently fails to note that the Iraqi willingness and ability to take on more responsibility for the security of Iraq can be directly attributed to the surge of American troops that Obama vehemently opposed and called a failure. Recall that Obama not only predicted failure but also predicted that the surge would only lead to additional violence. Perhaps someone needs to ask him that question, as opposed to just merely asking him whether or not he agrees that the surge was a success. Because you know Obama is always going to squirm his way past that question of success. As a lawyer, I've encountered hundreds of witnesses who squirm like Obama does when the topic of the surge comes up. "Well ... ehh ... ahh ... it really depends ... eh ... on what the definition of success is ..." Someone please ask Obama about the prediction that the surge would lead to more violence. There is no squirming around that question, unless Obama wants to look and sound really stupid by saying that it depends on what the definition of violence is.
 
Oh yeah, never mind. The strategy of "Iran is a grave threat" is indeed something new. But only to Obama, who had originally said that Iran is a little country who does not pose any danger.
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Obama: I am not a flip-flop. I am just inartful!

Anyone notice how Obama and the Democrats like to use the word "inartful?" It's like Roger Clemens using the word "misremembered." Whenever Obama flip flops on an issue, neither he nor the Democrats can bring themselves to admit that there has been a change in position. Never mind that a good leader needs to be flexible and ready to change his or her position, IF there are circumstances that call for a such a change in position. Only problem for Obama is that political expedience, his inexperience and ineptitude do not fall in the category of "circumstances that call for such a change in position." Consequently, Obama and his surrogates have to hold the party line that there has been no change in position. Maybe they were "inartful." But heavens knows that "my policy hasn't changed, and it's been very consistent"!!
 
I suppose Obama was only being inartful when he said that he would use public funds for campaign if his Republican counterpart did the same. Then he inartfully said that he never agreed to it. He was merely "considering" it.
 
Remember the ban on gun issue? When completing a questionnaire, someone in the Obama campaign answered that Obama believes that the D.C. ban on guns is a good law. Obama himself said last year that he supported the D.C. gun ban. After Obama initially refused to comment about his thoughts of how the U.S. Supreme Court should decide on the lawsuit against the D.C. gun ban, Obama finally said that he believes that the 2nd Amendment gives individuals the right to bear arms. When asked about prior representations that he and his campaign made that Obama supported the D.C. gun ban, Obama's referred to the earlier statements as "inartful." Obama's campaign then said that a "clerk" made a mistake when answering the questionnaire.
 
When Katie Couric interviewed Obama and asked him about his comment about keeping Jerusalem undivided, and then backtracking on that statement after getting flak, Obama's response was: "We just had phrased it poorly in the speech ... But my policy hasn't changed, and it's been very consistent." Way to be "inartful" again Mr. Obama.
 
I suppose Obama was also being "inartful" when he told Couric that the conditions on the ground in Iraq had improved significantly, that U.S. troops have helped reduce violence in Iraq, while still refusing to support the surge or even directly acknowledge that the surge in troops brought about the current level of security in Iraq.

Couric:
But talking microcosmically, did the surge, the addition of 30,000 additional troops ... help the situation in Iraq?

Obama: Katie, as ... you've asked me three different times, and I have said repeatedly that there is no doubt that our troops helped to reduce violence. There's no doubt.

Couric: But yet you're saying ... given what you know now, you still wouldn't support it ... so I'm just trying to understand this.

Obama: Because ... it's pretty straightforward. By us putting $10 billion to $12 billion a month, $200 billion, that's money that could have gone into Afghanistan. Those additional troops could have gone into Afghanistan. That money also could have been used to shore up a declining economic situation in the United States. That money could have been applied to having a serious energy security plan so that we were reducing our demand on oil, which is helping to fund the insurgents in many countries. So those are all factors that would be taken into consideration in my decision-- to deal with a specific tactic or strategy inside of Iraq.

Couric: And I really don't mean to belabor this, Senator, because I'm really, I'm trying ... to figure out your position. Do you think the level of security in Iraq would exist today without the surge?

Obama: Katie, I have no idea what would have happened had we applied my approach, which was to put more pressure on the Iraqis to arrive at a political reconciliation. So this is all hypotheticals ....

Senator Obama, let me answer your question as to "what would have happened" had your approach to Iraq been applied 18 months ago. Iraq would have been in total chaos, because American troops would not be there to reduce the violence by fighting the terrorists and insurgents. You wouldn't have had the photo op with smiling American soldiers. You wouldn't be touting how Maliqui "supports" your 18 months troop withdrawal deadline. Bottom line is that we would have lost the war in Iraq!! But of course, in the grand scheme of things, Obama and the Democrats want us to lose the war in Iraq. Because losing the war in Iraq is the best and only way Obama and the Democracts can articulate why they should be in the White House. Perhaps if Obama and the Democracts could just stop being so inartful ...
 
Last but not least, and totally unrelated to flip flopping, Obama said that Wesley Clark was being "inartful" when Clark dismissed John McCain's experience in Vietnam as being anything but relevant for someone running to be the commander-in-chief.
 
PS: I do give credit to Couric for actually asking tough questions during the interview, and not let her left bias get in the way of journalism for most of this interview. Let's see if she and CBS can keep it up.
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The Irony of the Surge's Success -- How Obama is using the Surge's Success

A year and a half ago, Obama was opposed to the surge of troops in Iraq when the Bush administration decided to add about 30,000+ troops to combat the mounting terrorists and insurgent attacks. Obama stated that the surge would not only fail, but that the surge would increase violence in Iraq. A year and a half later, the facts are undisputed that the violence in Iraq has decreased to the point that there are reports that some American soldiers in Iraq "itching" for action are complaining of boredom. Obama's current Iraq policy is to withdraw all American troops within 16 months. It's an artificial timetable that Obama actually opposed back in 2004 (which he conveniently forgot). However, as of today, this timetable is the backbone of Obama's current Iraq policy. The Iraqi government of Maliki was recently quoted as "supporting" Obama's timetable. And of course, the Obama campaign has utilized Maliki's statement as a "confirmation" of Obama's superbly thought out Iraq policy. Consider the irony of it all ...

If the surge had never been implemented, Obama's timetable of 16 months would have been moot, given that the war against terrorists and insurgents in Iraq would have been lost by now. If the surge had never been implemented, Maliqui's government would not be around to "support" any type of timetable for American troop withdrawal. It is even doubtful that Maliqui would be alive today if American troops were not still in Iraq. If the surge had failed as Obama predicted, Maliqui's government and Maliqui himself would not be around today. In fact, the only reason that Maliqui is even talking about American troop withdrawal from Iraq in recent days  is the very fact that the success of the surge has actually allowed Maliqui to feel secure about his position in Iraq. Maliqui's sense of security (whether real or perceived) is what allows Maliqui to talk about American troop withdrawal. The success of the surge is what provides the possibility that maybe, just maybe, the U.S. will be able to pull its troops out of Iraq -- whether in 12, 16, 24, or however many months. So the surge, which Obama was AGAINST and which McCain was for, and the success of the surge, have in a round-about way actually helped Obama's policy on Iraq. The very surge of troops Obama opposed has lent credibility to Obama's self proclaimed "foresight" about how it is perfectly feasible for the U.S. to withdraw its troops from Iraq in 16 months. Of course prior to the conclusion that the surge has indeed succeeded in stabilizing Iraq from violence standpoint, Obama's intent/motivation to withdraw all troops within 16 months was based on his perception that the fight in Iraq was hopelessly lost. Now that the surge was succesful, Obama is spinning the facts to support his 16 month timeline for withdrawal on the basis that even Maliqui supports the 16 months timetable. Obama of course will never point out that Maliqui would not be around to support the 16 months timetable proposed by Obama IF Obama had had his way a year and a half ago, and there had never been a surge at all.

When Obama was asked today whether or not he would have supported the surge a year and a half ago, knowing everything that he knows today, Obama answered "no." Given that the success of the surge has actually lent his Iraq policy credibility, maybe one of his 300 campaign advisors ought to tell Obama that he should give credit where credit is due.

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