Get This Blog by Email
BlogAboutBlogOverclockedResearchInitiativesPhotos
« Why No Republican Mashup Debate? links for 2007-09-25 »


Hillary Will Not End This War

by Patrick Ruffini :: September 24th, 2007 11:21 pm

I sat and watched the Sunday shows in astonishment. It was not what Hillary was saying, but when she was saying it. By telling us in the most explicit terms yet that she will not withdraw from Iraq in 2009, she must believe she has the nomination wrapped up. And she is beginning to protect her flank from what I have long believed to be our most lethal argument against her.

The Clintons have promised Democrat primary voters that they will “end the war” once Camelot is restored. Which begs the question that our nominee should begin asking on February 6th, “Okay. When?”

Withdrawal from Iraq seems impossible today, and would be the kind of abrupt foreign policy change you would only expect from a transformational President (e.g. not Hillary). It is an open question whether a cautious trimmer like Hillary would have the guts to actually go through with it.

Our best argument against Hillary is not that she will end the war. It’s that she won’t.

And that she’s being dishonest when she says she will. And that she’s just another spineless Democrat like John Kerry who can’t stand up to any criticism, and won’t tell the country what she really thinks about the war. And that her political gamesmanship sends the wrong message to our troops and our enemies.

If there is little operational difference between Hillary Clinton and say, Mitt Romney on Iraq, then why change? If no one who gets elected in 2008 will end the war, why not stick with the party that you would normally trust in wartime?

So what Hillary told us on Sunday is that she will refuse to be pinned down on a date certain for withdrawal. (She won’t even apologize for her 2002 vote!) Until she does, her pledge to end the war should be laughed at, and this should be used to drive a wedge between Hillary and her anti-war base.

Fleshing this out further, you could easily argue that President Hillary’s middle ground approach would be just as dangerous as complete withdrawal. Under President Hillary, we’d have 75,000 troops in Iraq — not enough to get the job done and but still taking significant casualties. Iraq 2010 would look like Vietnam 1970 and you can call her Hillary Milhous Clinton.

ISN’T THERE AN EERIE CONGRUITY building between Hillary Clinton and George Bush on Iraq? The President, while confidently predicting a Republican will win in 2008, is openly talking of handing off to an anti-war successor a stable enough situation to be able to maintain at least some force presence through the next Administration. And Hillary is practically meeting him half-way, refusing to budge on her 2002 vote and talking openly about the dangers of abject withdrawal. Given that the natural drift of any incoming administration is to be more not less interventionist in foreign policy, it’s a pretty good bet that the netroots will be sold down the river in 2009.

Hillary is morphing into a George W. Bush Democrat. While that will draw heat from an increasingly desperate Obama, she will pay the price in the general election, not because she’s totally wrong, but because Democrat-inclined voters will smell something fishy about their gal acting like the one they’ve so long fantasized of kicking to the curb. And if she wins, the BushClintonBushClinton consensus will be back.

Tagged:

Comments Comments (2) Comments Trackbacks (0) del.icio.us digg it subscribe

This was posted in: Uncategorized

Both comments and pings are currently closed.

  1. Rob says:

    I’ve said it before on this web site, and I’ll say it again. There will be little difference between the two candidates for President on the war issue in this election. I will be 1968 all over again when both Humphrey and Nixon promised “peace with honor” and said very little about how they were going to achieve it. Both candidates will move to the center

    Nonetheless, I don’t think Republicans will get much traction by accusing Hillary of being a hawk. Anti-war voters will simply have no place else to go. The Republican candidate will need an exit strategy just to keep anti-war Republicans in line and not forego completely the independent vote. So accusing Hillary of being a hawk will make the Republican candidate sound like a dove, and I don’t think he will quite want that either because he wants to hold the Bush loyalists.

    But make no mistake about it. Whatever his or her position is now, the new president is going to withdraw from Iraq. But like Nixon, he will recognize that he has four years in which to get the job done. Nonetheless, no president, Democrat or Republican, is going to go into the 2012 election with the Iraq albatross hanging around his neck.

    The first priority of any new administration will be to plan an exit from Iraq even though that exit may take some time.

    # September 26th, 2007 at 4:50 pm

  2. Sean says:

    She should end the war. Otherwise , whe would in no way stand differently from George W Bush

    # September 27th, 2007 at 5:17 am

Patrick Ruffini   Patrick Ruffini is an online political strategist, blogger, and wearer of many hats. More...


Ruffini Around the Web







 Subscribe in a reader

Add to Google

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Rojo




Tags
2008 actblue activism al gore announcements barack obama bill clinton blogosphere bush congress conservatism cpac debate democrats epolitics eric cantor facebook fred thompson fundraising grassroots hillary clinton iowa iraq jim ogonowski john edwards john mccain MA 5 marketing media mike huckabee mitt romney movement netroots new hampshire online politics overclocked polls rightroots ron paul ronald reagan rudy giuliani savethedebate south carolina strategy straw poll technology user generated content video web2.0 youtube

By Month

  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006



  •   


  • Blogroll

  • Join the email list
    Blogs
    Main
    Overclocked
    On the Side

    About
    Bio
    Portfolio
    2008 Wire
    MSM, Blogs
    GOP, Dems
    FAQ
    Initiatives
    ECorps
    Research
    Photo Gallery

    © 2007 Ruffini Strategies LLC

    Clicky Web Analytics