Shifting sands in the Iraqi desert

The headline of this story in today’s New York Times pretty much sums up the debate that we will be having over the next week as we wait for Gen. David Petraeus to tell us next week taht that we can’t leave Iraq:

Bush Shifts Terms for Measuring Progress in Iraq

“Shifts terms.” Perhaps, moving the goal posts would be a better way of explaining the president’s approach:
With the Democratic-led Congress poised to measure progress in Iraq by focusing on the central government’s failure to perform, President Bush is proposing a new gauge, by focusing on new American alliances with the tribes and local groups that Washington once feared would tear the country apart.

As the piece points out — though, too subtly for my tastes — this is one in what has been a succession of changed bench marks and measuring sticks that the president has used to justify what has always been an unjustifiable policy.

The current approach, according to the paper, will be to focus on “ground-up relationships” with tribal and other local groups in an effort to extinguish the smoldering ash of Iraqi rebellion. Administration officials paint the new approach as an “augmentation” of earlier efforts and say it is part of a “dual strategy” in which the administration plans to work with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and local agents.

The current focus on the provinces, they say, reflects the fact that the White House overestimated what could be achieved by Mr. Maliki and his government, and underestimated the degree to which the local tribes developed a deep hatred for Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, the homegrown Sunni Arab extremist group that American intelligence agencies have concluded is led by foreigners. The extent of its links to Osama bin Laden’s network is not clear.

“It’s not that they love us Americans,” said one senior administration official. “It’s that Al Qaeda was so heavy-handed, taking out Sunnis just because they were smoking a cigarette. In the end, that may be the best break we’ve gotten in a
while.”

While the focus on local leaders may seem a move in the right direction to some, it really is nothing more than a way to avoid doing what has to be done — which is to begin bringing American troops home and turn the mess over to the United Nations. Americans would likely have to work with U.N. troops under such a scenario, and we’d probably have to foot most of the bill, but then we created this mess in the first place.

Enough is enough. No matter how many times the president redefines the rules, the game is still the same. And so is the outcome. Bring ’em home.

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Runner’s diary, Wednesday

Four miles in — well, I have no idea. I was out there on Perrine Road, set to turn off into one of the developments when I realized that the GPS unit I use to measure pace, distance and time had konked. I noticed yesterday that the batteries were low, but I thought it would be fine. Oh well. I stayed to a regular route to ensure I did my four.

Music: Wilco, Sky Blue Sky

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The great exploding egg caper

I learned something about the physics of boiling eggs. Get them out of the pan before the water boils off or there could be some trouble.

I was boiling eggs tonight for egg salad for lunch later in the week, but forgot the flame was still on and, well, was reminded when I heard what sounded like a shelf of dishes crashing to the ground.

I ran to the kitchen and found something stinky (burned eggs smell real bad) and stuck to the cabinets and ceiling.

So the moral of this story is: Don’t forget the eggs or there will be egg on more than your face.

Yuck.

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Enough hypocrisy to go around

There has been something rather unseemly about the glee with which my fellow liberals and leftists have met the fall of Larry Craig and other Republican hypocrites.

Yes, Sen. Craig, U.S. Rep. David Vitter and others did make their political career out of bashing the very behavior for which they are now getting a very public comeuppance. (Tom Tomorrow offers the best take on the entire run of affairs.)

But the level of glee is downright scary in that it resembles nothing so much as the rabid attacks that Newt Gingrich and the GOP made against Bill Clinton during Monica-gate and the impeachment proceedings.

Here is the piece (by Sandip Roy) we all should be reading.

So adding that up, all I can get is Craig might have wanted to have sex with Karsnia. Perhaps right there in the bathroom. Perhaps in a hotel room somewhere. And that is what McConnell calls “unforgivable.”

If one person hitting on another person in a public place is a crime, then every singles bar in the country on a Friday night is a hot spot of unforgivable crimes. It is America’s stunning prudery that just the thought of having, the desire to have, (gay) sex has been criminalized, so that this man was blackballed, ostracized and forced to resign.

Hmmm. That seems to be the point. The hypocrisy is palpable — the closeted homosexual using his public position to oppress homosexuals even as he maybe seeking surreptitious sex on the sly — but it is rather human.

If every politician was chased from office for his hypocrisy, then there would be few politicians in office.

More from Roy:

Larry Craig, homophobe on the Senate floor, is dying a death of a thousand cuts by homophobia disguised as nonjudgmental fairness.

Gay activists are rejoicing at the fall of another homophobe, hoisted on his own petard, tripping over the skeleton in his own toilet stall. Activist Michelangelo Signorile, who has defended the “outing” of antigay closeted public figures, said in Newsweek, “For me, this is all about journalism and equalizing the reporting of homosexuality and heterosexuality.”

But if there is a case of a radical discrepancy in how homosexual sex and heterosexual sex are treated by the media, it is Larry Craig vs. David Vitter. And while it’s always gratifying when a hypocrite gets his comeuppance, it’s tragic that those activists rubbing their hands in schadenfreude didn’t stop to note that gross
inequality.

This is not about the right to have sex in a public place. Craig is being sacrificed for the mere act of perhaps wanting to have sex. Nothing more. And that will come to haunt us all long after we have forgotten the unfortunate senator from Idaho.

Perhaps it is not just folks like Craig and Ted Haggard and other Republicans who are hypocrites. Maybe, just maybe, our glee at their demise is an indication that the left and the rest of America might suffer from a bit of hypocrisy, as well.

Food for thought.

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