There is an elephant in the room when it comes to the recent controversy over Joe Lieberman’s public proclamations of support for the war in Iraq and for George Bush’s strategy. Lieberman has recently written:
and he has insisted:
But he has said this in the context of rejecting a timetable for withdrawal, and insisting our strategy in Iraq is working:
These sentiments of Lieberman’s are beyond off-message. They represent a seeming disconnect from reality. When Republicans express these sentiments we can excuse them as apologists who feel the need to defend the Bush administration. They may mouth these talking points publicly, but we doubt many of them really believe things in Iraq are on track.
But why would Lieberman spout disingenuous GOP talking points? To me, the answer lies in Lieberman’s concern for Israel’s security.
Here is how Lieberman describes the stakes in Iraq:
If you set aside the numerous inaccuracies in this characterization of the resistance in Iraq, you are left with an assertion that a civil war in Iraq will lead to fanatical war-making on America. But this is ridiculous. The pilots of 9/11 trained in Florida and Arizona, not in Kandahar. Terrorists exploit the freedoms and openness of Western societies. They do not need a haven for hatching their deadly plans. I think Lieberman is concerned about something entirely different.
If the U.S. population forces a withdrawal from Iraq it will lead to a more general aversion for basing our troops throughout the Arab peninsula. And that could represent a long-term threat to Israel’s security.
Now, I have no problem with an American politician having serious concerns for the security of Israel. Israel is an ally of America and their security is important component of our overall foreign policy. What I have a problem with is the idea that we should remain in Iraq pursuing a losing strategy, hold no one accountable, make no milestones or timetables, give hopelessly pollyannish assessments of our progress, and tell the American people that this catastrophe is necessary to avoid fanatical war-making on our homeland. If anything, our failing strategy is making domestic terror attacks more likely as the number of people that long to exact retribution on America increases exponentially.
I think Lieberman is ignoring the heightened risks to America because he is concerned that a loss of will in Iraq will lead to a larger loss of will for a large military presence in the region. And the only plausible reason Lieberman has to trade heightened domestic risk for the maintenence of our military presence in the region is that he is putting the security of Israel over the security of the United States.
Lieberman probably never envisioned the possibility of defeat in Iraq when he recommended an invasion:
After the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, Lieberman strongly backed Bush’s call for a war against terrorism in Afghanistan. Later that year, he was one of 10 lawmakers who signed a letter urging Bush to target Iraq next.
Lieberman needs to check his priorities. We can do a lot better job of assuring Israel’s security than by losing a war, weakening our military, weakening our economy, losing our credibility and moral standing, and ignoring the peace process. It is precisely our failures that are making the American people reject the kind of foreign policy and military basing that Lieberman so values. He’s got it all wrong.