Fighting The Last War
by digby
While agreeing with E.J. Dionne’s basic premise in his op-ed this morning — that the Cheney administration acted like a bunch of rabid dogs back in 2002, making it extremely difficult to even debate, much less vote against the decisions to go to war — Michael Crowley makes the point that I mentioned earlier, which is that the Democratic leadership, particularly the Presidential Hopeful Club, were fighting the last war:
The 2002 debate was filled with discussions about who got the Gulf War “right” and who was “wrong,” and how the anti-war folks–who predicted all sorts of disasters that never came to pass–could have miscalculated so badly. Back in ’91, anti-war votes killed the near-term presidential aspirations of some key Democratic senators, which may help to explain why ambitious people like John Kerry, John Edwards, Joe Biden, and even Hillary Clinton all voted the way they did (pro-war) in 2002. Scare tactics or not, they may have felt they couldn’t afford, politically, to risk the sort of damage incurred by people like Democratic Senator Sam Nunn, who wound up on the “wrong” side of the 1991 vote and retired soon after instead of running for president as once expected.
Republicans had used the Gulf War I votes of various Senators as a cudgel to beat them over the head with throughout the 90’s adding significantly to the lore that Democrats are mincing cowards. Gulf War I was perceieved as an unalloyed success for the USA and people don’t like killjoys.
I wrote the other day that Democrats’ political instincts proved to be wrong both times, which may actually be at the root of the problem. My answer to this is that in the case of war, perhaps Democratic politicians should just vote their consciences and defend their decision on that basis. Deal making and bet hedging has not paid off for us anyway. Maybe we should simply do what we think is right in these matters and let the chips fall where they may. It’s possible that had we done this in 91 we would have ended up exactly where we did — on the Killjoy side of the equation. It’s hard to argue with a glorious victory. But had we done it in 2002, we would have ended up with credibility.
You can’t tell the future. When it comes to the big stuff, it’s best to do what you think is right and let the chips fall where they may. Democrats have shown that they aren’t partocularly good at playing politics with war anyway. If they simply do what they think is right at least they can sleep at night. And after all, if they’d voted against the Iraq war resolution, they would have been on the same side as pretty much everyone on the planet except the Republicna party.
.