Will Bush's Iraq Plan Sink McCain?

Trouble for McCain is brewing, and as usual Digby is remarkably prescient.  He wrote last Tuesday:


[McCain's] rationale for winning in 2008 hinges on his calling for more troops and the Bush administration not listening. (Whoever wins the Republican nomination in 08 must run against both Bush and the Democrats.)

McCain made a tactical error when he asked for a specific number recently. If they give him what he wants and it fails, which it will, his rabid support for the war becomes a huge liability.

Now comes the Saturday edition of the New York Times:

Military planners and White House budget analysts have been asked to provide President Bush with options for increasing American forces in Iraq by 20,000 or more. The request indicates that the option of a major "surge" in troop strength is gaining ground as part of a White House strategy review, senior administration officials said Friday.

Discussion of increasing the number of American troops, at least temporarily, has coursed through Washington for two months, as a possible way to reverse the deteriorating security situation in Baghdad. But the decision to ask the Joint Chiefs of Staff to specify where the additional forces could be found among overstretched Army, Marine and National Guard units, and to seek a cost estimate from the White House Office of Management and Budget, signifies a turn in the debate.

McCain must be sweating bullets.  If Bush decides to add troops, the strategy going forward in Iraq will be known as the McCain Doctrine.  The Senator never thought Bush would actually go through with it.

For Bush, this presents an excellent opportunity to work on his legacy.  Go with war hero John McCain's plan for Iraq and it suddenly becomes his problem.  Bush gets good press for trying something new, and John McCain watches his presidential hopes go down the drain.

What can McCain do now?  One option would be to escalate the number of troops and add other stipulations that he could later claim were the reasons for failure.  Look for him to do that on Sunday with the morning talk shows.  To avoid having Iraq hung around his neck like a rotten albatross, he needs to move quickly.

The real question that is left unanswered in the NYT piece is the rationale the Bush administration has for throwing another 20,000 - 30,000 troops into the quagmire.  The generals have come out against it, in fact the article even mentions Abizaid's belief that a troop surge could easily make the situation worse.  So why do it?

What do you think?

[Crossposted at StopJohnMcCain2008.com]



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No really... What do you think? (3.00 / 1)

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by KansasNate on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 02:31:15 AM EST

Re: Will Bush's Iraq Plan Sink McCain? (none / 0)

If Bush does adopt the "McCain plan" (which appears likely) and if the violence continues to worsen (which is almost certain), then McCain is finished, politically speaking. He might still be able to sneak through the primaries, but any Democrat will crush him in the general.

Having said that, I think that if there if the U.S. is still bogged down in Iraq in 2008, I don't think ANY Republican will be able to win. It'll just be a question of whether we beat them by a little or a lot.


by thirdestate on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 07:37:35 AM EST

Re: Will Bush's Iraq Plan Sink McCain? (none / 0)

The thought of these scuzzy old rats sending young Americans out to confront young Iraqis with guns and bombs -- just to further their senile, masturbatory ego games -- is disgusting. My 'fellow Americans' who don't bother to call for these filthy rats to be indicted and hung are pathetic. A very steep 'learning curve' of pain management awaits them. Time to wake up and smell the rot.


by blues on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 07:43:49 AM EST

Re: Will Bush's Iraq Plan Sink McCain? (none / 0)

Since less then 10% of the public wants to send more troops I would say both Bush and McCain are through.


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by Dameocrat on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 10:46:15 AM EST

Why do it? (none / 0)

Because Bush and Cheney are INSANE, that's why they will do it.

They probably also believe that they can use "bunker buster" NUCLEAR WEAPONS against Iran to destroy it's nuclear facilities.
My intuition tells me that Bush is preparing to unleash a HOLOCAUST in the Middle East that will kill millions of people.

If I'm wrong, then THANK GOD I'M WRONG!
But I don't think I'm wrong.

I think Bob Gates will report for work on Monday, do a meet and greet, check out his new office, and then tuck into a pile of paperwork to get up to speed. He'll be just about up to speed when he is called upon to stand behind the president as he announces his new Iraq policy.

If it's aired on C-span, see if you can watch Gates' face as Bush announces that he is ordering attacks against Iran.

Wednesday, I think.

Oh, and expect an increase in massive raids on "illegal aliens" both before and after this event, and expect deployment of national guard units to sweep protestors into Bush's military justice system, where habeas corpus is abolished.

Halliburton just finished the mass detention centers, and why not try out all these new powers Bush has? After all, only sympathizers with terrorists will object to a unilateral, "pre-emptive" nuclear attack on a UN member, right?

And with all the civil unrest going on, it will be too dangerous to convene Congress, right?

And what about the UN, eh? They meet in New York. Probably needs to be shut down in anticipation of a terrorist attack. What terrorist attack? Well, whatever happens, you will be assured that Iran is behind it.

But impeachment is out of the question. We're at war. FOREVER.


by taraka das on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 09:15:53 PM EST

McCain? Elections? What elections? (none / 0)

What war crimes?

What illegal wiretapping?

What abolishment of laws by fiat?

What police state?

This is America. We're free.


by taraka das on Sat Dec 16, 2006 at 09:18:26 PM EST

McCain's plan is worse! (none / 0)

Christ, go through all of McCain's speeches over a career and connect the common threads to the current situation.

1. McCain strongly supports an ideal of "national service".  I suspect on a level, McCain has always thought highly of Israel's military service requirements.

2. McCain strongly supports more troops in Iraq.  McCain is clearly disappointed by the post-Cold War draw-down initiated by Bush's dad.

3. McCain supports robust intervention everywhere.  Darfur, Bosnia, Iraq, Iran.

Tie all those ideas together, and McCain strongly supports a military draft that could eventually dwarf the Vietnam and WWII drafts.


by jcjcjc on Sun Dec 17, 2006 at 01:07:38 AM EST


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