Still a matter of hours after we couldn't get a vote on habeus restoration and Jim Webb's amendment to help American combat troops, we do seem to allow something truly monumental to come to a vote and pass overwhelmingly – that is, saving the nation from a newspaper ad from two weeks ago. Chris Dodd said it best about today's vote:
“It is a sad day in the Senate when we spend hours debating an ad while our young people are dying in Iraq.
And it's a sad day in Vermont when our senior Senator votes to prop up the GOP on this meaningless, propgandistic bullshit stunt. Honestly, I feel ashamed. As MoveOn says on their website, Leahy and the Senate “just told you to sit down and be quiet.”
In case you missed it, Kinsley at Time pretty much sums it up:
Goodness gracious. oh, my paws and whiskers. Some of the meanest, most ornery hombres around are suddenly feeling faint. Notorious tough guys are swooning with the vapors. The biggest beasts in the barnyard are all aflutter over something they read in the New York Times. It's that ad from MoveOn.org — the one that calls General David Petraeus, the head of U.S. forces in Iraq, general betray us. All across the radio spectrum, right-wing shock jocks are themselves shocked. How could anybody say such a thing? It's horrifying. It's outrageous. It's disgraceful. It's just beyond the pale … It's … oh, my heavens … say, is it a bit stuffy in here? … I think I'm going to … Could I have a glass of … oh, dear [thud].
As Kinsley continues “The fuss over this MoveOn.org ad is something else: it is the result of a desperate scavenging for umbrage material… The constant calls for political candidates to prove their bona fides by condemning or denouncing something somebody else said or to renounce a person's support or to return her tainted money are a tiresome new tic in American politics.”
Yeah. Almost as tiresome as when an otherwise brilliant Senator buys into the whole nonsense and boosts its effectiveness and credibility with the not-tuned-in public. Yuck. Even Senator Clinton voted the right way on this (although Obama missed it, and pissed off people like Stoller – he's suggesting in response that skipping out on the vote was a virtuous act).
Wanna do something? Go sign MoveOn's petition refusing to back down. If you want to revisit the offending ad and see how tame it is compared to routine GOP attacks, click below the fold.
UPDATE: Finally found out what happened to Biden on this. He just bagged the whole day of votes. Figures.
Here's the MoveOn NYT ad text:
General Petraeus or General Betray Us?
Cooking the books for the White House
(Click here for the thinking behind the ad)
General Petraeus is a military man constantly at war with the facts. In 2004, just before the election, he said there was “tangible progress“ in Iraq and that “Iraqi leaders are stepping forward.”
Washington Post, “Battling for Iraq,” by David H. Petraeus. 9/26/04 (see below)
And last week Petraeus, the architect of the escalation of troops in Iraq , said ”We say we have achieved progress, and we are obviously going to do everything we can to build on that progress.”
The Australian, “Surge Working: Top US General,” by Dennis Shanahan. 8/31/07
Every independent report on the ground situation in Iraq shows that the surge strategy has failed.
GAO report, 9/4/07
NIE report, 8/23/07
Jones report, CSIS, 9/6/07
Yet the General claims a reduction in violence. That’s because, according to the New York Times, the Pentagon has adopted a bizarre formula for keeping tabs on violence. For example, deaths by car bombs don’t count.
“Time to Take a Stand,” by Paul Krugman. 9/7/07
The Washington Post reported that assassinations only count if you're shot in the back of the head — not the front.
“Experts Doubt Drop in Violence in Iraq,” by Karen DeYoung. 9/6/07 l
According to news reports, there have been more civilian deaths and more American soldier deaths in the past three months than in any other summer we’ve been there.
The Associated Press, “Violence Appears to Be Shifting from Baghdad.” 8/25/07
National Public Radio, “Statistics the Weapon of Choice in Surge Debate,” by Guy Raz. 9/6/07
Associated Press, “Key Figures About Iraq Since the War Began in 2003.” 9/5/07
We'll hear of neighborhoods where violence has decreased. But we won't hear that those neighborhoods have been ethnically cleansed.
Newsweek, “Baghdad’s New Owners,” by Babak Dehghanpisheh and Larry Kaplow, 9/10/07
Ibid from the AP, “Violence Appears to be Shifting From Baghdad”
McClatchy, “Despite Violence Drop, Officers See Bleak Future for Iraq,” by Leila Fadel. 8/15/07
The New York Times, “More Iraqis Said to Flee Since Troop Rise,” by James Glanz and Stephen Farrell. 8/24/07
Most importantly, General Petraeus will not admit what everyone knows; Iraq is mired in an unwinnable religious civil war.
We may hear of a plan to withdraw a few thousand American troops.
The New York Times, “Petraeus, Seeing Gains in Iraq as Fragile, is Wary of Cuts,” by David Sanger and David Cloud, 9/7/07
The Washington Post, “Petraeus Open to Pullout of One Brigade,” by Robin Wright and Jonathan Weisman. 9/7/07.
But we won’t hear what Americans are desperate to hear: a timetable for withdrawing all our troops. General Petraeus has actually said American troops will need to stay in Iraq for as long as ten years.
The Hill, “Rep. Schakowsky: Petraeus hints at decade-long Iraq presence,” by Patrick FitzGerald. 8/10/07
Today before Congress and before the American people, General Petraeus is likely to become General Betray Us.