HolyCoast: Denial Isn't A River in Iraq Either
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Saturday, November 24, 2007

Denial Isn't A River in Iraq Either

Charles Krauthammer takes on the Iraq naysayers who refuse to recognize the military gains and concentrate on the political failings:
It does not have the drama of the Inchon landing or the sweep of the Union comeback in the summer of 1864. But the turnabout of American fortunes in Iraq over the past several months is of equal moment -- a war seemingly lost, now winnable. The violence in Iraq has been dramatically reduced. Political allegiances have been radically reversed. The revival of ordinary life in many cities is palpable. Something important is happening.

And what is the reaction of the war critics? Nancy Pelosi stoutly maintains her state of denial, saying this about the war just two weeks ago: "This is not working. . . . We must reverse it." A euphemism for "abandon the field," which is what every Democratic presidential candidate is promising, with variations only in how precipitous to make the retreat.

How do they avoid acknowledging the realities on the ground? By asserting that we have not achieved political benchmarks -- mostly legislative actions by the Baghdad government -- that were set months ago. And that these benchmarks are paramount. And that all the current progress is ultimately vitiated by the absence of centrally legislated national reconciliation.

The lamentations of Pelosi, Harry Reid and the Dem candidates are sounding sillier every day as they attempt to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. Read the rest of Krauthammer's piece here.

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