On the eve of the Petraeus hearings, I wrote that if the Democrats didn’t call out the general on his partisan, politically motivated spin of the events unfolding in Iraq, they would prove their irrelevance on the issue of the ongoing occupation once and for all.

In the end, it was much worse than that. Senate Democrats took the time to join their Republican colleagues in condemning an ad produced by MoveOn.org that — accurately — pointed out Petraeus’ previous spin about progress in Iraq and warned that the general would “Betray Us.” The resolution passed by a vote of 72-25. Among the presidential contenders in the senate, Hillary Clinton and Chris Dodd voted against the resolution and Barack Obama and Joe Biden abstained.

In the real world, this is all beyond idiotic. That the Senate would take valuable time to debate something as trivial as an advertisement in the New York Times is an indication of just how unserious the discourse about the war has become in Washington.

With such a boneheaded move, Senate Democrats showed again that there is no limit to their Pavlovian responses to military issues. They stand petrified that they’ll be called dirty, America-hating hippies who “oppose the troops” by Republicans, that they’ll invite a conservative back-lash if they show spine on ending the open-ended occupation of Iraq or that they’ll appear “soft on terror” or anti-military. It is the same unique paranoia about military issues that will likely keep a U.S. occupation force in Iraq until the Iraqis force our hand.

After the Petraeus smokescreen; but, before the Move On advert, Reuters commissioned an updated poll on Bush and Congress. Bush ended up with 29% approval – Congress with 11%. Both of these the lowest numbers since the beginning of Bush’s War.

Here’s a list of the Democrats who did Bush’s bidding. Someone buy each of them a wheelbarrow so they can stand up on their hind legs.



  1. pedro says:

    In the meantime, welcome the new strong currency: the Canadian dollar.

    I hate to say it, but the US looks everyday like a country that was.

  2. mxpwr03 says:

    Haha Alternet and CommonDreams “Breaking news & Opinions for the Progressive (in name only) Community”, scroungen’ for opinion pieces. Closure votes are a bitch aren’t they Senator Reid.

    “In the week just concluded, the Senate has debated a variety of measures related to the war in Iraq. The only measure which passed was one to denounce MoveOn for for its attack on General David Petraeus. By that measure, it was the most productive week the Senate has had on Iraq in months.”

  3. OmarTheAlien says:

    American leadership (huh?) has finally entered full disconnect stage from the electorate. November’s vote gave the Democrats a mandate to pull the plug on Iraq, and they’ve failed miserably. The media, shrill and irrelevant, scream on about TV, sex and the bizzare happenings in Tinseltown, while many of us shake our heads and mutter “Why bother?”
    My thoughts?
    Retain our representational form of government at the state level, disband the federal Congress, allow the Governors to appoint/elect the president, and shake down the federal monolith to where it exists strickly to maintain infrastructure. We are too big and diverse a people to be governed from a central location, and if we don’t change then there is gonna be one hell of a crash.

  4. ECA says:

    19,
    there COULD be success, BUT, its all being done WRONG.

    Pull the men out of the city.
    Cordon off the diff sections, and LET THE AREAS police there OWN sections…THEY know who lives in there area.
    SET our men OUTSIDE and monitor ALL incoming and OUT going…

    Those militants INSIDE that want to fight the USA, have to come OUT to shoot at us. We control the roads IN/OUT of the city.
    LET them have their civil war…LET THEM decide what they wish to do…

    But even as a police action, this could take YEARS…probably LESS then the ‘No mans land’ of Korea and vietnam…but STILL along time.

  5. Gary Marks says:

    What are the criteria for determining which ads by political action organizations are worthy of Senate debate? Is it the size of the ad, the amount of money spent, or its message that makes it such an important item of business for the American people and their elected representatives?

    I think #15 GigG actually would have been right on the money if he had not said the following with sarcasm…
    “Barack Obama and Joe Biden abstained.
    That’s the way to show leadership. “

    Refusing to participate at these lower levels may indeed have been the wisest course of action.

  6. OhForTheLoveOf says:

    #15 – “Barack Obama and Joe Biden abstained.”

    That’s the way to show leadership.

    That’s a way to say, “you guys are scrapping in the mud. We aren’t coming down to your level.”

    #16 – What happen to Jeffersons and Franklins bla bla bla…”

    Jefferson and Franklin were statesmen and patriots and as founding fathers, they are worthy of great respect… but let’s quit holding these guys up like they were gods… They were capable men who answered the call to serve, not unlike many of those who serve today. And like everyone today, they were flawed and they also made mistakes.

    I guarantee that if Jefferson and Franklin were alive today, Hannity and Limbaugh would call them traitors, and the press would be hounding Jefferson about his adulterous affair with a black housekeeper while Republicans would be moving to impeach Franklin amidst scandal over his almost 65 illegitimate children.

  7. MikeN says:

    According to Dan Rather’s new 70 million dollar lawsuit, even CBS caved into the Bush Administration, so why should Senate Democrats be any different? And of course, courage Dan Rather caved into CBS.

  8. doug says:

    I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again – democracy just doesn’t work.

    -Kent Brockman

  9. Greg Allen says:

    Sounds The Alarm >> #7 Democrats are cowards – they have shown this over and over again.

    I think it took more than a little guts for MoveOn to call-out Petraeus for putting Whitehouse policy above the troops.

    What have Republicans done that takes more guts than that?

  10. Li says:

    The behavior of many Dems, let alone Reps, in our legislature simply makes no sense, What could cause men to cast away their political power to a transparent fool, while utterly ignoring the will of the people, who are obviously going to cast them out for their performance? Is there something in the water? Or have they been so psychologically damaged by years of fear mongering, years of promises that Anthrax is the least of their troubles if they don’t submit, that they are suffering from some unique form of collective Stockholm syndrome? I don’t know, but I’m a little sorry that I can’t vote against any of those men who think it’s a good idea to violate their oath to the constitution by censuring the speech of the citizenry, no matter how vile they might think it to be. Obama might have had the right idea, in that this is not the Senate’s concern at all.

  11. These events should be the real test for the voters
    Not stale tv debates
    Not talk shows – leno or letterman
    Not inverviewers like Charlie Rose who don’t follow through on questions asked
    But the inability to take a stand when something is wrong and say so and not be intimidated by George Soros
    If there is one thing about George Bush at least he takes a stand rather than all of these and even Hillary Clintons – change the subject don’t answer the question approach
    As they say ” the silence is deafening”

  12. joshua says:

    Here’s a novel thing for me….Obama stated that he abstained because he felt that the Senate had no business having this vote, period. Biden also gave the almost same reason. They at least made a real stand. Obama has nothing to prove on the war issue….he may not be someone I would consider voting for, he at least has been consistent on the war….opposing it from the begining.

    The General isn’t lying either. The only people that haven’t acknowledged that the surge is working are the die hard far left and Harry Reid. Unfortunatly, and the General mentioned this in his report, the political situation has not improved, and both the surge had to work and the goverment had to resolve important issues or it would all be for naught. If you can’t do the research to find the truth, that more and more of Iraq is becoming more and more safe(as opposed to a complete disaster), then you don’t want to find the truth.
    What is looking more and more like the end to this part of the war is this…..there will be enough security and the Iraqi troops will be trained enough to hold off the al quida forces……after we leave, but the goverment will collapse completely and we will be stationing troops in the Kurdish areas to keep Iran from overrunning them. The country will split between Iranian controlled shia areas and Saudi controled sunni areas and the Kurds will declare independence.

  13. bobbo says:

    13–ArianeB, could it be “only” because I agree 100%, or is this in fact your best post to date?

    I have seen/heard NO ONE comment (blog wise or national news) that the Betrayus Report to the Senate’s most famous line was completely flawed. The Exchange: “WARNER: Does that make America safer?

    PETRAEUS: Sir, I don’t know actually. I have not sat down and sorted out in my own mind. What I have focused on and been riveted on is how to accomplish the mission of the Multinational Force in Iraq.”

    Is America Safer? NO ONE should care what Petraeus answer would be, its not his job. YES, Petraues betrayed us. While his answer was quite honest and correct in every regard, he “should have” said “I’m a General. I do what I am ordered to do. Whether we are safer or not is a determination to be made and acted upon by the Congress==not your generals, and not the President. YOU fuckwits are in charge. If you were in my army, you’d be in the stockade.”

  14. Rabble Rouser says:

    This bill does NOTHING! It isn’t binding, nor is it a law. It is merely a statement that the Senate does not condone criticism of the militray. It does not name MoveOn.org, or any other group.

    This is merely grandstanding by hypocritical Republicans. I understand why some Dems voted the way that they did. This legislation is MEANINGLESS!!! The Republicans who put this up for a vote, have criticized the military in the past themselves. Can you say Max Cleland?

    This only helped MoveOn.org raise more much needed money, in people’s outrage with the Senate, which is really ill founded.

    Time to move on now!

  15. pedro says:

    #32 you call that “excuse” a real stand?????

  16. pedro says:

    And I’m sorry for a lot of you, but you really have no idea what it’s really like when your military betray you and your country.

  17. MikeN says:

    Rabble Rouser, this is a bill, and it does criticize MoveOn. They cvouldn’t get support for a general criticism of the military supported by Democrats(watch what you say?) This is the defense appropriations bill. One question, suppose the resolution called for throwing MoveOn in jail, would you agree that the President should sign it and issue a signing statement that he will give the resolution the attention it deserves consistent with the Constitution?

  18. Mr. Fusion says:

    #37, MikeN,

    Sheet, if brains were made of dynamite, you wouldn’t have enough to blow your own nose. You are too effen retarded to be a moran.

    It was a non-binding resolution.

  19. HMeyers says:

    Free daily Bush whine!

    What are half of you guys going to do when he’s gone? Sheesh.

    I can barely stand the guy myself, but geez some of you just can’t get enough the man or something.

    Why do you spend so much time thinking about him? You should be relieved he’s gonna be gone soon and focus on the positive.

  20. Li says:

    Oh, but it get’s better. Now, the Dems, against their interest and against public opinion, are going to give blanket immunity for all the lawbreakers in the Administration and the Tel-Co industry!

    http://tinyurl.com/3dvkp2

    Is there any rational explanation for this behavior? They are either willful traitors to the rule of law and their oath of office, or they are so terrified of defying the boy-king and his goons that they will do anything to meet their twisted, banana-republican needs. I have to stress, that this sort of blanket immunity at the AG’s secret discretion is something that even the most decrepit and lawless of states don’t codify into law! Not Stalin’s Russia, not Hitler’s Germany; do we really want to not only emulate these states in our foreign policy and the treatment of prisoners, but actually surpass them by making these activities lawful?! This is utter madness.



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