Who’s Really in Denial?
Sphere: Related Content
“Americans face the choice between two parties with two different attitudes on this war on terror.”
–George W. Bush, September 28, 2006President Bush is right. It would be nice if he weren’t. The country would be better off if there were bipartisan agreement on what is at stake in the struggle against jihadist Islam. But despite areas of consensus, there is still a fundamental difference between the parties. Bush and the Republicans know we are in a serious war. It’s not the Bush administration that is in a “State of Denial” (as the new Bob Woodward book has it). It’s the Democrats.
Consider developments over the last week. Democrats hyped last Sunday’s news stories breathlessly reporting on one judgment from April’s National Intelligence Estimate (NIE)–that the war in Iraq has created more terrorists. More than would otherwise have been created if Saddam were still in power? Who knows? The NIE seems not even to have contemplated how many terrorists might have been created by our backing down, by Saddam’s remaining in power to sponsor and inspire terror, and the like. (To read the sections of the NIE subsequently released is to despair about the quality of our intelligence agencies. But that’s another story.) In any case, the NIE also made the obvious points that, going forward, “perceived jihadist success [in Iraq] would inspire more fighters to continue the struggle elsewhere,” while jihadist failure in Iraq would inspire “fewer fighters . . . to carry on the fight.”
“Americans face the choice between two parties with two different attitudes on this war on terror.”


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://politicalpartypoop.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/valid-rss.png)