Wallowing in nuance, Dems lack resolve
I love Steynâs way with words
Itâs a good rule of thumb that so-called moderate opinion is several degrees to the left of popular opinion. You can test this for yourself easily enough: pick a subject such as, say, illegal immigration and compare the position of every Democratic senator, the majority of Republican senators and 90 percent of the media with the position of the American people.
Thatâs why the press were befuddled by last weekâs polls. A month of Richard Clarke, the 9/11 Commission, Bob Woodward, Muqtada al-Sadr, Fallujah and Basra, and a constant drip-drip-drip of conventional wisdom on the presidentâs "vulnerability" from the Beltway to Hollywood to the Ivy League to that brave radio station in Plattsburgh, N.Y., thatâs now the flagship of Al Frankenâs Air America âânetworkââ -- and what happens? Bushâs numbers go up and Kerryâs go down.
Another six weeks of Dick Clarkeâs book tour, of snotty network reporters condescending to the president at his press conference, of the sneering Richard Ben Veniste and emotionally unhinged Bob Kerrey badgering Condi Rice at their hack hearings, of Bob Woodward and his unreadable book filling up slabs of CNNâs prime time every night with irrelevant arcana about what did Prince Bandar know and when did he tell Woodward he knew it, another six weeks of things that make Bush ââvulnerable,ââ and heâd be heading for a 49-state blowout over Kerry.
Donât get me wrong: Americaâs still a 50/50 nation. Thatâs to say, 50 percent of the nation backs Bush, and the other 50 percent either loathe him, or are undecided, or arenât yet paying attention to Campaign â04. I think the presidentâs numbers should be higher.
But the problem for John Kerry is that he and the networks and the New York Times are finding it all but impossible to make any dent in the Bush half. If it is a 50/50 nation, one sideâs 50 percent is pretty solid and the otherâs a lot softer.
How can this be? Well, letâs turn to our senior political analyst, the late Osama bin Laden. In his final video appearance 2-1/2 years ago, Osama observed that, when people have a choice between a strong horse and a weak horse, they go with the strong horse. But, to take that a stage further, the strong horse doesnât have to be that strong when the other fellowâs flogging a dead horse.
The 9/11 Commission? Nobody cares. You canât drive the car when youâre staring in the rear-view mirror. And, as those polls showed, if Americans are forcibly plonked in front of that rear-view mirror, they lay more blame on eight years of Clinton administration policy than eight months of Bush administration policy.
WMD? Another dead horse. Whether you were pro-war or anti-war had nothing to do with WMD. Bush thought Saddam Hussein had âem, but so did the French, Germans and Russians, and they were all anti-war. For most pro-war Americans, the need to whack Saddam was more important than the pretext on which he was whacked. He was unfinished business from Sept. 10. All the rest is footnotes, more rear-view mirror stuff.
Thatâs why even the old quagmire scenario now playing 24/7 on the cable channels doesnât work for Kerry. Visiting foreigners often remark on that popular T-shirt slogan, usually found below the Stars and Stripes: "These Colors Donât Run." To non-Americans, it seems a trifle touchy. But for a quarter-century the presumption of the countryâs enemies was that those colors did run -- they ran from Vietnam, from the downed choppers in the Iranian desert, from Mogadishu. Even the successful campaigns -- the inconclusively concluded Gulf War and the air-only Kosovo war -- seemed designed to avoid putting those colors in the position of having to run. As Osama saw it, these colors ran from the African embassy bombings, and the Khobar towers, and he pretty much expected them to run from 9/11, too.
A narrow majority of Americans get this: Being seen not to run -- or, if you prefer, being seen to show ââresolveââ -- is now an indispensable objective of U.S. foreign policy. So, when four contractors get lynched and hung off a bridge in Fallujah, poor foolish Sen. Robert Byrd may think itâs time for an ââexit strategy,ââ but most Americans want to see the thugs who did it hunted down and killed.
One day it will not be necessary to sell ââThese Colors Donât Runââ T-shirts. But it is as long as Byrd, Ted Kennedy, Michael Moore & Co. are twitching to add Iraq to the pockmarked pantheon of Vietnam, Iran and Somalia.
The left resists this analysis. ââResolve,ââ they say, may sound macho but itâs also simplistic. Not necessarily. In todayâs phony-baloney world, nuanced inertia is the simple choice, the default mode of international diplomacy, of the U.N. and the European Union. When you dig into whatâs holding up American resolve on Iraq, the people seem to be making more subtle distinctions than their elites.
Thus, the presidentâs numbers arenât affected by the sob sisters of CNNâs Baghdad bureau filing their heartrending reports on how thousands of Baathist apparatchiks havenât been paid since they were made redundant from Saddamâs Department of Genital Mutilation and Electrode Clamping last April.
U.S. public opinion is hardheaded about this: The welfare of the Iraqi people is a bonus, but the welfare of the American people is the primary objective. Thatâs why the United States went to war.
Thatâs the problem for the Democrats. If ââresolveââ is the issue, can you beat it with âânuanceââ? If I had to name the definitive Kerry campaign headline it would be this, from Britainâs (left-wing, Kerry-backing) Guardian last week: ââKerry Says His âFamilyâ Owns SUV, Not He.ââ That Chevy Suburban in the yard has nothing to do with him. Who you gonna believe? A respected senator or your lying eyes?
His statement is true in the sense that his ââfamilyââ (i.e., Teresa) also owns the house and the grounds, and indeed a big chunk of his presidential campaign. But itâs hard to claim that your powers of diplomatic persuasion would have won over the French and Germans when you canât even win over your ââfamily.ââ And do Americans want to hand over responsibility for Iraq to someone who wonât even take responsibility for the car in his driveway?
Posted by: tipper 2004-04-26 |