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| SHIELDS AND BROOKS | |
June 17, 2005 | |
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Syndicated columnist Mark Shields and New York Times columnist David Brooks discuss the public's reaction to the war in Iraq, President Bush's domestic policy and Democratic Senator Dick Durbin's comments regarding Guantanamo Bay. |
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MARGARET WARNER: And to the analysis of Shields and Brooks: Syndicated columnist Mark Shields, New York Times columnist David Brooks. Welcome. Let's talk about Iraq and the president. Mark, this week, just yesterday, in fact, four congressmen, - two Republicans, two Democrats - introduced a resolution to bring the troops home from Iraq by a time certain and the polls are also showing that a majority of Americans is now saying the Iraq War was a mistake. Is the domestic consensus around Iraq beginning to crumble? MARK SHIELDS: I think it has crumbled, Margaret. I mean, we've now reached the point in the Gallup Survey where six out of ten Americans say they're now ready to bring some or all of American troops home, which is a corner that has been turned. There's been a sense that six months after the election things are not better, the violence increased.
Col. Jack Wellman, Fred Wellman, excuse me, who's in charge of training the Iraqis said that there's no shortage of recruits and he says, "For every one -- We can't kill them all. For every one I kill, three take his place." So, I think there is a sense that the war is coming to that ultimate maxim, which is that the conventional army loses if it doesn't win and the insurgent army wins if it doesn't lose. MARGARET WARNER: Do you think that's happening, David? And if so, what are the implications?
But that doesn't mean you can't win an insurgency war. It just means and every insurgency war through history shows that you have to win it over a long period of time and they tend to be won a bit with military, but quite a lot with politics. |
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| The public's perception of the war in Iraq | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: But do you think that the American public -- I mean, you're giving me the arguments for why the U.S. should stick it out. But what do you think it says that the American public is saying, boy, it was a mistake? DAVID BROOKS: It's been a discouraging period. But you can't run wars by polls. MARGARET WARNER: So, you don't think it's going to have an impact?
But do serious people want to take a look at the situation and say "We're not making the progress we should be making? What should we do about it?" There I think you have a lot of people, Joe Biden on the Democratic side, a lot of Republicans want to say, hey, do we need -- my colleague, Tom Friedman suggested doubling the number of troops. A lot of other people are saying what we can do? There's a political process there, but the political process in Iraq has so far been disappointing. And so what do we have to do there? So I think what you've seen, especially on the Republican side, is a higher intolerance for the sort of happy talk that Vice President (Dick) Cheney was issuing and a much more dogged thing, what do we got to do now? Let's think about some changes. MARK SHIELDS: Margaret, I don't know what Tom Friedman's smoking. I mean, double the troops -- where are they coming from? I mean, we are now extended to the point with where we could not carry on a military effort any place else. This is the case of the elites being totally out of touch with the country. MARGARET WARNER: But didn't you talk to one of these -- I hate to interrupt you. One of these members signed on to this resolution, the one who had voted for the war. MARK SHIELDS: Yes. Walter Jones, a Republican of North Carolina in whose district, the third district of North Carolina, are Camp LeJeune, the largest Marine installation, Cherry Point Marine Air Station and the -- an Air Force base -- 60,000 military retirees -- strong supporter.
Here's a man who voted for it and who feels it's his responsibility, his responsibility. He said "Our troops have fulfilled their task now." I spent a long time with him yesterday. And he was very open, he said, "Look, if this costs me my political career, fine. I'm doing the right thing." Because the reality ii our troops have done everything we've asked them to do. And it's time now that we have fulfilled -- they have fulfilled their task. They are now an army of occupation and that makes them targets. DAVID BROOKS: But, you know, I have this statement right here of today he said he does not support withdrawal of troops, he does not support setting a date to end troops. He's saying let's talk about this. And I think what you're beginning to see, is a friction between those Republicans who never believed in nation building, get rid of Saddam, he's a menace, let's get out, and those who do believe in nation building. And that's a genuine friction.
DAVID BROOKS: Right. Certainly the way they're talking about it because that happy talk, that the insurgency is in its death throes -- that last gasp -- all that stuff was disastrous, and I think they now appreciate that. Whether the substance change, I think the substance will not change. They're not going to double the troops, as my colleague Tom Friedman suggested. They're going to keep doing what Gen. Portrayis -- trying to train more troops. But there are substantive policy debates. For example, there is now a sense that because we can't police everywhere because there's such a shortage of troop there, of our troops there, that we have to allow not only their troops, but their militias and allowing maybe Sunni militias. So they're having that kind of debate. But for sure they know they have to be more realistic about the way they talk about this. |
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| Senate debate on Guantanamo | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: Now there was also a lot of debate on the Hill this week, both on talk shows and hearings on the floor about Guantanamo. And let's just give our viewers a flavor of that because there were some pretty contentious words said on the floor of the Senate this week. On Tuesday, Democratic whip Dick Durbin rose and he began reading what he said was a report that an FBI agent had submitted to Pentagon investigators about what went on there.
"On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a fetal position to the floor with no chair, food or water. Most times they urinated or defecated on themselves and had been left there for eighteen to twenty-four hours or more." If I read this to you and didn't tell you that it was an FBI agent describing what Americans had done to prisoners in their control, you would most certainly believe this must have happened by Nazis, Soviets in their gulags, or some mad regime, Pol Pot or others, that had no concern for human beings. Sadly, that's not the case. This was the action of Americans in treatment of their own prisoners. MARGARET WARNER: Now, the White House spokesman immediately denounce Durbin's statements as reprehensible and then yesterday the Republican chairman of the Armed Services Committee, Sen. John Warner, rose in the Senate to express his dismay over Durbin's remarks.
SEN. DICK DURBIN: To suggest that I am criticizing American servicemen, I am not. I don't know who was responsible for this. But the FBI agent made this report. And to suggest that I was attributing all the sins and all the horror and barbarism of Nazi Germany or Soviet Republic or Pol Pot to Americans is totally unfair.
SEN. JOHN WARNER: For you to have come to the floor with just that fragment of a report and then unleashed the words "the Nazis," unleashed the word "gulag," unleashed "Pol Pot," I don't know how many remember that chapter, it seems to me that was a grievous error in judgment and it leaves open to the press of the world to take those three extraordinary chapters in world history and try and intertwine it with what is taking place -- allegedly -- at Guantanamo. |
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| Heated rhetoric debate over detainees | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: And this went on for quite a while. Majority Whip Mitch McConnell got into it, Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid did too. Mark, what does it tell you that we're hearing such heated rhetoric on the Senate floor over this Guantanamo issue? MARK SHIELDS: Well, I think in this case they were both right. I mean, I think John Warner was right when he said these are buzz words. I mean, when George Bush the first said Saddam is Hitler before the war in 1991, it was just over the top. This is very -- this is over the top when you use the same word.
MARGARET WARNER: It is. MARK SHIELDS: It is -- this is under the constitution. Ever since then, in total defiance of that court decision, they have stonewalled the Supreme Court, that decision. And I think there's no question that this was established and it's hurt the United States. We've lost the moral high ground and it just is not working for us. MARGARET WARNER: So David, you know, there was also a hearing on the Judiciary Committee this week and Sen. (Arlen) Specter, the chairman, said really Congress has ignored it own duties to set up some procedures, just left it to the Defense Department and the courts. Do you think we're going to see Congress really getting into this very sticky issue? DAVID BROOKS: They'd like to, but as we just saw, it's so polarized. I'm not sure they can do it effectively. You know, the one thing I disagree with Mark about is Saddam was Hitler; his ideology was Hitler and his behavior was Hitler. But, no, I bring that up for a reason. Because this debate -- the debate over whether to go into war has never ended and the Gitmo debate is a new version of that debate.
MARGARET WARNER: We had a debate here this week between Sen. (Pat) Leahy and Sen. (Jon) Kyl and he expressed that view. And Sen. Leahy expressed the view that it was just becoming an icon for anti-American feeling around the world. Mark, let me just keep going - yes - called for it to be shut down - MARK SHIELDS: And called him an icon - MARGARET WARNER: But briefly, do you think we're going to see Congress really getting into this, taking responsibility, in other words? MARK SHIELDS: Taking responsibility? I'd be encouraged, I'll be thrilled if they did, but I don't see a willingness to step up to the plate. |
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| Is President Bush's domestic policy in trouble? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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MARGARET WARNER: All right. Another congressional question for you: A couple of aspects of the president's agenda hit little speed bumps this week. You saw the House reject one portion of the Patriot Act, the existing Patriot Act, and Republican leaders also reportedly told White House the Social Security thing is really -- they probably can't do it. Why do you think -- do you think these two are related? Why do you think these important parts of the president's agenda are having these troubles? MARK SHIELDS: Well, I think for the first time Margaret we're seeing what George Bush's great political strength, that was his resoluteness, that he knew where he stood, that didn't flinch, is becoming a problem. On Social Security there's no question about it. I mean, it is dead.
So you've got sort of resoluteness turning into stubbornness and that's the down side of resoluteness. The president has a tin ear, doesn't listen to what's going on and I think on both Iraq and Social Security that's the case. As far as the Patriot Act, Margaret, it's hard to call it -- librarians of the United States crazies. I mean, they were the principal lobbyists and the cooperation, the coalition that put this together, Ray Lahud on the Republican side, Bob Ney of Ohio, and Jack Kingston of Georgia, are not exactly ACLU poster boys. They're saying, do you really have to -- the problem has not been collecting information, it's been what to do with that information, how to share it, how to analyze it, how to act upon it since 9/11. It hasn't been the collection of it. MARGARET WARNER: Do you think these are discreet issues, that Social Security is in trouble because of certain things and this part of the Patriot Act is in trouble on its merits? DAVID BROOKS: I actually do think -- I think that part of the Patriot Act, as Mark suggested, widely, people were widely nervous about it. Even if Bush were riding high, I think that probably would have been cut out. But the issue on domestic policy, I think is in some ways more serious for Bush than the issue on foreign policy in Iraq because what you get the sense from Republicans on the Hill is they know Social Security is dead, they don't know what's coming next, they see they're down in the polls, they see the president is down in the polls, the party's down in the polls. That's fine. Things go up and down.
MARGARET WARNER: And how worried is Republican leadership about the slipping poll numbers? I mean, do they really think it could affect them? And what do they want - what are they going to do about it? DAVID BROOKS: In their professional souls they say "Hey, polls go up and down." In their gut they're worried, and especially in the House. MARK SHIELDS: The only other thing, Margaret, is that the biggest number that concerns Republicans right now is that number that says -- the New York Times/CBS Poll "Does Congress share my priorities?" Nineteen percent of Americans think the Republican Congress shares their priorities. They look to the president to kind of lift them up. And what they're not getting from the president is any fresh ideas, any fresh initiatives because there aren't any right now. And part of that is that sense of resoluteness, I'm sticking to where I stood and that's become a problem for them. They don't see the life preserver being thrown to them. DAVID BROOKS: Right. And in the White House they're having a debate, how do we turn up the heat on the Democrats; how do we make them suffer for obstructionism, so the president went out this week and said, "They're obstructionists." Believe me, that doesn't turn up the heat on the Democrats. They're sitting fine right now. So they've got to think of a new way. MARGARET WARNER: All right. And we have to find a new way to end this. Thank you both. |
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