I'm not usually in the habit of throwing around Coulteresque
allegations of pseudo-treason, but I don't know how else to respond
to this:
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Democratic leaders in Congress
lobbed a warning shot Friday at the White House not to launch an
attack against Iran without first seeking approval from lawmakers.
"The president does not have the authority to launch military
action in Iran without first seeking congressional authorization,"
Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., told the National
Press Club.
If we can't credibly threaten military action, then retarding the
Iranians' nuclear progress through diplomacy, which is what the
Democrats claim to want, becomes absolutely impossible. If they
can't bring themselves to take the prudent course and give Bush an
open-ended authorization for an attack on Iran (and no, I'm not
saying that it would be a good idea to bomb Iran at this time, just
that it would be helpful to advertise that it's a serious option),
can Reid and his copartisans at least refrain from loudly
proclaiming their intention to block such an attack?
UPDATE: On further reflection, I suppose if you believe that the
consequences of attacking Iran would be worse than the consequences
of Iran going nuclear, it makes sense to block an attack however
possible. (That position is misguided, but not unpatriotic.) But if
that's the Democrats' position, they aren't really against a
nuclear Iran in any real sense, and are being disingenuous when
they suggest otherwise.
topics:
Harry Reid, Law, Military, Iran