In a post criticizing Obama's shifting 16-month goal posts, Mark
Levin writes, "In my opinion, McCain has
not come closer to Obama's position. McCain's position, like
Bush's, has always been a conditional one, based on
circumstances/conditions not ideology." Leaving aside the
unmistakable ideological component on both sides of the debate,
it's a fair enough point as far as it goes. Presumably, neither
Bush nor McCain would be advocating a faster drawdown of troops if
things were getting worse (how tenable their position would be in
such conditions is another matter). They are reducing the numbers
on the ground in response to conditions in Iraq, as envisioned
during the planning of the surge.
But Bush and McCain's talk of drawing down has gotten much more
explicit and specific. Earlier this year, who envisioned the
debate over Iraq hinging on the 70,000--80,000 troops McCain would
like to draw down to and the 50,000-man residual force Obama says
he would leave in Iraq? Sure, McCain and Obama have different
reasons and different approaches. That's why supporters of the war
fear Obama would undermine security gains in Iraq by withdrawing
too rapidly and opponents of the war believe McCain will never
decide that conditions on the ground permit him to withdraw at his
current proposed rate or faster. However, I don't think you can
deny that in terms of specifics, even if not ideology, the
candidates are getting closer rather than further apart.
topics:
Iraq