'Long war' is breaking down into tedium
My worry is that on the home front the war is falling prey to lack-of-mission creep -- that, in the absence of any real urgency and direction, the "long war" (to use the administration's new and unsatisfactory term) is degenerating into nothing but bureaucratic tedium, media doom-mongering and erratic ad hoc oppositionism. To be sure, all these have been present since Day One: The press have been insisting Iraq is teetering on the brink of civil war for three years and yet, despite the urgings of CNN and the BBC, those layabout Iraqis stubbornly refuse to get on with it. They're happy to teeter for another three years, no matter how many "experts" stamp their foot and pout their lips and say "I want my civil war now." The New York Times ran a headline after the big bombing: "More Clashes Shake Iraq; Political Talks Are In Ruins." The "political talks" resumed the day after publication. The "ruins" were rebuilt after 48 hours.
Mark Steyn
Bush's unquestioned support continues to erode. Congressional Republicans continue to distance themselves from the President. I continue to hold that the last two years of Bush's term will be of a lame duck quality not seen since Woodrow Wilson.
Mark Steyn
Bush's unquestioned support continues to erode. Congressional Republicans continue to distance themselves from the President. I continue to hold that the last two years of Bush's term will be of a lame duck quality not seen since Woodrow Wilson.
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