Hillary Clinton’s Latest Position on the Iraq War
 
Here is Hillary’s latest position du jour on the Iraq War.
From the New York Times:
WASHINGTON, March 14 — Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton foresees a “remaining military as well as political mission” in Iraq, and says that if elected president, she would keep a reduced military force there to fight Al Qaeda, deter Iranian aggression, protect the Kurds and possibly support the Iraqi military.
In a half-hour interview on Tuesday in her Senate office, Mrs. Clinton said the scaled-down American military force that she would maintain would stay off the streets in Baghdad and would no longer try to protect Iraqis from sectarian violence — even if it descended into ethnic cleansing.
In outlining how she would handle Iraq as commander in chief, Mrs. Clinton articulated a more nuanced position than the one she has provided at her campaign events, where she has backed the goal of “bringing the troops home.”
She said in the interview that there were “remaining vital national security interests in Iraq” that would require a continuing deployment of American troops.
The United States’ security would be undermined if parts of Iraq turned into a failed state “that serves as a petri dish for insurgents and Al Qaeda,” she said. “It is right in the heart of the oil region,” she said. “It is directly in opposition to our interests, to the interests of regimes, to Israel’s interests.”
“So it will be up to me to try to figure out how to protect those national security interests and continue to take our troops out of this urban warfare, which I think is a loser,” Mrs. Clinton added. She declined to estimate the number of American troops she would keep in Iraq, saying she would draw on the advice of military officers.
It appears that Hillary’s position on troop withdrawal has become, in the words of the New York Times, more “nuanced.”
In terms of Democratic Presidential candidates, does that phrase have a familiar ring to it?
Didn’t she say not two weeks ago that, as President, she would end the War?
And, she is going to accomplish this by leaving troops in Iraq?
I suppose that now, she is for the troop withdrawal before she was against it.
If she thinks that her latest position will appease the anti-war wing of her party, she is badly mistaken.
Prediction: anti-war group Code Pink will target her offices for a protest, in much the same way they recently expressed their disapprobation with Nancy Pelosi
Beacon Street Journal
Friday, March 16, 2007
By John Kinsellagh