President Obama’s decision to reverse himself and oppose the release of photographs depicting "detainee abuse" by the U.S. military might be wildly controversial on the left, but the Times story by Jeff Zeleny and Thom Shanker on Thursday’s front page was very slow to feature opposing voices. ACLU chief Anthony Romero surfaced in paragraph 11, and even then he was complaining about how the photos would expose the last administration.
However, on the other side of the front page, on the far left, appropriately enough, was a story by David Herszenhorn headlined "Unease Grows for Democrats Over Security." No one in this story denounced Obama’s reversal on the detainee photos, but they did question Obama’s plans for Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo. Will the networks dare to find divisions between Democrats?
While the Times reporter suggested House and Senate Democrats will easily pass new appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan, "the discomfort among Democrats points to a harder road ahead for Mr. Obama and the prospect of far more serious rancor if conditions worsen overseas. The unease, particularly over the war in Afghanistan, is greatest right now in the more liberal ranks of the Democratic caucus and is more evident in the House than in the Senate."
Old-style liberal David Obey, chairman of the Appropriations Committee, was blunt:
"With respect to Afghanistan and Pakistan, I am extremely dubious that the administration will be able to accomplish what it wants to accomplish," Mr. Obey said last week. "The problem is not the administration’s policy or its goals. The problem is that I doubt that we have the tools there that we need to implement virtually any policy in that region."
Freshman liberal Alan Grayson of Florida wildly suggested the two Bush wars were relics of the 1800s: "There is no need in the 21st century to do this, to make us safe....This is a 19th-century strategy being played out at great expense in both money and blood in the 21st century, in the wrong time at the wrong place."
The Times also featured Reps. Jack Murtha and Jerrold Nadler inside, and published large photos and quotations from Obey, Murtha, and Nadler. There were no Democrats quoted who were satisfied with the current Iraq and Afghanistan strategies, so the story wasn’t exactly a two-sided debate. But at least the Times is acknowledging the potential for internal conflict in the Democratic Party, as opposed to their usual obsession with creating and growing fissures in the Republican fold.
(Obey image from USNews.com)
—Tim Graham is Director of Media Analysis at the Media Research Center.




















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Pure bloviating
May 15, 2009 - 08:45 ET by BKeyserTo borrow Bill O'Reilly's 'favorite' word...
Look, this is about courage of convictions, and it starts at the top. Obama ran on a platform that simply put, was the Bizarro-Bush platform. The George Costanza- 'just do the opposite' agenda. And after nearly 14 years of campaigning (or something like that) Obama has spent nearly 4 months of first enacting, than redacting his anti-Bush policies. Mostly after intense scrutiny and a little finger-in-the-air decision making (a la Bill Clinton), he has reversed or significantly altered his early policy shifts.
This is not the make up of a leader. And Mr. Obey, who says, "The problem is not the administration’s policy or its goals. The problem is that I doubt that we have the tools there that we need to
implement virtually any policy in that region", needs to follow that up with exactly what he believes is needed.
And this Grayson fellow... what the heck does "There is no need in the 21st century to do this, to make us safe...." mean? Does that mean there is no threat? Does that mean that since 1899, there has not been a threat? I think Mr. Grayson should be provided a television camera and as much time as he needs to tell his Florida constituents that he believes that America is safe, has been so since 1899, and all threats to our nation have been incorrectly perceived. I'm sure the Jewish community there will wholeheartedly agree with that philosophy.
There were no Democrats
May 15, 2009 - 08:51 ET by MidAmericaThere were no Democrats quoted who were satisfied with the current Iraq and Afghanistan strategies, so the story wasn’t exactly a two-sided debate.
Afghanistan has the possibility of splitting the democrats apart just as Viet Nam did during the LBJ years. Obama seems to be hoping that Afghanistan remains just a distraction but the Taliban can wait him out and wear down the publics patience with getting our troops killed in an endless war. Obama and the democrats have some tough decisions to make.
How different this would have been.
May 15, 2009 - 08:53 ET by CTJust imagine that McCain had won the election, the Democrap Party and the far far Left would have been united. The din of the opposition to all American foreign (and domestic) policy would be deafening. Obey and Pelosi's stars would be soaring. Just a thought exercise, but one that puts the Left in perspective.
Back the truck up!!!
May 15, 2009 - 09:06 ET by motherbelt"There is no need in the 21st century to do this, to make us safe...This is a 19th-century strategy being played out at great expense in
both money and blood in the 21st century, in the wrong time at the
wrong place." -Alan Grayson, D-Florida
Wait a minute! I thought Iraq was the wrong war in the wrong place, and we should be concentrating on Afghanistan !!
Apparently that explanation is no longer operable.....
They might say "Wow, that sucks!" But at least they'll say "Wow!" -Duff Goldman, the Ace of Cakes
tired of liberal lies Now
May 15, 2009 - 13:10 ET by stunnedtired of liberal lies
Now Afganistan is the wrong war? Pardon me but where is the right war?
This unholy alliance is
May 15, 2009 - 18:37 ET by RR GOPThis unholy alliance is heading for a huge meltdown.
All that can save them is:
a. The Tea Party movement loses momentum and the various rebelling states are forced back into line.
b. Most voters in 2010 will still go with the premise that the Dems/government can 'fix' and 'save' whatever they are afraid of losing.
c. ACORN and other similar Marxist organizations efforts in voter fraud and coercion.
d. Ultimately the Fed's power through the legal system and ultimately their armed police/agents and the military. More than enough bullying power in order to maintain power.
I don't think these guys plan on going anywhere in 2012, or any other time in spite of what the voters say.
One of the 34% who thinks George W. Bush was a great President. One of the 61% who wants to bring back the stock and pillory (yep...approval for Congress now at 39%...do you believe that!?).