The Anti-War Turn is a Loser by Dick Morris
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  The Anti-War Turn is a Loser by Dick Morris
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Author Topic: The Anti-War Turn is a Loser by Dick Morris  (Read 1790 times)
Sam Spade
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« on: September 23, 2004, 12:15:47 PM »

Dick Morris maybe a lousy poll-reader and a crappy prognosticator, but his political skills at attacking are well, brilliant.  And he lays out what GWB should do against Kerry with this new line that Kerry's taking.

http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/19597.htm

THE ANTI-WAR TURN IS A LOSER

BY DICK MORRIS  
 
September 23, 2004 -- STUNG by criticism that his campaign lacks direction and focus, Sen. John Kerry has chosen to base his candidacy on an all-out assault on President Bush's record in Iraq — indeed, opted to move to the left decisively and attack the war head-on.
Liberals will cheer Kerry's new-found decisiveness, but it opens the way for Bush to deal him a counterstroke that can all but end this election and finish off Kerry for good.

Kerry's right flank is now gapingly vulnerable to a Bush attack. According to Scott Rasmussen's tracking polls, 30 to 40 percent of Kerry's voters disagree with his new leftward tilt on Iraq.

That is, even as the Democrat condemned the war in Iraq as a "diversion" from the central mission of the war on terror, a large minority of his own voters disagrees and sees it as "integral" to the battle to respond to 9/11.

Kerry has moved to the left, leaving about one-third of his vote behind. Bush can now move in and peel off Kerry's moderate supporters.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has opened the door for this new Bush offensive by declaring the invasion of Iraq "illegal" and equating the deadly terror raids by Iraqi guerillas with the embarrassing but hardly lethal sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners by the U.S. military. With those incendiary claims put into play, it is now legitimate for Bush to attack the secretary-general and ask his opponent to take a stand for or against Annan's remarks.

In his current incarnation as a dove, Kerry dares not dissent too sharply from the views of the U.N. leader. Bush can develop a key campaign issue over whether it is legal for the United States to act in its own self-defense without obtaining Security Council approval. Ratification by an assemblage of nations bribed through the Oil-for-Food program should not be a prerequisite for American action.

The backdrop of this new emphasis on Iraq is Bush's largely successful effort to appeal to women in his battle against terror. After misdirecting his rhetoric for months, echoing a macho tough guy approach, the president found his stride at the GOP Convention and, with the able assistance of his wife, portrayed the war in Iraq and the global battle against terror as an effort to keep American families safe at home.

This linkage of combat in Baghdad with safety on Main Street has reduced the gender gap in the polls to historic lows as women have resonated with Bush's new emphasis.

Now that Kerry has moved too far left in a misguided effort to enthuse his political base, Bush can close in for the kill and defend our action in Iraq and our global combativeness against terrorism as fundamental to the protection of our families at home.

Part of Kerry's vulnerability on the Iraq issue is because he is really not proposing anything new to deal with the war. His four-part "plan" — which centers on urging our allies and the U.N. to do more and calls for strong efforts to provide jobs to Iraqis (the John Edwards message, sent abroad) and to train Iraqi police and troops — just mirrors what Bush is already doing.

That is, it is only in retrospect — in criticizing past actions — that Kerry really differs from Bush. He is proposing no real alternative for action in the future.

Since elections are about the future and history books about the past, Bush can fairly ask Kerry what he would do differently. When the Democrat ticks off his agenda, Bush can reply with his statistics saying (in effect), Been there, done that.

John Kerry has zigged when he should have zagged. He has chosen to fight over terror and Iraq when he should have stayed on domestic issues. He has tacked left when he should have stayed in the center on foreign issues and attacked on matters closer to home.

Kerry has defined himself as a liberal — and will pay for it with his defeat.
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AuH2O
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« Reply #1 on: September 23, 2004, 02:18:13 PM »

Morris did well with this article. There are some things he leaves out, perhaps for the sake of brevity, but still good.

Kerry criticizes Bush on the war, mostly because he claims we aren't doing well enough (he says the same about Afghanistan), but he also is horrified by our (relatively low) casualty rate.

If he can do better while taking fewer losses, he has a responsibility to tell voters how. Of course, he doesn't, which is why he is losing on Iraq and will only be dragged further down by it.
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Fmr. Gov. NickG
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« Reply #2 on: September 23, 2004, 05:32:29 PM »


I would assume Kerry thinks we could have done better by having a more international effort.  Under this scenario, there might have been more casualties, but fewer American casualties.
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A18
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« Reply #3 on: September 23, 2004, 05:34:59 PM »

How are you going to get other nations to join? Bush has been trying that the whole time.
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agcatter
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« Reply #4 on: September 23, 2004, 08:36:47 PM »

Kerry knows it, and so does everyone else.
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nomorelies
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« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2004, 10:21:59 AM »

Clean slate with all countries.

Allow contract to be offered to European countries. Note that Britain was prevented from having many contracts that were open to bidding.

Bush has baggage - he stuck two fingers up at the UN. Americans laugh at the UN and they know you do. So why should they help when Americans are so disrespectful to them.

American conservatives push the oil for food scandal yet no one says anything about giving wmds to Israel when the UN Securtiy Council said not too.
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nomorelies
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« Reply #6 on: September 24, 2004, 10:22:50 AM »

Dick Morris is a Republican.

He makes his living of the Clintons and FOX news so he has to criticise Kerry or he has no job.
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A18
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« Reply #7 on: September 24, 2004, 10:32:48 AM »

The Oil for Food scandal proves that France has no credibility on this issue.

We all know the UN is an anti-semetic organization.
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Sam Spade
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« Reply #8 on: September 24, 2004, 10:54:01 AM »

Nomo:  Read what he's trying to say, then attack the substance of his points, not his political beliefs.

I didn't post the article because of Dick Morris' partisan nature, I posted it because I consider his political judgment to be astute, whether when he supports Bush, like now, or when he was Clinton's main advisor, like in 1996.
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nomorelies
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« Reply #9 on: September 24, 2004, 11:28:19 AM »

His political motive should be questioned.

If he praises Kerry. THE RIGHT ATTACK HIM

The left hates him coz he makes money by bashing the Clintons.

So he has to praise bush as he has to pay the bills.

FOX would fire him if he kept praising Kerry.
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dazzleman
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« Reply #10 on: September 25, 2004, 06:59:53 AM »

The problem with Kerry's current position is that he only came to it after supporting the war at the time the decisions were being made.

Kerry fully believed that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, and supported unilateral action against Iraq all the way back in 1997.  If he was "misled" on this issue, it was by Pres. Clinton rather than Pres. Bush.

He then voted in favor of the current Iraq War.

I don't see how a person can claim to be a leader when he criticizes his opponent for doing the things that he advocated doing at the time the decisions were made.  Kerry's position is a very flimsy one.

As far as Morris goes, I have mixed feelings about him.  He is obviously a political whore, but that's the way the system works.  He gave some good advice to Clinton when he was running for re-election in 1996 and in the period leading up to that, though Clinton did not take all his advice.  I tend to think that Morris is right about Kerry.
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Democratic Hawk
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« Reply #11 on: September 25, 2004, 08:43:58 AM »

How are you going to get other nations to join? Bush has been trying that the whole time.

Doesn't Bush's failure to get other nations involved in Iraq not tell you anything?  He lacks the necessary qualities to provide effective global leadership in a precarious world.

He's just simply neither liked nor respected as international player. His supporters argue that he is a stong leader, but strong leaders ought to command international respect and Bush doesn't!

Time for a change in direction.

Dave
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A18
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« Reply #12 on: September 25, 2004, 09:01:31 AM »

And as long as he continues to lack those qualities, I will continue to support him.

The change in direction will come in 2009. Hope you like Giuliani.
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Democratic Hawk
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« Reply #13 on: September 25, 2004, 09:54:24 AM »


The change in direction will come in 2009. Hope you like Giuliani.

After he besmirched Churchill. Fat chance!  

Dave
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