The Case for Bill Richardson: Every Single U.S. Troop Out Of Iraq

This is part of the candidate series on MyDD. I was asked to post a weekly diary on Richardson's campaign. I am not part of his campaign. Four years ago, Dean was seen as the Democratic nominee and Kerry had run out of money. My point: in presidential politics, three months is a lifetime. Today, in the Democratic race there are 2 frontrunners - Clinton and Obama. They have tremendous national name recognition and vast sums of money. And there are 2 challengers - Edwards and Richardson. Both have sufficient funds to compete with Clinton and Obama in the January caucus/primary states. Edwards, as the immediate past Democratic Vice Presidential candidate, has strong name recognition too. Richardson lacks the national name recognition of the other top candidates. Nevertheless, he has distinguished himself in the early voting states. As noted by Pollster.com, "for other Democratic candidates, we've not seen a substantial upturn anywhere. Richardson stands alone in that respect at the moment." Today, only these four candidates have double-digit support in polls in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. Last Sunday, in Indianola, Iowa, Senator Tom Harkin held his "Steak Fry," one of the key events leading up to the Iowa caucuses. David Yepsen, regarded as the premier political reporter in Iowa, praised Richardson for giving the best speech:
Richardson gave the best overall speech of the day. He was forceful. He was specific. He gave good sound bites. It's clear the New Mexico governor is getting better on the stump as the campaign wears on. If one of the top three contenders stumbles, Richardson's in a position to move up.
Yepsen has been noting Richardson has an opening to do well in Iowa's caucus. In his August 30 column, Yepsen wrote:
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson's uptick in the 2008 Democratic presidential campaign was visible here Tuesday night at a town meeting he held at Coe College. About 200 people showed up on a steamy summer evening to spend close to two hours listening to what he said was the "short version" of his stump speech - it still went 35 minutes - and then posing questions to him. In Iowa, Richardson has moved from 1 percent support in the state to a middle tier all his own. That's more movement than any other Democratic candidate has seen this year. . . Richardson has set the ambitious goal of finishing in the top three contenders in Iowa, which means he has to beat Clinton, Edwards or Obama, a feat that would deal an almost mortal blow to one of them and slingshot him into serious contention. While that objective is the correct one - no one who has ever finished worse than third in a caucus fight has ever gone on to win a nomination - those are formidable contenders. Moving into their top tier will be harder than moving out of the bottom ranks. Still, it's possible. Edwards' populism sounds increasingly angry, and voters don't elect angry people to the presidency. Edwards has seen a clear lead in Iowa shrink to a statistical tie with Clinton and Obama. Also, many Iowa Democrats are worried about Clinton's electability. She has moved up in Iowa surveys as she debates well and addresses the issue, but the question hasn't gone away and remains her single biggest impediment to the nomination. Obama is vexed by questions about his lack of experience. He also has upset some Democratic constituency groups by blowing off a number of Iowa events and debates because he doesn't want to be seen with his rivals. . . . All of which gives Richardson an opening. A growing number of activists believe he puts together an impressive package. He notes in his stump speech that Clinton talks about experience, and Obama talks about change, "and with me you get both."
A large part of Richardson's success in the early states can be attributed to his crystal clear plan on the number one issue in the campaign, the Iraq war. John Nichols of The Nation, in an article entitled "The Richardson Surge," observed Richardson is clicking with voters because he emphatically calls for the removal of every single soldier - both combat and support troops - from Iraq:
Against a field of first-tier candidates (Clinton, Obama and John Edwards) who don't mind savaging the Bush Administration's management of the Iraq imbroglio but who regularly fall short of proposing clear exit strategies, Richardson offers not just a résumé but specifics--and a sense of urgency. His TV ads in the early caucus and primary states identify him as the candidate with "the only plan that pulls every single soldier out of Iraq." As the contender with the most international experience--save, perhaps, hapless Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Joe Biden--Richardson says it is not merely possible but necessary to end the US military presence in Iraq and to replace it with diplomacy and targeted aid initiatives. Rejecting all the dodges of the frontrunners, Richardson argues, "If we are going to get out, we need to do it now."
Richardson understands that by the U.S. remaining in Iraq, we unwittingly perpetuate the war. Our troops have become the targets in a civil war. The Iraqi government, in turn, is dependent on the U.S. for security that the Iraqis themselves should provide. Richardson notes: "The Iraqis won't take the necessary steps toward political reconciliation until the U.S. makes it clear that it will leave the country for good." In an interview with the Associated Press this week, Richardson explained:
all combat and non-combat troops should be removed from Iraq because their presence is only contributing to violence instead of bringing security."There's no question there's tribal and ethnic hatreds," Richardson told The Associated Press. "But when those tribal and ethnic hatreds are fueled by American policy of hostility, then you make the situation worse." Richardson criticized Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards -- his leading rivals for the presidential nomination -- for plans to pull out combat troops from Iraq but leave residual forces behind. He said he would keep the Marines that guard the U.S. embassy in Baghdad but would withdraw all other military personnel. "Who is going to take care of non-combat troops? The Iraqis?" Richardson asked. He said he would move a small contingent mostly of special forces to Kuwait and more troops into Afghanistan, although he would leave the specific number up to military leaders.
Last night at the Democratic debate in Davenport, Iowa, Judy Woodruff asked the candidates if they were elected how many U.S. troops would remain in Iraq after their first year in office. Biden said it depends on how Bush leaves Iraq. Edwards agreed with Biden, claiming "it's impossible to say." Clinton echoed Biden's view, vaguely offering "a reasonable and prudent plan" to get our troops out. Dodd objected to speaking about 2010 and said Congress should not wait that long to act. Only Richardson provided a direct and unambiguous answer:
Zero troops! . . . Without getting our troops out you can not have a political settlement. . . . I would take all of our troops out. We need to end this war now.
Here is the video of the most significant exchange to date in the debates among the candidates in the race for President: Obama chose not to attend the debate and instead conducted a fund raiser in Atlanta, making two huge mistakes in one day. Earlier, Obama failed to vote against the Republican resolution condemning MoveOn for its newspaper ad attacking Gen. David Petraeus.

Tags: 2008 elections, Barack Obama, Bill Richardson, debates, Hillary Clinton, Iraq, Iraq War, joe biden, John Edwards, president, Primaries (all tags)

Comments

13 Comments

Good Case: Point Well Made

This is a strong case for the governor. I believe you are on target with this.

Again I return to the parallels between JFK's general approach, and the governors. In general,
JFK realized the different elements of whats going on with the international situation and
was able to avert a nuclear war.

I think its hilarious that they've tracked down
these relatively obscure comments the governor has made, to make an issue of them. In general, my understanding of being a good diplomat is that
when the heat is on you say the right thing.

Now the governor needs to step things up a notch
IMHO in the next debate and really press the advantage like Dean did. The front runner isn't always at an advantage , as was the case for Dean. Richardson can use the technique Kerry used (I won't say it here, but it worked) for Iowa.

BTW I am really pretty objective about stuff like this. I am by no means a flag waver for any one camp. I just think the Governor has the best plan.

by Trey Rentz 2007-09-21 09:17AM | 0 recs
Re: Good Case: Point Well Made

And Richardson does have such a storng resume to back this up.  Just wish he were a better "candidate."

by justinh 2007-09-21 09:26AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson
And there are 2 challengers - Edwards and Richardson.

Nice entry, but don't go trying to elevate Richardson to the same tier as Edwards. Even if you want to make the case that Hillary and Obama are in a group above Edwards, Richardson is not there with him.

As long as Richardson's severe case of foot-in-mouth disease causes him to insult gays, jews, service unions or whatever other group he's speaking in front of, he isn't ready for primetime.
by MORawn 2007-09-21 09:26AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson

Considering Richardson polled ahead of Edwards in Iowa, not long ago..?

by Trey Rentz 2007-09-21 10:00AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson
Uh... link please? I missed that one.

Guess the voters there must have really agreed that "God wants Iowa to be first".
by MORawn 2007-09-21 10:08AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson

Richardson has not polled above Edwards in Iowa.  Recent polls from New Hampshire however show them in a statistical tie.  And Edwards has basically stopped running in Nevada, pulling his people to Iowa, which gives Richardson a great opportunity to over take Edwards there.

My point though is not that Richardson is stronger in the polls than Edwards (yet). It is that right now in the race there are only four persons that have a realistic chance at being the Democratic nominee, and those four include Richardson.  

The race can change quickly.  We saw that in 2004.  Richardson is polling in Iowa at the same level Kerry was four years ago.  Also at this time four years ago, Edwards was in the single digits in Iowa and ended up finishing a surprising and strong second.  

In terms of your criticisms of Richardson as a candidate, I'm not going to respond other than to say equally damning if not worse statements can be made about Edwards.

by Stephen Cassidy 2007-09-21 10:31AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson
My point though is... that right now in the race there are only four persons that have a realistic chance at being the Democratic nominee, and those four include Richardson.

I get your point, it's just that I disagree with it. My point is that as long as Richardson keeps stumbling and bumbling along - reliably putting out a new gaffe each week, his likelihood of winning the nomination is no different than Biden, Dodd or Kucinich's and should be recognized as such.
by MORawn 2007-09-21 11:01AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson

I agree to a large extent. It also isn't just the gaffes, it is the lack of serious thought behind them. Byron "Whizzer" White as the ideal SCOTUS justice model for him?

Sorry, that is a deal breaker right there.

by lestatdelc 2007-09-21 03:54PM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson
Let's see how you do in a debate when you get hit with surprise questions and have no time to think them through. At the same debate, Obama didn't name Israel as one of our top allies and Edwards took prolonged time to think of a hero. This displays a lack of thought?
Two days ago the Senate had a chance to help get more of our soldiers home for longer periods of time -- but the measure failed. Yesterday they had a chance to set a timeline to start withdrawing troops -- but that failed too. And today, another measure that would've required a withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq failed. Three chances to make a difference, lost. But instead of continuing to push on the most important issue facing our country right now, yesterday Congress spent their time debating and condemning a newspaper ad by an anti-war group. Let's get some perspective here -- ads don't kill people -- wars kill people. And it is long past time to end this war.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gov-bill-r ichardson/ads-dont-kill-people-wa_b_6538 4.html
by Stephen Cassidy 2007-09-21 05:44PM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson: Every Single U.

Rhetoric is cheap, but I still don't see evidence that Richardson isn't just pandering to the pro-withdrawal base. He's trying to make a strategic distinction between himself and the others to get the nomination; should he be the nominee he is no more likely to call for absolute total withdrawal than any other democratic candidate would be.

by azizhp 2007-09-21 11:17AM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson: Every Single U.

Specific promises by a candidate are not rhetoric.  And look at whom Richardson's military advisers are.  They include retired General Gard:

Lt. Gen. Robert Gard worked as executive assistant to Robert McNamara, secretary of defense during the Vietnam War. He believes Iraq, like Vietnam, is a failure, and the only responsible solution is to bring American troops home, he said.

"These troops are not expendable commodities to fulfill the pipe-dream vision of a group of people trying to remake the world in our image," Gard said. "It's time for us to get the hell out of there."

http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs. dll/article?AID=/20070624/REPOSITORY/706 240337

Who is advising Clinton, Obama and Edwards?

by Stephen Cassidy 2007-09-21 01:30PM | 0 recs
Re: The Case for Bill Richardson: Every Single U.

Uh, I don't think you want to go toe to toe with Obama on advisers:

Obama team loaded with all-stars

That's their headline, not mine

On foreign policy alone, some 200 experts are providing the Obama campaign with assistance of some sort, arranged into 20 subgroups. On the domestic front, more than 500 policy experts are contributing ideas, campaign aides said. Veterans of previous election campaigns say the scale of the policy operation resembles the full-blown effort candidates typically undertake for a general election campaign rather than the more stripped-down versions common for the primary season

Obama's policy team

Foreign policy/national security

Anthony Lake

(Bill Clinton national security adviser)
Susan Rice

(Clinton assistant secretary of state for African affairs)

Samantha Power

(Harvard Kennedy School of Government professor, Pulitzer Prize-winner author of book arguing for more vigorous U.S. action to counter genocidal campaigns)

Gregory Craig

(Clinton impeachment defense attorney and director of policy planning for Clinton State Department)

Richard Danzig

(Clinton Navy secretary, has written on potential dangers of terrorist biological weapons attacks)

Former Maj. Gen. Scott Gration

(Retired Air Force officer, former director of strategy for U.S. European Command, military officer assigned to accompany Obama on senator's Africa trip)

Former Gen. Merrill McPeak

(Retired former chief of staff of the Air Force)

And of course, there's good ole Zbigniew Brezinski.

What's more, there's a common thread to his policy team:

n late 2002 and throughout 2003, at such think-tanks as the Brookings Institution, the Council on Foreign Relations and the Center for Strategic and International Studies, many eminent scholars, policy intellectuals and politicians out of power lined up for and against Bush's war plans.

On one side were a number who opposed the war -- among them Zbigniew Brzezinski, Ivo Daalder, Susan Rice, and Lawrence Korb -- all of whom called for a broader, multinational coalition, intensified weapons inspections and expanded diplomacy.

"Ultimately, the Bush revolution [in foreign policy] is bound to fail, because its core premise -- that America's security rested on an America unbound -- is deeply mistaken," wrote Daalder, former director for European Affairs on President Clinton's National Security Council staff, in an October 28, 2003 essay. "Far from demonstrating the triumph of unilateral American power, Bush's wars have demonstrated the importance of basing American foreign policy on a blend of power and cooperation."

On the other side of the Democratic divide were the early backers of the drive to invade Iraq and oust Saddam Hussein, including Richard Holbrooke, Sandy Berger and Martin Indyk.
[snip]

The well-publicized contrast between Hillary Clinton's early backing of the Bush administration's war effort and Barack Obama's early opposition, has to a degree been replicated in the less visible network of foreign policy advisers that each candidate has cultivated -- the early war opponents by Obama, and the one-time hawks by Clinton.

Huffington Post

The Wall Street Journal talks about his FP team some more here, in their article Obama tones Foreign Policy muscle

They note that he's basically running his own Dept of State at this point.

by mopper8 2007-09-22 03:29AM | 0 recs
Richardson is a Clinton Vote-Holder

Richardson offers up a completely naive plan to remove all troops in Iraq practically overnight.  No serious person agrees; check out the other candidates; check out Juan Cole.  What's interesting is why Richardson with his experience would even float such an idea.

My opinion is that he serves as a place to stash anti-war votes that would otherwise go to Obama or Edwards.  Who does this benefit?  The Dem DC establishment candidate--Hillary.  This preserves her "front runner" status.  Richardson seems to be angling for a VP slot under Hillary and this is how he gets there.

Hard politics at work.

by cube3u 2007-09-22 04:47AM | 0 recs

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