In Iraq, as military and security conditions continue to improve, American war politics enters one of its stranger moments in our history. Certainly it is historically odd for war reporting to diminish almost to the point of public invisibility - just as our troops are starting to gain the upper hand. But we are fighting this war with the journalists we have, not the ones we want.
However, although the media maintained a virtual radio silence once things started going our way, the public has come to recognize the military success. Typical of recent polling is the Pew Poll from Nov. 27, which shows that about half the country now thinks the military effort is going very or fairly well (up from 30 percent). The public is also substantially more optimistic than they were in recent years that we are reducing civilian casualties, preventing civil war, defeating insurgents, preventing terrorists bases and rebuilding infrastructure.
Despite such optimism, by 54 percent to 41 percent (virtually unchanged from February's 53 percent to 42 percent) the public wants our troops to come home rather than stay. Recent polls by Harris, Zogby, The Washington Post/ABC and Associated Press all show ambiguity in public attitudes. Even as the percentage who think we are going to succeed or win approaches 50 percent or more, a majority don't want us to stay and barely a third think the war was worth the effort.
In politics it is usually the case that when your opponents stop talking about an issue, you must be winning with the public on it. Following that almost iron rule of political communication, in light of the fact that the antiwar Democrats have virtually stopped talking about the war, they must think it is no longer a winner for them.
But the polling data cited above would suggest that if the Democrats don't see the war as a winning issue, neither can President Bush and those of us who support the war effort feel we have the public behind us. In other words, the public now tends to think we are succeeding, but doesn't think it is worth the effort and would like us to leave pretty soon, anyway.
There would seem to be no higher communications task for the president and his supporters over the coming months than to make a better case that the success that may well be within our grasp is not only worth persisting over now - but that, even knowing what we know now, the war was worth the effort from the beginning.
Assuming we succeed in establishing a stable government in Iraq that is hostile to terrorists and respectful of the United States and thelegitimate order of the world and while we aren't there yet, we now have good grounds to expect such an end - I believe a strong case can be made for the value of not only finishing the war now, but even based on what we now know, for having decided to fight it in the first place.
First, of course, the debit side must be noted, foremost the human cost, to date: about 4,000 dead American troops, about 30,000 injured, perhaps half seriously, including more than 600 amputees and about 3,000 diagnosed traumatic brain injuries. Many more Iraqis have been killed. The financial cost of the war will run above $1 trillion. We have also, at least temporarily, driven thousands of Muslims into the radical ranks, created great enmity in much of the Muslim world (and not a little in Europe also.)
Against these costs and terrible human losses, on the credit side we eliminated a vicious anti-American regime and aborted any future plans they might have had for developing nuclear weapons. We intimidated Libya to give up its surprisingly advanced nuclear program. And, if the recent National Intelligence Estimate is to be believed, Iran happened to give up its nuclear program just at the moment that a couple hundred thousand American troops occupied Baghdad - conveniently close to Iran.
These geopolitical facts are precisely evidence of the larger strategic purpose of the war. As I argued in an August 2002 column in which I predicted that this war would unleash vast hostility against us, I endorsed Henry Kissinger's argument for the war that we had to demonstrate that a terrorist challenge to us produces catastrophic consequences for not only its perpetrators but its even tacit supporters. "We had to break the will and pride of all those in the Islamic world who would dare terrorize us and the international system." Osama bin Laden said it best. His people will follow the strong horse. If, after years of stumbling and bumbling, the enduring strength and eventual wisdom of the American people can enter into the belly of the Islamist world, overturn tyrants, empower the Muslim people with peaceable and prosperous ways and intimidate two Islamist nuclear aspirants to renounce their pretensions, we will show ourselves to be the strong horse. Thereby we will hasten the day when the terrorist pretensions will fall on deaf Muslim ears and the threat of Islamist terrorism will begin to recede.
We have it almost in our hands to gain the first strategic psychological victory in the war on terror - and that will have been worth the suffering and the loss.
Tony Blankley is executive vice president for global public affairs at Edelman International. He is also a visiting senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times