Kudlow and Lieberman get it right:
Our last, best hope in Iraq — Gen. David Petraeus — reminded Pentagon reporters this week of a critically important fact long forgotten by most observers: Our real enemy in Iraq, the true source of all the murders, mayhem, and instability, is not sectarian strife. And it’s not the Sunnis or the Shiites, either. The real enemy we face in Iraq is al-Qaida.
According to the top American commander in Iraq, al-Qaida’s No. 1 priority is defeating the United States in Iraq. The general called this organization “public enemy No. 1,” adding that “Iraq is, in fact, the central front of al-Qaida’s global campaign.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid doesn’t understand this. Nor, for that matter, do the other defeatist Democrats carelessly demanding our immediate withdrawal. They fail to grasp that the root of our problems in Iraq — again, the true source of the hostilities — remains al-Qaida. These murderous thugs are fomenting the sectarian strife on both sides of the Iraqi street. Their tactic is the nadir of nihilism.
In contrast to the blind Harry Reid contingent, I’d like to highlight one remarkably clear thinker who does get what’s going on in this war — someone who recognizes the true enemy and is able to articulate his position in breathtaking clarity. I’m talking about Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut. Frankly, no public official understands what’s at play better than Lieberman. He set forth his lucid position in Thursday’s Washington Post and brought it alive when I interviewed him on “Kudlow & Company” later that day.
Lieberman forcefully stated that “al-Qaida, after all, isn’t carrying out mass murder against civilians in the streets of Baghdad because it wants a more equitable distribution of oil revenue. Its aim in Iraq isn’t to get a seat at the political table; it wants to blow up the table — along with everyone seated at it.”
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