Today, the Washington Times leads with a story that the President is scrapping a speech on medical liability and preparing a "significant speech" for Thursday night. Presidential aides say it will cover terrorism and the War in Iraq, and attempt to counter attempts “by the president's opponent to launch false attacks and mislead the American people on these big priorities.“ Translation: look for Rove to pull one out of the playbook of William Jefferson Clinton.
I fully expect Bush to say that he has made mistakes, that he thought there were WMD, but that there were none, that he thought there was an al Qaeda-Iraq link but there was none, and that despite all of this, he is the candidate that is best suited to fight in Iraq and against terrorism in general.
How can I make such a bold prediction? Two reasons: (1) Karl Rove always likes to strike at his opponent's strength, which for Kerry right now is Bush's own errors in Iraq; and (2) Key players in the Iraq fiasco have signaled in the last two days that the assumptions on which the war was based were flawed and serious mistakes were made in first few months of the war.
First, let's deal with Rove. The President's number-one hatchet man is known for striking at an opponent's strength. Right now John Kerry's strength is the President's own position on Iraq and the War on Terror. Last Thursday, Bush appeared out of touch and defensive on what was supposed to be his signature issue.
Meanwhile, Kerry put to bed any doubts about being indecisive with his manly (yes, manly), defense of his position on the war. The flip-flop issue melted under the hot lights in Miami.
The problem for John Kerry is that his strength relies totally on the continued obstinate pollyannish stupidity of his opponent. Should Bush admit to the problems that our efforts in Iraq face, Kerry is back at square one, albeit a square he's been trying to get the election to from the beginning--the issues.
Once Bush pulls a Clintonian “I've made mistakes,” then Rove can try to make the race about personality--people do genuinely like Bush and want to believe he is a nice guy.
Signals sent by senior administration officials also hint that a reversal of field is coming from the Bush/Cheney camp. Rove is also known for clearly signaling his moves to the media as well.
On Monday, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, speaking of al Qaeda-Iraq ties before the Council on Foreign Relations, said that there was no “strong, hard evidence that links the two.” Although he later “clarified” the statement, the message got out and stuck.
Similarly, statements by former Ambassador Paul Bremer made at a speech at a conference Monday indicated that he thought that the Administration did not have enough troops on hand to control Iraq after the ground war ended. Bremer also made similar remarks at a speech at DePaw University on Sept. 17. Conference organizers suspiciously distributed the gist of those remarks on Monday as well. Although Bremer too, “qualified” his remarks later on Monday, its doubtful that he would have made such potentially damaging remarks in the middle of the Bush reelection campaign without approval from the heights of the Bush/Cheney campaign.
What the tea leaves seem to indicate is that Bush is planning to reverse his field and declare that he has made mistakes, but that it would be best to keep the reins in his hands until the job is done. I also would not be surprised to hear that the Administration has plans to increase troop strength in Iraq to get the job done right.
Thought this election was weird? Just you wait.
Update (12:42 Tuesday): The speech has been changed to Wednesday.