Today's Article
Christmas has
come early this year
for a resurgent
Democratic Party.
The American Spark
Rumsfeld Gone As Dems Take Congress

By Cliff Montgomery

Within hours of the Democrats' triumph in congressional elections, and after years of defending his secretary of
defense,
Bush announced the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld on Wednesday.

Bush reached back to his father's administration to nominate a former
CIA director, Robert Gates, as the new defense
secretary.

The
Iraq War was the principal issue of Rumsfeld's nearly six-year tenure. Unhappiness with the war was a major element
of
voter dissatisfaction Tuesday--and the main reason for his departure. Even some Republican lawmakers have
become critical of the war's management, and growing numbers of
politicians were urging Bush to replace Rumsfeld.

Bush said the 63-year-old Gates, who has served in a variety of
national security jobs under six previous presidents,
would be nominated to replace Rumsfeld. Gates, currently the president of
Texas A&M University, is a Bush family friend
and a member of an 'opinion tank' studying the way ahead in Iraq.

The
White House hopes that replacing Rumsfeld with Gates will give a fresh voice to U.S. policy on the deeply unpopular
war, and perhaps establish a stronger rapport with the new Democratic
Congress. Rumsfeld's rather terse manner
produced a rocky relationship with many on
Capitol Hill.

"Secretary Rumsfeld and I agreed that sometimes it's necessary to have a fresh perspective," Bush said in the sudden
announcement during a post-election news conference.

In a later appearance at the White House with Rumsfeld and Gates at his side, Bush thanked Rumsfeld for his service and
predicted that Gates would bring fresh ideas.

"The secretary of defense must be a man of vision who can see threats still over the horizon and prepare our nation to
meet them. Bob Gates is the right man to meet both of these critical challenges," Bush said.

But underscoring that he would not bow to those hoping to use common sense in dealing with his military misadventure in
Iraq, Bush also said, "I'd like our troops to come home, too, but I want them to come home with victory."

A typical logical fallacy from this president: it is known as a "Sweeping Generality", for it insists that there is a mission to win,
even when it's obvious there is no clear mission in the first place.

One must first
have a mission, Mr. President, for one to either win it or walk away from it.

In brief remarks, Rumsfeld described the Iraq conflict as a "little understood, unfamiliar war" that is "complex for people to
comprehend." That's true--and no one understood it less then Donald Rumsfeld, who at times really seemed to believe that
a devout
Muslim country would greet un-invited, non-Muslim American forces as 'liberators', and that the fruitless
nation-building of Iraq was somehow really going to deal a death blow to
Osama bin Laden, who had nothing to do with
Hussein's Iraq in the first place.

If Mr. Rumsfeld understood the Iraq War--or the
Middle East--as he still claims, Iraq wouldn't be in the mess it is today.
The man who breaks a country can't pretend to be the only one who understands it.

Rumsfeld told reporters, "It will be a different Congress, a different environment, moving toward a
presidential election
and a lot of partisanship, and it struck me that this [his resignation] would be a good thing for everybody."

There was little overt reaction among
Pentagon officials, beyond surprise at the abrupt announcement.

Asked whether Rumsfeld's departure meant a new direction in a war which has claimed the lives of more than 2,800
U.S.
troops
and cost more than $300 billion, Bush said, "Well, there's certainly going to be new leadership at the Pentagon."

On Tuesday, voters clearly told politicians that the sooner the war ends the better. Surveys at polling places showed that
about six in 10 voters disapproved of the war and only a third believed it had improved long-term security in the
United
States
.

With a condensending manner which grated many nerves, Rumsfeld had been the administration's face of the Iraq conflict.
He became more of a political target as the war grew increasingly unpopular in
America amid rising violence without an
end in sight, or a coherent plan for Iraq on the table.

Numerous Democrats in Congress had been calling for Rumsfeld's resignation for months, asserting that his
mismanagement of the war and of the military had been a complete failure. Critics also accused Rumsfeld of not fully
considering the advice of his generals and of refusing to consider other courses of action.

Sen.
Carl Levin (D-MI) and Rep. Ike Skelton (D-Missouri)--the top Democrats on the Armed Services committees--said
Rumsfeld's resignation would only be a positive step if accompanied by a change in policy.

"I think it is critical that this change be more than just a different face on the old policy," Skelton said.