SMRs and AMRs

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Get Jim in Here, Pronto!

By Michael Kinsley
Washington Post

If I told you that there was something in Washington called the Baker commission but didn't tell you what it was about, you still could probably name many of its members. If you are of a certain age, you might wonder, "Jim or Howard?" And you might have a quibble or two.

Where is Dick Holbrooke? Does Sandra Day O'Connor's new availability mean that Madeleine Albright is out of luck from now on? Are they sure that Larry Eagleburger is still alive? But Vernon Jordan is there, along with Ed Meese and Alan Simpson and Lee Hamilton. This is one torch that has not been passed to a new generation, although former Virginia senator and presidential son-in-law Charles Robb (age 67) is a fresh face in the pool of Washington Wise Men. Welcome, Chuck.

The Baker commission -- that's James Baker, of course -- was appointed by Congress to look into the situation in Iraq. It is expected to report early next month, and it is duly bouncing around and staffing up and holding hearings and all the things that prestigious commissions do.

Ordinarily a commission such as this has two possible purposes: action or inaction. Sometimes a problem is referred to a prestigious commission so that the commission can recommend doing things that everybody knows must be done but that nobody has the nerve to propose -- at least nobody who has to run for office. The commission can ram this policy down the politicians' allegedly unwilling throats. If it is bipartisan -- and what fun is a commission that isn't bipartisan? -- the commission also protects both parties against a stab in the back by the other. This is how Social Security was reformed and saved the last time, when the chairman of the commission was Alan Greenspan, and undoubtedly this is how it will be reformed and saved again. Hey, Greenspan's available again. Come to think of it, why isn't he on this one? He is no expert on Iraq -- but neither is Leon Panetta, another recent initiate into the Pantheon.

Welcome, Leon.

On the other hand, sometimes a problem is referred to a commission simply to get it off the table. Action is widely perceived as necessary, and the creation of a commission can be made to look like action.

(The rest is here.)

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