All On That Day


Oh, sinner man, where you gonna run to? 
Oh, sinner man, where you gonna run to?
Oh, sinner man, where you gonna run to?
All on that day.

Run to the rock. 
Rock, won't you hide me? 
Run to the rock. 
Rock, won't you hide me?
Run to the rock. 
Rock, won't you hide me? 
All on that day.
(Traditional, Sinner Man

USA Today, not exactly known as a rightwing standard bearer, has come out with an editorial that savages Nancy Pelosi for her little jaunt to the Middle East – especially Syria. Even though they disagree with the administration's policies, they still say Pelosi should not have taken this trip. This is the worst beating that paper has administered to a Democrat that I can remember. They call her behavior, "Crossing a line."

Democrats in Congress have been busy flexing their foreign policy muscles almost from the moment they took power in January, for the most part responsibly. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi crossed a line this week by visiting Syria, where she met with President Bashar Assad. She violated a long-held understanding that the United States should speak with one official voice abroad — even if the country is deeply divided on foreign policy back home.

Like it or not (and we do not), President Bush's policy has been to refuse to negotiate with Syria until it changes its behavior. That behavior is malignant. Syria has long meddled destructively in neighboring Lebanon and is widely seen as the bloody hand behind the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri. Syria has aligned itself with Iran and supports the violently anti-Israel groups Hezbollah and Hamas. It foments violence in Iraq by allowing suicide bombers and jihadists to cross the Syria-Iraq border.

Pelosi surely knew that as speaker — third in the succession line to the presidency — her high-profile presence in Damascus would be read as a contradiction of Bush's no-talkpolicy. No matter that she claimed to have stuck closely to administration positions in her conversations with Assad, smiling photos of Pelosi and the Syrian president convey the unspoken message that while the U.S. president is unwilling to talk with Syria, another wing of the government is. Assad made good use of the moment.

Also along was House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom Lantos, D-Calif., who said the meeting was "only the beginning of our constructive dialogue with Syria, and we hope to build on this visit." That suggested Democrats are going beyond unobjectionable fact-finding and getting-to-know-you conversation into something closer to negotiations, undermining U.S. diplomacy.

This is very harsh stuff for USA Today. I have pointed out that the media was sending warning shots across Pelosi's bow about her running out of media cover. It looks like time is up and the full battle is now on. Pelosi is about to find out what it is like to be on the receiving end of all that negative media attention. No place left to hide, all on that day.

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