SUSTAINING SUCCESS IN AFGHANISTANBY JOHN MCCAIN, JOE LIEBERMAN, & LINDSEY GRAHAMWASHINGTON POSTA key part of this post-2014 U.S. military commitment should be a counterterrorism force that can continue working with our Afghan partners against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, ensuring that these groups can no longer pose a military threat to Afghanistan, our allies and us. … This agreement could change the narrative in Afghanistan and the region from one of imminent international abandonment to enduring international commitment. These decisions rest … with President Obama. We have disagreed with some of his choices regarding the war in Afghanistan. But after all our nation has sacrificed in Afghanistan, we stand ready to do everything in our power to secure the same bipartisan support for this war in its twilight hours as when it began more than a decade ago.
ROMNEY’S MISTAKESBY ROSS DOUTHATNEW YORK TIMESEven the most successful candidate inevitably makes significant mistakes. A grinding, delegate-accumulating march to the nomination counts just as much as any other kind of win. There are advantages in working through problems in the primary season so that you know when to go for the jugular and how not to talk about your money during the fall campaign. These consolations notwithstanding, right now the toll of the long primary campaign looks more significant than its potential benefits. Romney has all but won despite his campaign’s blunders, but that doesn’t mean he wouldn’t like to have those blunders back.
Read Wednesday’s must-read opinion columns








