Maliki Pegs Obama as the Most Pliant: Krauthammer Iraq PM thinks Dem can be manipulated, writes Krauthammer By Jason Farago Posted Jul 25, 2008 8:48 AM CDT Copied Barack Obama talks with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, right, in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, July 21, 2008. (AP Photo) Nouri al-Maliki's endorsement of Barack Obama's timetable for withdrawal from Iraq this week was "the earliest and most ostentatious absentee ballot of this presidential election," writes Charles Krauthammer. The Washington Post columnist thinks that the Iraqi PM gave Obama an electorial assist for a clear reason: between him and John McCain, "it is no mystery who would be the more pliant US negotiator." McCain, like George W. Bush, thinks that America must profit from the long war with Iraq by establishing a strategic relationship and using Iraq as a regional power base. Not the Democrats: they are "so sick of this war, so politically and psychologically committed to its liquidation" that they'll cede to any of Maliki's demands to get out. And if, as Krauthammer predicts, Obama becomes president, Iraq's PM has a new bargaining chip: "He now owes him." Read These Next Trump reportedly wants a $230M payout from the DOJ. Online boo-bears go after the demo firm tearing White House apart. A well-known nutrition influencer died after a home birth. Trump nominee who said he has 'a Nazi streak' withdraws. Report an error