SNEAK PEEK: 'Victory Over the Insurgency is the Only Meaningful Exit Strategy'

John McCain meets with President Nixon's Secretary of State in Boston

ByABC News
December 18, 2007, 6:33 PM

December 18, 2007— -- 15 Days Until the Iowa Caucuses

What are journalists and campaign staffers hooked on right now?

Their blackberries

ABC News' Political Radar

http://www.elfyourself.com/ (In rare moments of downtime)

But most of all…..new polls!!!

New insights into the state of the Democratic race in Iowa will be revealed in a brand new ABC News/Washington Post poll released on Wednesday.

Check ABC News.com at one minute after midnight this evening (12:01 am ET) for the results and watch ABC's "Good Morning America" for full analysis. Poll numbers for the Republicans in Iowa will be released Wednesday afternoon.

Also on Wednesday, Sen. John McCain is in Boston for a conversation and media avail with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former CIA director Jim Woolsey.

Kissinger, like McCain, has taken a hard line on Iraq. In a Washington Post article published in August 2005, Kissinger wrote that "victory over the insurgency is the only meaningful exit strategy." He's since suggested that the Iraqi government might not be able to get the sectarian violence under control and that a clear military victory is not possible.

Mitt Romney may have new trouble with his past views on abortion.

His evolution from an "effectively pro-choice" position to a "pro-life" position has come under scrutiny again now that a photo of Romney and his wife attending a Planned Parenthood fundraiser in 1994 has surfaced.

Ann Romney made a $150 contribution to the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts back in '94 when her husband was touting his support for abortion rights as he waged a campaign against Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy.

Romney has said he has no recollection of the donation and that his wife was acting on her own.

Romney's recent grilling on a Sunday news program reinforced the idea that he can barely get a whimper of his campaign themes out without first addressing his Mormon faith and/or "intellectual journey" on a number of issues. With Mike Huckabee leading the Republican field in Iowa and Huckabee and John McCain climbing in New Hampshire, Romney would very much like to talk about the future rather than the past.