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WSWS : News
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US War Drive
Al Gore backs Bushs war plans
By Patrick Martin
20 February 2002
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In a speech February 12, his first major political address
since the US Supreme Court stopped a vote count in Florida and
handed the 2000 presidential election to George W. Bush, the Democratic
presidential candidate, Al Gore, declared his full support to
the Bush administrations plans for expanded warfare in the
Middle East. Gore called for a final reckoning with
Iraqi president Saddam Hussein.
The former vice president spoke in New York City before a meeting
of the Council on Foreign Relations, the think tank that publishes
Foreign Affairs and has long exercised important influence
on foreign policy, whether the occupant of the White House was
a Democrat or Republican.
Gore specifically solidarized himself with the axis of
evil rhetoric in Bushs State of the Union speech.
Bushs bellicose languageparticularly his singling
out of Iraq, Iran and North Koreahas been widely denounced
in Europe and criticized even by several congressional leaders,
including Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle and Republican Senator
Chuck Hagel.
As far as Im concerned, there really is something
to be said for occasionally putting diplomacy aside and laying
ones cards on the table, Gore said. There is
value in calling evil by its name. One should never underestimate
the power of bold words coming from a president of the United
States.
Gore made a bow to European criticisms of Bushs unilateralism,
and presented himself as an advocate of a more inclusive style
of foreign policy. He called for attention to underlying causes
of global unrest, including poverty, ignorance, disease and political
oppression, warning, What we deal with now is todays
manifestation of an anger welling up from deep layers of grievance
shared by many millions of people.
But the basic thrust of his speech was to demonstrate how far
the Democratic Partys titular leader would go in identifying
himself with the aggressive militarism that now dominates Washington.
Gore declared, I also support the presidents stated
goals in the next phases of the war against terrorism as he laid
them out in the State of the Union. The 2000 Democratic
presidential candidate thus backed the worldwide campaign of military
force, covert provocations and diplomatic bullying that is being
waged in the name of the war on terrorism. He endorsed
Bushs shift in the focus of this campaign from terrorist
groups to governments allegedly engaged in the development of
biological, chemical and nuclear weapons.
Gore said, There is a clear case that one of these governments
in particular represents a virulent threat in a class by itself:
Iraq. As far as I am concerned, a final reckoning with that government
should be on the table. To my way of thinking, the real question
is not the principle of the thing, but of making sure that this
time we will finish the matter on our terms.
The former vice president recalled that he was among a small
group of Democratic senators who backed the first President Bush
in his decision to dispatch a huge army to the Middle East and
go to war against Iraq over Kuwait. His only criticism of the
Persian Gulf War was that it did not go far enough and was ended
with Saddam Hussein still in power.
Gore added, So this time, if we resort to force, we must
absolutely get it right. It must be an action set up carefully
and on the basis of the most realistic concepts. Failure cannot
be an option, which means that we must be prepared to go the limit.
And wishful thinking based on best-case scenarios or excessively
literal transfers of recent experience to different conditions
would be a recipe for disaster.
This amounts to a rebuke to the more optimistic war planners
in the White House and Pentagon, who have suggested that it would
be possible to overthrow Saddam Hussein with only 50,000 US troops,
or perhaps no ground troops at all, using proxy forces and American
air power on the Afghanistan model. Gore declared in advance his
support for a much larger commitment of American forces against
Iraq than was required to overthrow the Taliban.
Gore did not spell out what he meant when he said the US had
to be prepared to go the limit against Iraq. Do his
provocative and reckless words imply the destruction of Iraq as
a functioning society, through saturation bombing? The invasion
of the country and occupation of Baghdad by an American army?
Or perhaps the use of nuclear weapons in the event that an air
and ground attack should prove insufficient?
Gore also said that Iran was a much more dangerous challenge
than Iraq in terms both of support for terrorism and development
of weapons of mass destruction. He did not draw the conclusion
that war with Iran was more necessary than war with Iraq, but
strongly implied that such a war would be inevitable unless the
Islamic fundamentalist regime in Teheran were overthrown from
within.
The former vice president closed his half-hour speech with
a paean to the virtues of bipartisanship and the need for national
unity in defense of the interests of American imperialism. He
suggested that the war against terrorism should be modeled on
the Cold War, which he said was won by the cumulative work
of administrations from Harry S. Truman to George H.W. Bush.
He concluded: When all is said and done, I hope that
when the people of our country next return the White House for
a time to the Democratic Party, our leadership then will be big
enough to salute the present administration for what it will have
done that is wise and good. And to build upon it forthrightly.
Gores speech underscores two fundamental facts: from
the standpoint of foreign and military policy, to quote another
leading Democrat, House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, there
is no daylight whatsoever between the Bush administration
and the Democratic Party. Gore offers a no less reactionary and
bloodthirsty program for using American military power to reshape
the world.
From the standpoint of American politics, Gores remarks
demonstrate the politically moribund and intellectually debased
character of liberalism. As he did during the election campaign,
when he sought to ignore the right-wing campaign that led to Clintons
impeachment, and as he did during the post-election crisis in
Florida, Gore seeks to tranquilize the American people about the
dangers to their democratic rights.
Far from his idyllic picture of two major parties peacefully
alternating in control of the White House, it is clear that the
ultra-right elements that dominate the Bush administration and
the Republican Party are prepared to resort to criminal and illegal
methods to hold onto power, regardless of the will of the people.
A movement within the United States against imperialist militarism
and in defense of democratic rights must involve a political break
with both the Democrats and Republicans, and the building of a
new political party based on the interests of working people.
See Also:
Bush administration confirms
plans for war against Iraq
[16 February 2002]
Billions for war and repression:
Bush budget for a garrison state
[6 February 2002]
State of the Union speech:
Bush declares war on the world
[31 January 2002]
The 2000 election and Bushs
attack on democratic rights
[14 November 2001]
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