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Al Gore attacks Bush on Iraq War
By Bill Vann
13 August 2003
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In his first major policy speech in nearly a year, former vice
president Al Gore delivered a broad-ranging critique of the Bush
administrations foreign and domestic policies in an August
7 appearance at New York University.
Within the context of official American politics, which virtually
excludes any serious discussion of important questions, Gores
address was notable for its relatively direct and caustic appraisal.
In reviewing the methods used by the administration to engineer
the war against Iraq, attack democratic rights at home and implement
a vast transfer of wealth to the rich, Gore outlined the features
of what amounts to a criminal conspiracy centered in the White
House.
Gore refrained, however, from drawing any fundamental political
conclusions from the damning picture of the Bush administration
that he himself had painted. His speech implicitly raised serious
issues about the American two-party system that Gore chose not
to broach openly with his audience.
A government based on secrecy and lies
The thrust of Gores message was that the Bush administration
had systematically lied to the American people in pursuit of a
political agenda driven by the ideology of the extreme right and
designed to further enrich Bushs wealthy corporate backers.
Euphemistically referring to the claims used to promote the
Iraq War as false impressions, Gore presented a litany
of White House lies:
Saddam Hussein was partly responsible for the attack
against us on September 11 ... Saddam was working closely with
Osama bin Laden ... Saddam was about to give the terrorists poison
gas and deadly germs that he had made into weapons ... Saddam
was on the verge of building nuclear bombs and giving them to
terrorists ... Our GIs would be welcomed with open arms
by cheering Iraqis ... Even though the rest of the world was mostly
opposed to the war, they would quickly fall in line after we won
and then contribute lots of money and soldiers to help out...
The evidence, Gore said, demonstrated that every one of these
pretexts was false. He pointed to the recently released findings
of the Congressional investigation into September 11, which established
that there had been no link between Iraq and the attacks on New
York and Washington, as well as the forgery of documents used
to allege that Iraq had sought to buy uranium from Niger.
As for the cheering Iraqi crowds we anticipated, unfortunately,
very unfortunately, that didnt pan out either, so now our
troops are in an ugly and dangerous situation, Gore said,
adding that US taxpayers are now having to spend a billion
dollars every week to finance the occupation of Iraq.
The former vice president charged that the same species of
false impressions had dominated the administrations
presentation of its economic policy, promoting the illusion that
massive tax cuts for the rich would create lots of new jobs
and sufficient growth to offset ballooning deficits. Another deception
was the claim that most of the benefits would go to average
middle-income families, not to the wealthy...
Here too, Gore said, every claim had proven false: Instead
of creating jobs, we are losing millions of jobsnet losses
for three years in a row. That hasnt happened since the
Great Depression.... And it turns out that most of the benefits
actually are going to the highest income Americans...
He quoted George Akerlof, the 2001 winner of the Nobel Prize
for Economics, who recently told the German magazine Der Speigel
that Bushs economic policy amounted to a form of looting
and called the Bush administration the worst government
the US has ever had in its more than 200 years of history.
Gore accused the administration of carrying out a systematic
effort to manipulate facts in service of a totalistic ideology
that is felt to be more important than the mandates of basic honesty.
As a result, he declared, powerful and wealthy groups and
individuals who work their way into the inner circlewith
political support or large campaign contributionsare able
to add their own narrow special interests to the list of favored
goals without having them weighed against the public interest....
And the greater the conflict between what they want and whats
good for the rest of us, the greater the incentive they have to
bypass the normal procedures and keep it secret.
As an example, he cited the secret meetings between Vice President
Cheney and the executives of US energy conglomerates in 2001.
Cheney and the administration have refused to release the names
of those who participated, or reveal whether the company the vice
president headed before the election, Halliburton, was represented.
Implying that personal gain and vested interests at the highest
levels of the Bush administration played a direct role in the
formulation of the governments energy policy, he said, But
of course, as practically everybody in the world knows, Halliburton
was given a huge, open-ended contract to take over and run the
Iraqi oilfieldswithout having to bid against any other companies.
Gore went on to indict the administration for stonewalling
the bipartisan commission formed to investigate September 11 and
called attention to press reports that Bush was specifically advised
more than a month before the attacks on New York and Washington
that Al Qaeda was planning to hijack airplanes in order to carry
out terrorist strikes on US soil.
The former vice president charged that the same modus operandi
of secrecy and deceit was evident in the administrations
environmental policy.
A recurrent theme in Gores speech was the subversion
of democratic norms and constitutionally protected rights. He
accused the Bush administration of frustrating the normal
and healthy workings of our democracy and using tactics
that deprived the American people of any opportunity to
effectively subject his arguments to the kind of informed scrutiny
that is essential in our system of checks and balances.
He condemned the abrogation of democratic rights in the name of
fighting terrorism, including the administrations assertion
of the right, based on the presidents say-so, to imprison
US citizens without charges, a trial or the right to legal counsel.
The implications of Gores speech were unmistakable. The
US government has been taken over by a clique that rules through
methods that are thoroughly antidemocratic and unconstitutional.
It uses its power to carry out preemptive wars abroad and loot
the economy at home for the benefit of a powerful and wealthy
elite. It employs misinformation to cover its tracks, while amassing
unprecedented police-state powers.
The role of the Democrats
Gores description of the Bush administration, as far
as it went, was accurate. But it raised questions that Gore made
no attempt to seriously address. How was it possible for such
a state of affairs to arise? Where was the Democratic Party when
these policies were being implemented? Why did Gores party,
which claims to represent the interests of the common man, allow
the Republican right to ride roughshod over the basic interests
and rights of the American people?
Gores gesture toward addressing such questions was a
lame evasion. Maybe one reason that false impressions have
played a bigger role than they should, he said, is
that both Congress and the news media have been less vigilant
and exacting than they should have been in the way they have tried
to hold the administration accountable.... It seems obvious that
big and important issues like the Bush economic policy and the
first preemptive war in US history should have been debated more
thoroughly in Congress...
Obvious indeed! So obvious that Gores pose of puzzlement
over the lack of any significant opposition from the Democratic
Party cannot be taken seriously.
The Democrats are, in fact, complicit in the campaign to deceive
the American people and justify military aggression against Iraq.
They have capitulated on every major political questionfrom
tax giveaways to the rich, to cuts in social programs, to unprecedented
attacks on democratic rights.
The Democratic Party, it should be recalled, controlled the
US Senate from the end of May, 2001 until January of this year,
during which time it provided indispensable support for the antidemocratic
Patriot Act as well as the congressional resolution authorizing
Bush to carry out his preemptive war against Iraq.
Nor did the reactionary policies of the Bush administration,
as one might surmise from Gores speech, come out of the
blue. The preceding Clinton-Gore administration presided over
the Democratic Partys final repudiation of the social reformism
with which the Democrats had been identified in an earlier period.
It oversaw an escalation of American militarism, launching US
bombings or interventions against Iraq, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan
and Somalia. Its actions helped pave the way for the political
agenda that the Bush administration is now so ferociously pursuing.
Gore himself played a crucial role in delivering the White
House to those whom he now indicts. He adapted himself to the
impeachment conspiracy against Clinton and, in the 2000 election,
despite having won half a million more votes than Bush, quickly
acquiesced in an electoral coup by the allies of the Republican
right on the US Supreme Court, which halted the counting of votes
in Florida and installed Bush in the White House.
Since the 2000 election, the policy of Gores party has
centered on concealing the real implications of the Bush administrations
policies from the American people and covering up for its crimes.
For whom does Gore speak?
Gore himself is neither a political innocent nor an independent
actor. The former vice president is the son of a US Senator and
scion of a prominent political dynasty. He knows far more than
he chose to reveal in his New York University speech, including
the fact that the Republican Party and the Bush administration
are beholden to forces of an outright fascistic characterfrom
the Christian fundamentalist right, to unreconstructed white supremacists
and anti-Semites, to gun-crazed terrorist elements, to forces
in the corporate elite who consider any restraints on private
wealth and profit an intolerable infringement on the prerogatives
of capital.
Gores interventions are carried out in consultation and
coordination with powerful elements within the corporate and political
establishment. In the final analysis, he serves sections of the
same financial oligarchy that propelled Bush to power and has
backed his policies.
This is underscored by the circumstances surrounding Gores
last major policy speech prior to his August 7 appearance in New
York. In September of 2002, he appeared before an audience in
San Francisco and attacked the Bush administrations doctrine
of preventive war, as well as its specific rationale for employing
this policy against Iraq. He declared at that time that the greatest
fear internationally was Not about what the terrorist networks
are going to do, but about what were going to do.
The speech earned him the blistering censure of the Bush administration
and the corporate media, as well as the stony approbation of his
own partys leadership.
Gores remarks at that time cut across a broad consensus
within the ruling elite to invade and occupy Iraq, in the hope
that a quick and successful war, followed by a relatively painless
occupation, would reap both long-term and short-term benefits.
Washington and Wall Street have long coveted Iraqs rich
oil resources, and the demise of the Soviet Union encouraged those
sections of the establishment that had been pushing for direct
US military and political control of the Persian Gulf. There was,
as well, the hope that war in Iraq would divert attention from
the mounting crisis at home and provide a quick fix for an increasingly
ominous economic situation.
Gore got the message. Once those upon whom he based his hopes
of mounting a new bid for the White House expressed their displeasure,
he accepted their verdict and announced in December of last year
that he would not stand as a presidential candidate in the 2004
election.
Why Gore has reemerged
So why is he back? Gores speech came only one day after
former New York governor Mario Cuomo publicly urged him to seek
the Democratic presidential nomination in 2004. Despite Gores
repeated assurances that he is not a candidate, the New York University
speech had all the trappings of a campaign appearance, with the
former vice president speaking against a backdrop of US flags
and following up his remarks with a handshaking foray through
the crowd and a kiss from his wife Tipper.
If Gore is once again testing the political waters for a possible
second run for the presidency, he is doing so not simply on his
own account. Rather, he is acting at the behest of elements within
US ruling circles who are well aware of the profound and widespread
popular opposition to the Bush administration, and the failure
of the Democratic Party to provide a safe channel for rising discontent.
There can be little doubt that he and those behind him sense
a sharp shift in the popular mood. The hope for a quick and lucrative
war has evaporated amid mounting popular discontent over the daily
death toll in occupied Iraq. Hostility to the existing political
setup is being exacerbated by growing unemployment lines and widening
social inequality. Gores speech is indicative of deepening
divisions and a growing sense in official circles that the Bush
administration is in crisis and is politically vulnerable.
It is no accident that the speech came in the midst of the
political crisis surrounding the California recall election. The
attempt of extreme-right elements in the Republican Party to overturn
last Novembers gubernatorial election in the nations
largest state has had the unanticipated consequence of unleashing
forces that have been long suppressed within the straitjacket
of a political monopoly exercised by two reactionary bourgeois
parties.
Gores choice of venue for his August 7 speech was significant.
The meeting was composed primarily of students and organized by
moveon.org, a group that characterizes itself as a grassroots
movement of online activists. It represents the left
flank of the Democratic Party. This has hardly been the political
base of the former vice president, who was a leading figure in
the Democratic Leadership Council, a caucus formed in the early
1980s for the purpose of shifting the party decisively to the
right.
Gores turn toward student youth and the layers around
moveon.org represents an attempt to breathe life into a party
that has become a political semi-corpse. His aim in cultivating
such elements is to gain some credibility for the Democratic Party,
and provide it with a left face in order to better
contain the mounting opposition to Bush and prevent an emerging
mass movement of social protest from developing along politically
independent and socialist lines.
The public reappearance of Al Gore as a progressive
critic of the Bush administration is a manifestation of a deepening
political and social crisis in America, and the fear within ruling
circles that not only the Bush administration, but the entire
two-party setup is on the verge of breaking apart.
See Also:
Al Gore and the politics
of oligarchy
[21 December 2002]
Al Gore backs Bushs
war plans
[20 February 2002]
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