|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Democratic candidates back Bushs Iraq war spending bill
By Patrick Martin
29 September 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Last Thursdays debate among the 10 Democratic candidates
for president, held at Pace University in New York City, was a
largely undistinguished and unremarkable affair. The seven major
candidatesthose whose campaigns have received sufficient
funding from corporate America and the wealthy to be considered
viabletraded criticisms of each other, while ignoring the
three most liberal candidates, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, former
Ambassador Carol Moseley-Braun, and Reverend Al Sharpton, whose
lack of financial backing renders them irrelevant to the outcome
of the contest.
Virtually all the critical comments related to domestic policy:
Dean and Gephardt criticized Lieberman and Kerry for doing the
bidding of big corporations on trade rules and globalization;
Gephardt and Kerry accused Dean of siding with Newt Gingrich on
cutting Medicare; Kerry, Edwards and Lieberman criticized Dean
and Gephardt for wanting to increase taxes on working class and
middle class families.
In other words, the candidates all took turns attacking each
other from the left. This was a peculiar but politically necessary
maneuver, since all of the Democrats espouse policies that fall
within the narrow limits permitted in American capitalist politics:
ranging essentially from conservative to ultra-conservative. Given
that the role of the Democratic Party is to sustain the illusion
of a choice while blocking any real alternative to the right-wing
consensus, each Democratic candidate seeks to posture as a defender
of the working people or the middle class, while indicting his
rivals as beholden to large corporate interests. At the same time,
each candidate avidly seeks as much money as possible from the
multimillionaires to finance his campaign.
Remarkably, none of the internecine sniping concerned the war
on Iraq, despite the fact that most of his rivals criticized Dean,
the supposed antiwar candidate. Dean currently leads the pack
in fundraising and in polls in key primary states, thanks to a
successful campaign of outreach on the Internet, promoting him
as the strongest opponent of Bushs war policies. But unlike
previous debates, there was little or no disagreement among the
Democrats over Bushs decision to invade and conquer Iraq.
Instead, the debate saw a demonstration of party unity in the
response to the question posed to the entire panel by moderator
Brian Williams of MSNBC and the other media questioners. They
asked all the candidates to give their views on the Bush administrations
request for $87 billion in new spending to maintain the US occupation
of Iraq and Afghanistan. All but Kucinich and Sharpton indicated
that they would support the request, and they used virtually identical
language, candidate after candidate, citing the necessity to support
the troops.
Dean: Even though I did not support the war in the beginning,
I think we have to support our troops.
Clark: We need to make this operation a success. We need
to support our troops.
Lieberman: We have no choice.... We have those 140,000
American troops there. We need to protect them.
Graham: I will support whatever is required for the troops
in Iraq.
Edwards: We have young men and women in a shooting gallery
over there right now. It would be enormously irresponsible for
any of us not to do whats necessary to support them.
Moseley-Braun: It is absolutely, I think, critical that
we not cut and run, that we provide our troops with what they
need.
Kerry and Gephardt spoke in a similar vein, but emphasizing
the need to get a more comprehensive strategy from the Bush administration
before providing funding, and calling for making the wealthy share
the burden along with the soldiers and middle class taxpayers.
Not one of these candidates had the intellectual or moral honesty
to explain what they meant by supporting the troops.
Providing the troops what they most need and want would be a simple
matter: give each one a plane ticket out of Baghdad to return
to their families. Withdraw every American soldier, sailor and
airman from Iraq and the entire Middle East.
What the Democratsand Bushmean by supporting
the troops is to spend billions upon billions to enable American
soldiers to continue killing and maiming Iraqis and destroying
their country through the use of bombs, missiles, tanks, artillery
and other weapons. And in the course of continuing the criminal
occupation of Iraq, such support guarantees that hundreds
more American soldiers will be killed, thousands wounded and countless
more psychologically traumatized.
The Democratic candidates essentially agree to put aside the
question of the origins and legitimacy of the waron which
they were sharply dividedin favor of a discussion of the
best way to maintain American domination in postwar Iraq. This
means accepting the war of aggression launched by the Bush administration
and disputing only the best way to hold onto the fruits of this
criminal act.
Thus there are proposals to offer concessions to the European
powers to insure more international troops and UN backing for
the US-controlled puppet regime in Baghdad. Or there are arguments
over how to finance the continued US occupation, how to divide
that burden among various segments of American society. But there
is no questioning of the legitimacy of US occupation as such.
Not one of the Democratic candidatesor the media questionersmentioned
the comments the week before by Senator Edward Kennedy on the
political motivations for launching the war with Iraq. In an interview
with the Associated Press, Kennedy charged that Bush and his top
political adviser, Karl Rove, launched the war for political advantage.
There was no imminent threat, he said. This
was made up in Texas, announced in January to the Republican leadership
that war was going to take place and was going to be good politically.
This whole thing was a fraud.
Kennedys remark hit a nerve in the Bush administration
and among congressional Republican leaders, who howled that the
Democrat was guilty of virtual treason for questioning the rationale
for the war.
The longtime leader of Senate liberals was only pointing to
an obvious truth, even if it is one which the American media studiously
ignores. This truth has definite implications: if Bush & Co.
launched a war for political purposes, they are guilty of war
crimes under the precedents set by the Nuremberg Tribunal. A political
leader who took such charges seriously would demand the immediate
impeachment of Bush and Cheney, and the resignation of all those
officials who are co-conspirators in the war plot.
But neither Kennedy himself, nor his Democratic colleagues
in the Senate, nor any of the presidential candidates at the New
York debate have pursued the issue. The representatives of moribund
liberalism do not take themselves seriously, and they believe,
like Bush and his cronies, that the domination of American politics
by an ultra-right clique is permanent and unchallengeable.
See Also:
US Congress passes $368 billion for Pentagon
war machine
[26 September 2003]
Democratic Party leaders embrace
Bushs war of aggression
[28 March 2003]
Leading Democrats line up
behind Bush on Iraq war
[8 February 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |