|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Democratic candidate Kerry vows to maintain US troops in Iraq
for years
By Patrick Martin
17 July 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal on Thursday,
Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry declared that, if he
were elected, US troops would remain in Iraq throughout his first
term in officeto the end of 2008. The Democratic candidate
also suggested that the Bush administration was more likely to
withdraw troops quickly than a Kerry administration.
Both the content of the interview and the choice of publicationthe
Journal has been the most vehement media advocate of the
war in Iraq and is one of the chief editorial voices of the extreme
right within the American political establishmentare politically
calculated to send a message. Kerry is reassuring the US ruling
elite, including the far-right elements who now back Bush, that
he can be trusted to carry forward the US conquest and occupation
of Iraq.
Kerry set three conditions that would have to be met for removing
US troops from Iraq. He said it was necessary to measure
the level of stability in the country, to measure
the outlook for the stability to hold, and to measure
the ability...of their security forces to defend the country.
Until then, he said, I will provide for the worlds
need not to have a failed state in Iraq.
The main difference between Kerry and Bush on Iraq boils down
to Bushs continued, albeit cynical and false, claim that
the US mission in Iraq is to bring freedom and democracy,
words that were nearly absent in Kerrys discussion with
the Wall Street Journal.
It is worth noting that the three criteria set by Kerry for
success in Iraq would describe the regime of former president
Saddam Hussein. All three criteriastability, lasting stability,
and securitywould be satisfied by the establishment of a
military-police dictatorship headed by a new Saddam, such as the
current US-backed prime minister, Iyad Allawi.
Kerry represents that section of the US ruling elite that wants
to set aside Bushs doubletalk about democratization. This
was necessary for gulling the American people during the run-up
to the war, they concede, but now it is time to get on with their
real business, by establishing the security conditions in which
American capital can extract profits from Iraqs huge oil
reserves and from lucrative contracts with the US-controlled puppet
regime in Baghdad.
As the Journal summed up the interview, Mr. Kerry
is determined to present himself as a leader of strength, one
who would more effectively pursue the same goals Mr. Bush has
established for progress in Iraq and the broader anti-terror war.
Much of Kerrys criticism of Bush was, if anything, from
the right. He said that Bush had not consulted sufficiently with
the military brass, saying that as president he would listen
to them with greater respect than this president and his secretary
of defense did. He also promised greater success in wooing
other countries to contribute troops to the occupation, saying
that it would take a new president to repair the damage done to
US alliances.
Kerry warned that Bush might attempt a too-precipitate withdrawal
from Iraq, which might endanger the new US-backed regime. Ive
heard said by many people, he told the Journal, that
the White House might even withdraw some troops before the November
elections, in order to appease the growing popular opposition
to the war. Im prepared for any political move,
Kerry said. Id put nothing past them.
Though Kerry said the US presence in Iraq was not an
open-ended commitment, he refused to give any target end
date for an end to the occupation. At the end of my first
term I would consider it a failure of my diplomacy if we havent
reduced the number significantly, he told the Journal,
but I certainly cant tell you numbers.
Antiwar opinion excluded
Kerrys statements are only the most glaring demonstration
of a remarkable and instructive political fact. Although the majority
of the American people now regard the US invasion of Iraq as a
mistake, and well over 40 percent believe that US troops should
be withdrawn immediately, the official two-party system has conspired
to produce a presidential election campaign in which there is
no outlet for antiwar public opinion.
The Republican campaign to reelect Bush is, of course, premised
on all-out support for the war and the endless repetition of long-exposed
lies about Saddam Husseins connections to terrorism and
the claim that Bushs policy of military aggression and preemptive
war has made the American people safer.
The Democratic campaign to elect Kerry criticizes Bushs
management of the war in Iraq, but it does not challenge any of
the fundamental premises on which the war was basedand which
Kerry himself supported in his October 2002 vote in the US Senate
to give Bush the authority to attack Iraq.
As the WSWS has previously explained [see The
rise and fall of Howard Dean: An object lesson in Democratic Party
politics], the contest for the Democratic nomination
was carefully managed by the partys leadership and the corporate-controlled
media to prevent the war issue from becoming the focus of the
presidential campaign. antiwar sentiment was responsible for the
rise of former Vermont Governor Howard Dean to front-runner status
last year. Most of Deans rivals, including Kerry and his
vice-presidential running mate, John Edwards, adapted to the antiwar
views of Democratic primary voters as part of their successful
effort to wrest the nomination away from him.
The result is that although the overwhelming majority of Democratic
voters oppose the war and favor withdrawal of US troops as rapidly
as possible, the Democratic nominee and the Democratic Party platform
are committed to keeping US troops in Iraq for as long as is required
to assure the desired outcome: a stable, pro-US regime that gives
American imperialism a dominant strategic position in the Middle
East and makes the second-largest oil reserves in the world available
to US corporate interests.
The drafting of the Democratic platform illustrates the exclusion
of antiwar views. The platform contains 16,000 words and is 35
pages long, but it takes no position on the central political
issue confronting the American people. The draft language on the
war in Iraq declares: People of good will disagree about
whether America should have gone to war in Iraq. There is
much discussion in the platform about what should be done nowinvolving
the United Nations, bringing in more international support, etc.but
the platform simply declines to comment on whether the war was
justified or not.
Instead, the Democrats call for increasing the size of the
US military by 40,000 troops, intensifying US support for Israels
war against the Palestinian people, and maintaining a more-or-less
indefinite occupation of Iraq. We cannot allow a failed
state in Iraq that inevitably would become a haven for terrorists
and a destabilizing force in the Middle East, the draft
platform reportedly says.
The platform committee rejected language calling the war a
mistake and proposing a specific date for the withdrawal of US
forces. Supporters of Congressman Dennis Kucinich, who ran as
a peace candidate in the presidential primaries, dropped their
call for antiwar language and agreed not to press the issue on
the convention floor. Kucinichs representative at the platform
discussion, Ana Dias of Hawaii, said Kucinich had instructed her
to drop the fight, adding, We do want to be unified.
Kerry and his running mate Edwards took a similarly noncommittal
position on the decision to invade Iraq in joint interviews last
week with several newspapers and on the CBS News program 60
Minutes. Both were asked whether they regretted their
votes to authorize the war, in light of the Senate Intelligence
Committee report that the Bush administrations grounds for
war with Iraqpossession of weapons of mass destruction and
ties to terroristswere false.
The Democrats refused to give a straight answer on whether
they would have voted for the war, knowing what they know now.
Edwards summed up the position by declaring: trying to go
back and reevaluate what we would have done, had we had, hypothetically,
had this information or that information, is not useful to us
now.
Adding arrogance to evasion, Kerry told the New York Times,
Look, the vote is not today and thats it. I agree
completely with Senator Edwards. Its a waste of time. Its
not what this is about. We voted the way we voted based on the
information in front of us, based on that moment in time. And
it was the right vote at that time based on that information.
Period.
The SEP alternative
Kerrys open embrace of the war shows the political bankruptcy
of the position adopted by many prominent liberal opponents of
the war, including The Nation magazine and such figures
as filmmaker Michael Moore and Professor Noam Chomsky. They present
Kerry as a vehicle for the expression of mass antiwar sentiment,
despite his repeated and unmistakable declarations that the US
must continue the military occupation of Iraq until a reliable
puppet regime has been established.
These liberals continue to support Kerry on the grounds that
he is the only possible alternative to the reelection of Bush.
That no one other than Bush or Kerry will be elected president
on November 2 is, of course, true. But that is not an argument
for supporting or voting for Kerry. It is an argument for rejecting
the US two-party system, which offers such constricted and reactionary
alternatives to the American people.
The central issue in the election is the effective political
disenfranchisement, not only of antiwar voters, but of the working
class as a wholethat is, the vast majority of the American
people. Bush, Cheney, Kerry and Edwards are all millionaire politicians,
vetted by and dependent on the narrow stratum of millionaires
and corporate chieftains who control the two big-business parties
and monopolize American political life.
An alternative to the two-party system can develop only through
an independent political mobilization of the working class and
the construction of a new mass political party, based on a socialist
program. The Socialist Equality Party campaign in the 2004 electionsBill
Van Auken and Jim Lawrence for president and vice president, and
our congressional and state legislative candidatesprovides
the means for taking forward the struggle to achieve this historic
and urgent task.
See Also:
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
presidential candidate: Kerry-Edwards: Democrats finalize their
pro-war, millionaires ticket
[7 July 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections: Statement of the Socialist Equality
Party
[28 April 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |