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Kerry proposes 40,000 more troops, as Democrats back Bush
war spending
By Patrick Martin
19 February 2005
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Led by Senator John Kerry, the defeated presidential candidate,
leading congressional Democrats said this week they would support
the $82 billion supplemental funding bill proposed by the Bush
administration to finance its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Unlike
previous votes on Iraq war spending, not a single prominent Democrat
has come out in opposition.
Bush sent the request to Congress on February 14. The request
includes $75 billion for military activities in Iraq and Afghanistan,
with the remaining $7 billion for reconstruction costs in those
two countries, as well as aid for countries devastated by the
Asian tsunami, emergency aid to refugees from the Darfur region
of Sudan, and funding to establish a new intelligence center under
the director of national intelligence.
One portion of the spending underscores the growth of the insurgency
fighting the US occupation of Iraq: more than $12 billion is earmarked
to repair or replace tanks, helicopters and other weaponry damaged
or destroyed in the war. Another $5 billion is for restructuring
Army divisions into smaller brigade-size formations that the Pentagon
believes are more effective in fighting a guerrilla war.
The spending request includes two other notable sums: $650
million to build a new US embassy in Baghdad, the largest in the
world, and $400 million to reimburse US allies for the cost of
deploying their troops in Iraq. The first amount signifies that
the Bush administration is spending nearly as much on a new fortress
to protect the US overseers of Iraq as its entire outlay on tsunami
relief, which totals $950 million. The second amount is an outright
bribe to client states which have dispatched small numbers of
troops to give the illusion that the US-British occupation involves
a broader coalition.
Congressional Democrats criticized the Bush supplemental request
on the grounds that it was too small, and promised to introduce
amendments that would add as much as $8 billion to the overall
cost of the emergency bill.
Senator Kerry outlined his proposal in comments to the press
Tuesday. He said he would try to attach a proposal to add 40,000
troops to the US military establishment, 30,000 to the Army and
10,000 to the Marines, as well as to raise death benefits for
soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, and provide other financial
compensation for soldiers and their families.
Senator Harry Reid, the Democratic minority leader in the Senate,
said, Getting our troops and their families what they need
and deserve has always been a Democratic priority, and the first
bill we introduced this Congress reflects the commitment of Sen.
Kerry and the rest of the caucus to stand with our troops.
He said the Democratic caucus had adopted the proposed troop increase
as one of its top 10 legislative priorities for the current session
of Congress.
The Bush administration included the increased death benefitfrom
$12,420 to $100,000in the emergency spending bill, but limited
it to those who die in combat zones, retroactive to the US invasion
of Afghanistan in October 2001. Kerrys version of the benefit
would be available to the families of all soldiers whose deaths
are service-related, regardless of where they diedan effort
to outdo the Republicans in support our troops demagogy.
House Democrats also voiced their support for the war funding
bill. House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland declared,
Democrats are hopeful we are successful in Iraq and
Afghanistan, while criticizing the administration for being extraordinarily
wrong in its cost estimates. John Spratt of South Carolina,
the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, indicated he would
vote for the bill, adding, through a spokesman, He suspects
most people will, because we have troops in the field.
In September 2003, 115 House Democrats voted against the supplemental
military funding bill. This year that number could fall to a handful.
The solidarity of the Democrats with the Bush administrations
policy of military intervention in the Middle East was demonstrated
as well in their response to the White House threats against Syria.
At a hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Wednesday,
liberal Democrat Barbara Boxer joined with her Republican counterparts
in declaring that the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri should be an occasion for stepped-up pressure on
Syria. Boxer, a co-sponsor of the Syrian Accountability Act, called
on the administration to use the current crisis to save
Lebanon and give to them their independence.
Kerry was among the Senate Democrats who voted against the
2003 war funding bill, in a transparently opportunistic effort
to appeal to antiwar sentiment that was fueling the then front-running
presidential campaign of Howard Dean. After Kerry won the Democratic
nomination, he faced continual attacks by Republicans on the inconsistency
of his position, since he had voted in October 2002 to authorize
Bush to go to war, and then voted against the money required to
carry out the invasion and occupation.
As during the election campaign, Kerry found himself flummoxed
as he attempted to explain the twists and turns in his own position
on the warin this case his decision to vote for more money
now, after having voted against it in September 2003. He called
passage of the new bill important to our being successful
and to the completion of the process. Asked why the same
considerations had not applied a year-and-a-half ago, when he
was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, he declared,
Mine was the right vote at the time and I wouldnt
change it if we went back to that point in time because it was
the right vote. We didnt have a plan and they didnt
spend the money correctly.
It would be absurd to suggest that the current situation in
Iraq represents progress over the conditions that prevailed in
September 2003when the insurgency was at an embryonic stage
and only a few hundred US soldiers had been killed. At that point,
the Pentagon was still projecting that most US troops would be
out of Iraq sometime in 2004. Now the outlook is for an indefinite
full-strength occupation of the country.
On the same day that Bush submitted his supplemental war funding
bill, Kerry delivered a speech entitled Strengthening Americas
Military to an audience of veterans in Worcester, Massachusetts,
elaborating his proposal to increase the number of US soldiers.
While laced with criticism of the Bush administrations handling
of the war in Iraq, Kerry cited a recent CIA National Intelligence
Estimate on the prospect of more failed states where
the US government would be required to intervene. Kerry embraced
this perspective, declaring:
Too many of the planners who designed todays defense
policies are still mired in the post-Vietnam doctrine of only
fighting big wars against strong hostile states, not
wars in and against failed states in which enemy armies
are the least of our problems. Wars are won, not merely by breaking
the enemys army, but by breaking his will to fight. But
in the decade after the 1991 Gulf War, we built a military prepared
to break armies. Weve invested in the tools of war and we
are supreme in our ability to project force around the world.
Weve failed to invest sufficiently in the types of forces
that win the peaceweve failed to invest in the people,
the men and women, who turn battlefield success into strategic
victory. Combined with failed diplomacy and poor judgment in Iraq,
these failures have produced an Army stretched to the breaking
point.
Kerry concluded, One thing is clear: the American military
today is both too small and ill-designed for todays dangers.
A force designed for the post-Cold War 1990s is too small for
the war on terror and the challenges of the new century. The administrations
failure to address this issue, quickly and wisely, has only deepened
the hole in which we find ourselves.
Kerrys position demonstrates the folly of any belief
that the election of the Democratic candidate last November would
have in any significant way changed US policy in Iraq, let alone
brought a speedy end to the war. The Democratic Party, like the
Republican, is an imperialist party committed to defend the worldwide
interests of the American ruling elite. Central to these interests
is establishing US hegemonic control over the oil resources of
the Middle East and Central Asia, the real motive for the invasions
of Afghanistan and Iraq and the steady buildup of American military
power throughout the region.
See Also:
Kerry rejects call for Iraq troop withdrawal
Defeated Democratic candidate on Meet the Press
[1 February 2005]
Congressional Democrats line
up behind Bush request for $80 billion in war spending
[29 January 2005]
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