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White House aide Karl Rove witch-hunts Iraq war opponents
By Patrick Martin
25 June 2005
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In a heavy-handed effort to intimidate opponents of the US
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, top White House political aide Karl
Rove delivered a speech Wednesday in New York City that all but
accused critics of these wars of giving aid and comfort to the
terrorists. Rove declared that while the Bush administration responded
to the 9/11 attacks by waging war, liberals responded by offering
therapy and understanding for our attackers.
He denounced recent comments by Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois,
who compared the methods used at the US detention camp at Guantánamo
Bay to those of fascist and Stalinist dictatorships. The previous
day, Durbin had made a sniveling recantation on the floor of the
Senate.
Noting that Durbins original statement had been rebroadcast
on Al Jazeera, Rove said it was certainly putting Americas
men and women in uniform in greater danger. He concluded,
No more needs to be said about the motives of liberals.
These remarks were a calculated political provocation. Rove
delivered them to a convention of the Conservative Party of New
York, a rump organization of ultra-rightists that generally lends
its line on the statewide ballot to Republican candidates. He
spoke in Manhattan, traditionally a stronghold of Democratic Party
liberalism, only a few miles from the World Trade Center site
where nearly 3,000 people died.
The tone of the speech harkens back to the worst days of McCarthyite
witch-hunting in the 1950s, when Republicanand Democraticredbaiters
sought to criminalize every form of left-wing political activity,
branding as spies and traitors those who fought for socialist
principles or opposed American militarism, racial injustice and
corporate domination.
Rove combined allegations of disloyalty and sympathy towards
terrorism with militarist demagogy. September 11 was not a time
for moderation and restraint, he declared. It
was a moment to summon our national willand to brandish
steel.
Implying that Democratic Party liberals were little better
than traitors, Rove continued, Conservatives saw what happened
to us on 9/11 and said: we will defeat our enemies. Liberals saw
what happened to us and said: we must understand our enemies.
Conservatives see the United States as a great nation engaged
in a noble cause; liberals see the United States and they see
... Nazi concentration camps, Soviet gulags, and the killing fields
of Cambodia.
A beleaguered administration
Behind this reactionary outburst is an intensifying political
crisis confronting the Bush administration, the Republican Party,
and the ruling elite as a whole, the driving force of which is
the sharp turn in American public opinion against the war in Iraq.
Polls have shown a dramatic increase in unease over the war and
outright opposition to its continuation, with clear majorities
believing that the war was launched on false pretenses and favoring
withdrawal of some or all American troops.
Prominent senators in both parties have begun to question the
Bush administrations strategy and tactics in Iraq. Republican
Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, a Vietnam veteran, declared last week
that America is losing in Iraq and that the Bush administrations
claims of steady progress were completely disconnected from
reality about the war.
Joseph Biden, the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, warned in a speech June 21 that the military position
of the United States in Iraq was politically untenable, and that
the Iraqi government established by the occupation had little
authority outside the Green Zone in Baghdad.
The Bush administrations optimistic rhetoric was completely
at odds with the reality, he said, adding, This disconnect,
I believe, is fueling cynicism that is undermining the single
most important weapon we need to give our troops to be able to
do their job, and that is the unyielding support of the American
people. That support is waning.
The consternation within ruling circles was on display Thursday
at Senate and House committee hearings on the progress of the
war, where Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and three top
military officers testified. More significant than the highly
publicized exchange between Rumsfeld and Democratic Senator Edward
Kennedy, who called for Rumsfeld to resign, were the concerns
expressed by fervent war hawks on the senate panel.
Democrat Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut warned, I fear
that American public opinion is tipping away from this effort.
Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said, Im
here to tell you sir, in the most patriotic state that I can imagine,
people are beginning to question ... the public views this every
day, Mr. Secretary, more and more like Vietnam.
Another Republican, John Ensign of Nevada, said he believed
the US military presence inspires more insurgents,
and added, The only way they can win is back here at home,
defeating us politically if we lose the support of the American
people.
General John Abizaid, head of the US Central Command, responsible
for both Iraq and Afghanistan, told the Senate panel that soldiers
in the field were becoming aware of the shift in public opinion
at home, and were asking him whether or not theyve
got support from the American people.
He made the obligatory claim that US soldiers were confident
of victory, but continued, in an open criticism of Congress and
the media, When I look back here, at what I see is happening
in Washington, within the Beltway, Ive never seen the lack
of confidence greater.
Rumsfeld also blamed his congressional critics for declining
public support for the occupation of Iraq. If the American people
were turning against the war, he said, I have a feeling
theyre getting pushed.
It is an article of faith, both in the military brass and in
the leading personnel of the Bush administration, that the United
States won a military victory in the Vietnam War, but the victory
was forfeited because of the activities of the antiwar movement,
aided and abetted by sections of the Democratic Party.
This conception recalls the stab-in-the-back theory
peddled by Hitler and the Nazis, who blamed Germanys defeat
in World War I on the opposition of Jews, Socialists and Communists
at home. This served both to cover up the imperialist nature of
the war and to provide a suitable domestic scapegoat for the crisis
of German capitalism.
The same issue arises in relation to the war in Iraq. Bush,
Rove & Co. have drawn the lesson from Vietnam that all opposition
to the war must be branded illegitimate, even treasonous. Roves
speech was a preemptive strike, not so much against the tepid
criticism of the Democrats, but against the profound and deep
opposition to the war among tens of millions of working people.
It is part of a political counteroffensive by the White House
leading up to Bushs scheduled speech on the Iraq, to be
delivered on national television June 28.
Rove rehearsed the themes of his New York speech the day before
he delivered it, in an interview on MSNBC, where he alternately
denied that a majority of the American people had turned against
the war and claimed that, if they had, they were giving in to
the strategy of the insurgents. We need to remember,
he said, thats part of the goal of the insurgents.
Their goal is to weaken our resolve by being so violent and so
dangerous and so ugly that they hope that we will turn tail and
run.
Democrats on their knees
In staging such provocations, the Bush administration counts
on the spinelessness and impotence of the Democratic Party. Roves
characterization of the liberals as inwardly sympathetic to terrorism
and Al Qaeda is a slander. But his depiction of Democrats as cowardly
and mealy-mouthed is apt when it comes to their role as the so-called
opposition to the Bush administration.
Senator Durbins blubbering apology on the Senate floorretracting,
for the second time, his comparison of Guantánamo to a
Nazi or Stalinist concentration campwas followed by Democratic
bluster Thursday in response to Roves speech. None of the
leading Democrats would call Roves speech what it was: an
attack on democratic rights and an attempt to deny the legitimacy
of political opposition to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead,
they protested that there were no divisions between liberals and
conservatives over the war on terror.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Rove knows full
well, as do all Americans, that our country came together after
9/11. Defeated 2004 presidential candidate John Kerry called
Roves statements an outrageous attempt to divide the
nation.
Senator Jon Corzine of New Jersey said that, after the September
11 attacks, we werent divided. There were no liberals,
progressives ... saying that we did not have a need to respond.
He cited the resolution authorizing the Afghanistan war, giving
Bush a blank check to use all necessary and appropriate
force, which passed the Senate 98-0 and the House 420-1.
The subservience of the Democratic Party is rooted in its class
position. No less than the Republicans, it is a party of the capitalist
ruling elite that defends the interests of American imperialism
in the world. Its differences with the Bush administration are
purely tactical. They concern the methods being employed, not
the goals.
Thus Senator Durbin can denounce torture in Guantánamo,
and Senator Kennedy can blast Rumsfelds incompetence or
Bushs lies, but not a single leading Democrat will say plainly
that the war in Iraq is a predatory war of conquest, aimed at
securing oil resources and a decisive strategic advantage for
the United States over its imperialist rivals in Europe and Asia.
Both parties support the imperialist aims and goals of the
occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. But the failure to subdue
the insurgencies in both countries has produced differences over
how to proceed.
If the Republicans fear that any criticism of their conduct
of the war opens the door to a Vietnam-style collapse of political
support, the Democrats fear that the arrogance and incompetence
of the Republicans are fueling opposition to the war, both within
the United States and internationally.
Thus Biden warned in his June 21 speech that the future,
if it results in failure, will be a disaster. He presented
his recommendations for a change of tactics in Iraq, including
an appeal for a NATO blocking force to patrol the Iraq-Syria border,
as the product of consultations with US military authorities in
Iraq. And he claimed that if the American people opposed the war,
it was not because of the death toll but because there is
not a plan for success.
Biden, the chief Democratic spokesman on foreign policy in
the Senate, said in his speech: I want to see the president
of the United States succeed in Iraq. It is necessary for the
president to succeed in Iraq. His success is Americas success.
And his failure is Americas failure. So any good-thinking
American would want to see him succeed in Iraq.
See Also:
Durbins tearful apology
Democrats make cowardly retreat on Guantánamo torture
[24 June 2005]
Bush administration defends Guantánamo
prison camp
[20 June 2005]
Bush faces growing opposition to Iraq
war
[18 June 2005]
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