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Uproar in US Congress over Iraq withdrawal vote
By Bill Van Auken
21 November 2005
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The US House of Representatives was thrown into an uproar Friday
when the Republican majority forced a vote on a sham resolution
calling for the immediate withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq.
The measure was placed on the agenda at the conclusion of the
Houses final pre-vacation session in a bid to embarrass
the Democrats and retaliate against Democratic Congressman Jack
Murtha of Pennsylvania, who the previous day had called for a
pullout of US occupation forces over the next six months.
Murthas proposal shook politicians in both parties and
was an unmistakable sign of the deepening crisis confronting the
American intervention in Iraq. The 16-term congressman spent 37
years in the Marine Corps, retiring as a colonel. As a veteran
officer and the most experienced congressional figure in defense
appropriations, he enjoys the closest ties with the military brass.
The raucous congressional debate came after White House Press
Secretary Scott McClellan made the absurd charge that Murtha,
a consistent hawk who supported both the first Persian Gulf war
and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, was endorsing the policy
positions of Michael Moore and the extreme liberal wing of the
Democratic Party. His call for a rapid withdrawal of US
troops, McClellan said, amounted to surrender to the terrorists.
The New York Times reported on the House session: Republicans
and Democrats shouted, howled and slung insults on the House floor,
adding that the debate descended into a fury over President
Bushs handling of the war and a leading Democrats
call to bring the troops home. The Washington Post
reported that Democratic and Republican congressmen nearly
came to blows.
The fury was triggered by a remark from Ohio Republican Representative
Jean Schmidtthe most junior member of the Housewho
declared that one of her constituents, a Marine, had told her
to send Congressman Murtha a message: that cowards cut and
run, Marines never do.
The insult to one of the most senior members of the House,
a Vietnam veteran, was a violation of the bodys customary
decorum as well as its rules, which bar members from directly
addressing each other.
In response, Rep. Harold Ford of Tennessee and other Democrats
shouted and lunged toward the Republican side of the chamber.
Newsweek commented, The melee was so intense that
it brought the soothing presence of Rep. Tom DeLay from his secure
undisclosed location, and Schmidt eventually apologized.
The Times quoted two Republican congressmen Sunday claiming
that Schmidt made the remark unaware that Murtha was a former
Marine. If this is true, it is testament to the abysmal intellectual
level of the crop of Republican House members like Schmidt who
have been elevated to Congress through appeals to reaction and
the backwardness of the Christian right.
Most House observers, however, saw the statement as a deliberate
provocation by a Republican congressional leadership that has
become increasingly desperate over the plummeting popular support
for Bush, the war in Iraq, and the partys domestic political
agenda.
In the end, the Republican measure calling for immediate
withdrawal was voted down by an overwhelming margin, with
403 voting against and just 3 Democrats voting yes.
Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi had urged Democratic congressmen
to vote against the measure.
In the wake of the vote, the Bush administration continued
its provocative attacks on Democratic critics of the administrations
war policy, calling forward military officers to attack its opponents
and making threatening statements implying that those opposed
to the war were endangering US troops.
The White House knows that Murtha speaks not just for himself,
but for significant sections of the Pentagons uniformed
command, with whom he has built up close political ties over decades.
Vietnam was the formative experience of many of these senior officers,
who once again see the threat of the US military disintegrating
under the grinding pressure of a dirty colonial war.
The evidence that the war represents a catastrophic and humiliating
failure grows daily. The US death toll in Iraq has reached 2,094,
with 67 American soldiers killed in the first 20 days of this
month alone. The rate of fatalities is the highest since November
2004.
Meanwhile, damaging corruption scandals involving US officials
and politically connected contractors, revelations of torture
and death squad murders by US-trained Iraqi security forces, and
the American militarys own abuse of prisoners and use of
banned weapons against the civilian population have all combined
to expose the criminal nature of the US war.
It is a measure of the administrations crisis that Busheschewing
the longstanding convention that partisan politics end at the
waters edgewas compelled to interrupt his appearance
at the Asian economic summit in South Korea to launch blistering
attacks on his domestic critics.
Addressing another captive audience of US military personnel
at Osan Air Base Saturday, the US president declared, In
Washington there are some who say that the sacrifice is too great,
and they urge us to set a date for withdrawal before we have completed
our mission. Those who are in the fight know better.
He then went on to quote approvingly a statement by one of
the senior commanders in Iraq, Maj. Gen. William Webster, that
setting a deadline for troop withdrawal would be a recipe
for disaster.
The statement itself was an extraordinary breach of the subordination
of the military to civilian government and a flouting of the longstanding
proscription against US military officers intervening in partisan
politics. In citing it, Bush essentially encouraged elements of
the military command to come out in defiance of Congress and those
who hold elective office.
General Webster is right, said Bush. And
so long as I am commander in chief, our strategy in Iraq will
be driven by the sober judgment of our military commanders on
the ground. So we will fight the terrorists in Iraq, and we will
stay in the fight until we have achieved the victory our brave
troops have fought and bled for.
That the presidents constitutional role as commander
in chief is meant to assure civilian authority over the military,
and bar military commanders from setting government policy, is
apparently lost on Bush.
Similarly, the Pentagon staged a teleconference with military
commanders in Iraq Friday to counter Murthas proposal. I
think we have to finish the job that we began here, Army
Col. James Brown of the Texas National Guard told the Pentagon
press corps. Its important for the security of this
nation, its important for the security of this region, and
certainly its important in the vital interests of the United
States of America.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, meanwhile, appeared on morning
talk shows Sunday to insist there would be no timetable for US
troop withdrawals and to issue ominous warnings against continuing
the debate on a pullout from Iraq.
The enemy hears a big debate in the United States, and
they have to wonder maybe all we have to do is wait and well
win.... The battle is here in the United States, he
told Fox News Sunday.
On the ABC News This Week program, he charged that
calls for pulling out of Iraq could demoralize US troops deployed
there. We have to all have the willingness to have a free
debate, he said, but we also all have to have the
willingness to understand what the effect of our words are.
The bitter insults thrown across the aisle in the House chamber
and the threat of physical confrontation Friday recalled the acrimony
and violence that gripped the halls of Congress in the years leading
up to the American Civil War. Then, political tensions erupted
in 1856 in a Southern congressmans brutal caning of Senator
Charles Sumner in the Senate chamber in retaliation for Sumners
anti-slavery Crime against Kansas speech.
But, as Marx famously noted, history repeats itself, the
first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.
The Republican-engineered vote was in every sense a political
stunt, much as was Senate Democratic leader Harry Reids
maneuver earlier this month to bring the Senate into secret session
so as to force onto the agenda the Bush administrations
use of false intelligence on Iraqi weapons.
Both were indications of the deep crisis of Congress and both
political parties in the face of massive popular opposition to
their policies of war and reaction, which are being pursued by
all branches of the US government.
The Republican leadership used the vote to highlight the hypocrisy
of Democratic leaders who praised Murtha for challenging the Bush
administrations war policy, while distancing themselves
from the congressmans demand for withdrawing troops in six
months.
House Democratic leader Pelosi denounced the Republicans on
the floor of the House and praised Murtha for having dealt
the mighty blow of truth to the Presidents failed Iraq policy.
But when asked if she agreed with his proposal for troop withdrawal,
responded, I think that Mr. Murtha speaks for himself.
Similarly, Reid declared, I dont support immediate
withdrawal. The Democrats 2004 presidential candidate,
Senator John Kerry, said, I respectfully disagree with John
Murtha.
Senator Joseph Biden (Democrat, Delaware) told the Associated
Press that it would be a mistake to withdraw US troops.
He lamented the polls showing massive popular support for precisely
that demand. Were losing the American people, and
that is a disaster, Biden said.
Murthas proposal itself is not a repudiation of US militarism
and aggression, but merely a recognition that the present strategy
in Iraq has failed, endangering Washingtons ability to intervene
elsewhere in the world.
Appearing on NBCs Meet the Press Sunday,
the Pennsylvania congressman stressed that he was advocating that
the Pentagon redeploy our troops to the periphery.
He has called for the US to keep a quick reaction force
in the region, together with an over-the-horizon presence
of Marines.
Nonetheless, the Democratic leadership opposes even this proposal.
The Republicans decision to call the Democrats bluff
by putting a withdrawal resolution up for a vote imparted an especially
acrimonious character to Fridays House debate.
From the outset, using American military power to impose US
domination over Iraq and its oil wealth and to secure US hegemony
in the strategic Persian Gulf has been a consensus policy shared
by both the Democrats and Republicans, whatever their tactical
differences over how this policy was to be implemented.
Now, the catastrophic failure of this policy has exposed the
vast gulf that separates the two partiesand the financial
elite they both representfrom the needs and aspirations
of the American working people.
See Also:
Political conflict intensifies over Bushs
Iraq war lies
[19 November 2005]
Senate Democrats back Iraq war, Guantánamo
prison camp
[16 November 2005]
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