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Bush, Democrats meet on war funding as violence soars in Iraq
By Bill Van Auken
19 April 2007
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US President George W. Bush and Democratic congressional leaders
staged a meeting in the White House Wednesday to discuss pending
legislation that would provide more than $100 billion to continue
and escalate the four-year-old US war and occupation in Iraq.
The gathering took place against the backdrop of a bloody eruption
of violence in Iraq. A series of mass killings in and around Baghdad
made a mockery of Washingtons claims that the surge
of additional US troops into the Iraqi capital that began nine
weeks ago is creating greater peace and security.
According to the Associated Press, 233 people were killed Wednesday
throughout Iraq, making it the second deadliest day since the
news agency began keeping a tally of the dead two years ago. Iraqi
police said that 191 people were killed in Baghdad alone. The
Sadriyah marketplace in the center of Baghdad, a predominantly
Shia area, was the scene of the most horrific of the bombings,
which claimed 140 live, while wounding 150 others, making it the
deadliest such attack since the US invasion of March 2003. Angry
crowds at the scene denounced the Iraqi government and the US
occupation as those responsible for the carnage.
Meanwhile, the death toll among US troopsnow standing
at 3,312has risen dramatically, with little notice, much
less alarm, expressed within the US media. April is shaping up
to be one of the bloodiest months since the war begin, with 65
soldiers and marines killed so far. Since the surge began in February,
226 American troops have died, while the toll for the past six
months stands at 535, the largest for any half-year period since
the war began.
The White House meeting, which was hosted by Bush, flanked
by Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid, represented part of a protracted piece of political
theater that appears likely to continue for another few weeks
before the war funding bill is finally approved.
Bush began the meeting with a ritualistic statement about Democrats
and Republicans alike sending our prayers to the families
of the victims of the massacre at Virginia Tech. No such
expressions of concern were voiced, however, for the seven times
as many people killed under the US occupation in the hours before
the meeting began.
Predicting a good discussion, with the Democrats,
Bush acknowledged that there were strong opinions
on both sides, but added, The whole objective is to figure
out how best to get our troops funded, get the money they need
to do the job that Ive asked them to do.
To no ones surprise, the meeting produced no substantive
agreement. Bush had made it explicit from the outset that he had
no intention of negotiating with the Democratic congressional
leadership, and that he intends to veto any legislation that attaches
timetables for troop withdrawals to the war funding.
Addressing the media outside the White House, Senate Majority
Leader Reid urged Bush to search his soul over the
legislation, while insisting: It gives the troops more than
hes asked for and leaves the troops there for considerable
periods of time with some goals and benchmarks that have been
called for by the American people, the Iraq Study Group and many,
many military.
For her part, House Speaker Pelosi indicated that she expects
the two chambers to iron out difference between House and Senate
versions of the funding bill and pass joint legislation by next
week. We cannot give the president a blank check,
she said, but quickly added a conciliatory note: We left
the room with the president understanding that we came in friendship.
We respect his role. We wanted him to respect ours.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Republican, Kentucky)
gave a concise assessment of the way in which the supposed confrontation
between the Republican White House and the Democratic leadership
on Capitol Hill will play out. The other side pretty much
conceded that we need to get funds to the troops, McConnell
said. The bill is going to be vetoed. Then we have to get
serious about funding the troops without a withdrawal date.
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino echoed this view after
the meeting, asserting that the discussion confirmed that the
Democrats will capitulate. It was clear that ultimately
there will be a bill that can fund the troops, that the troops
will get the funds they need, she said.
The House and Senate approved separate bills, both of which
provide more war funding than the White House had requested. Both
also, however, include language suggesting timetables for withdrawing
US combat troops from Iraqa term used to obscure
the fact that the Democratic leadership envisions tens of thousands
of US military personnel remaining in the occupied country for
the purposes of counterterrorism operations, training
Iraqi puppet forces and protecting US assets and interests, with
strategic oil resources undoubtedly at the top of the list.
The House version calls for the partial withdrawal to be effected
by August 31, 2008, while the Senate bill proposes that the drawing
down of forces begin within four months of the legislations
passage and be completed by March 31, 2008. The Senate version
expressly states that the deadline represents merely a goal.
The web site CQ.com, published by the Congressional Quarterly,
cited House aides as saying that Pelosi spelled out the path that
the Democratic leadership will take during meetings Tuesday with
her key advisors and the Out of Iraq Caucus.
The joint legislation that will be sent to the White House
will include the Senates nonbinding goal while
retaining House language requiring that the Pentagon observe its
own standards relating to length of tours and periods of rest,
recuperation and retraining between overseas deployments. This
mandate, however, includes a loophole allowing the president to
obtain a waiver of the requirements merely by invoking grounds
of national security. Already, the Pentagon has scrapped its 12-month
limit on deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, lengthening them
for all US troops there now and all that will be sent in the future
to 15 months.
Pelosi refused to characterize the House as backing down
from Democratic leaders pledge to end the war, the
congressional publication reported.
Of course, this is precisely what the Democratic leadership
is doing, as was evident from the outset of its supposed challenge
to the Bush administration over the war.
In her statement outside the White House, Pelosi signaled where
the Democrats are going, protesting that Legislation that
we want to present to the president is already a compromise, because
it contains his own benchmarks for progress in Iraq. It contains
his Defense Departments own guidelines.... And yet, the
president wants to reject them.
In the end, a compromise will likely be reached
on the basis of providing all the funding and more that Bush requested
for his escalation of the war, while merely reasserting so-called
benchmarks enunciated by Bush himself, demanding that
the Iraqi regime fulfill requirements imposed by Washington.
First and foremost among these, as far as both Democrats and
Republicans are concerned, is the enactment of a new petroleum
law, which would open up the Iraqi oil fields for exploitation
on terms more lucrative than anything seen by the US-based energy
monopolies since the days of colonialism.
Meanwhile, a series of new polls released this week have provided
fresh indications that the profound opposition to the war among
the broad masses of the American people has only increased as
Bush has sought to escalate it and the Democrats carry out their
protracted capitulation to the White House.
A new ABC-Washington Post poll found that 66 percent
of the American public now believes that the war was not worth
fighting and that 51 percentfor the first time a majoritybelieves
that the US will ultimately lose the war.
A CNN/Opinion Research poll released Wednesday found that fewer
than one third of the population support the war, while two thirds
oppose it.
Asked what Congress should do if Bush vetoes the congressional
war funding legislation, 35 percent of those who responded voiced
support for a new bill that would mandate an immediate withdrawal
of all US forces, while 26 percent expressed support for a measure
requiring a pullout by next March. Only 37 percent indicated support
for the clean bill that Bush is demanding to keep
US occupation forces in place indefinitely.
In summing up the poll, CNN reported that support for
the war in Iraq remains low amid widespread feelings that the
war is going badly and that sending additional troops to Iraq
wont make any difference.
This mass and growing popular sentiment against the war finds
no genuine expression within the ostensible political opposition
to the Bush administration, the Democratic Party.
Having won control of Congress thanks to the antiwar sentiments
of millions of Americans, the Democratic Party has explicitly
ruled out cutting off funding for the repressive US military operations
in Iraq. While going through the motions of proposing goals
for partial withdrawal of troops and standards for their deployment,
the Democrats have fully embraced the position of the Republican
right that funding a war that claims the lives of nearly 100 American
soldiersand uncounted thousands of Iraqisevery month
is a necessary means of realizing the cynical shibboleth of support
our troops.
Though bitterly divided on tactics, both major parties are
agreed that the occupation of Iraq and the aims underlying the
US warseizure of oil wealth and assertion of US hegemonywere
legitimate and necessary.
See Also:
John McCain at VMI: A blunt statement
of US imperialism's stake in Iraq
[13 April 2007]
Senate Democrats pledge funding to continue
Iraq war
[10 April 2007]
Behind Washington "showdown"
on Iraq: Democrats to fully fund the war
[4 April 2007]
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