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Democratic presidential candidates debate where to wage war
next
By Jerry White
28 April 2007
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In the first debate between candidates for the Democratic Partys
2008 presidential nomination, the leading contenders made clear
that whatever their differences with the Bush administrations
handling of the war in Iraq, they are all committed to maintaining
the US occupation of the oil-rich country and that, if elected
president, they would not hesitate to use US military power anywhere
in the world to defend the geo-political interests of American
imperialism.
The debate, which was broadcast by MSNBC television from South
Carolina State University, included ostensible front runners New
York Senator Hillary Clinton, Illinois Senator Barack Obama and
former North Carolina senator and vice presidential candidate
John Edwards, as well as Delaware Senator Joseph Biden, Connecticut
Senator Christopher Dodd and New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson.
Also included were Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich and former
Alaska senator Mike Gravel.
The debate was overshadowed by the deep crisis over the war
in Iraq and the growing popular hatred for the warparticularly
among Democrat voters, who according to a poll released this week
are 78 percent in favor of total withdrawal and 54 percent in
favor of immediate withdrawal.
While all of the candidates did their best to feign opposition
to the war, the debate began just hours after the Senate approved
a supplemental spending bill that will provide the White House
with an additional $124 billion to continue the fighting and occupations
in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Most of those on the platform sought
to cast the funding bill as an antiwar measure because
of the toothless and non-binding timetable in the bill for the
withdrawal of some troops from Iraq. The Congress has voted,
as of today, to end this war, Clinton declared.
Echoing the comments of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid earlier
in the week, Senators Clinton, Biden and Obama made it clear they
were against this wari.e., opposed to the way
the Bush administration is conducting the occupation of Iraq,
not the war itself. Clinton set the tone by claiming
the US had done everything to help the Iraqi people to have freedom
and their own country but now it was time for the
Iraqis to decide whether they would take that chance.
Blaming the Iraqi people for the devastating civil war that has
resulted from the US invasion and the shattering of Iraqi society,
Clinton said the Iraqi government had to provide security
and stability without our young men and women in the middle of
their sectarian civil war.
These comments parallel previous statements by Clinton who
has indicated that if elected she would keep large numbers of
US troops in Iraq for the foreseeable futurenot to protect
the civilian population against sectarian reprisals,but to defend
Americas vital national security interests:
first and foremost, oil.
In his remarks, Biden criticized Bushs fundamentally
flawed policy in Iraq, which he defined as the notion
of being able to set up a strong, central government in Baghdad
that will be democratic. The way forward, Biden said, was
to decentralize Iraq and have a limited central
government to share their oil wealth. Biden
has been the most strident proponent of partitioning Iraq into
ethno-religious statelets, dividing Kurds, Shiites and Sunnis.
Such a proposal is a prescription for ethnic cleansing and mass
killings on a scale not seen since the partitioning of India in
the 1940s. Governor Richardson endorsed this reactionary proposal,
calling for the US to establish a political framework
to divide oil revenues and possibly set up three
separate entities.
Illinois Senator Barack Obama said he had opposed the war from
the start and then attempted to justify his repeated votes to
fund it as hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and more than 3,300
US soldiers have been killed. He claimed that the troops needed
the best military hardware possible in order to come home
safely. In reality, Congress has the power to assure the
safe return of the troops by cutting off funding, something the
Democratic leadership refuses to do.
Representative Dennis Kucinich pointed out this anomaly, saying
every time the Democrats voted to fund the war they were reauthorizing
the war all over again. The Democrats, he said, have
the power to end the war right now, and thats what we should
do. Criticizing the Senate war-spending bill, Kucinich said
he had proposed a bill that called for the United Nations to provide
peacekeepers and security forces that will move in as our
troops leave.
Gravela Vietnam-era senator who opposed the Nixon administration
on the military draft and the waralso denounced the war-spending
bill, saying he was embarrassed by what was going
on in Congress. Because Bush is determined to continue the war,
the Democrats should pass a law, he said, making it a felony
to keep the troops in Iraq.
Neither Kucinich nor Gravel enjoys any support from the Democratic
Party leadership, let alone from the Wall Street investors and
other corporate backers who are pouring millions of dollars into
the campaigns of the top contenders. Nevertheless, they play a
central role in fostering illusions that the pro-war and pro-big
business Democratic Party can be pressured to stop the war and
defend the interests of working people. Kucinich in particular
presents himself as the voice of conscience in the
Democratic Party and living proof that there is an antiwar, progressive
faction within it.
In the 2004 elections, the Ohio congressman also sought the
partys presidential nomination. After the Democratic Party
leadership smothered the Howard Dean campaignaround which
significant antiwar sentiment had gatheredit took measures
to suppress antiwar opposition within the party and to make sure
the elections were not turned into a referendum on Iraq. This
campaign culminated in the nomination of a pro-war candidateMassachusetts
Senator John Kerry. Kucinich immediately dropped his campaign
and called for unity behind Kerry, thus attempting
to confine the opposition to the war tightly within the borders
of a pro-war party.
Earlier this week Kucinich introduced three articles of impeachment
against Vice President Cheney for the campaign of lies about WMDs
and Iraqi-al-Qaeda ties that was used to justify the war against
Iraq, as well as similar fabrications used to prepare another
war against Iran. These are indeed grounds for impeaching Cheney.
However, there is zero support for this within the Democratic
Party leadership, which is averse to any serious struggle that
might bring masses of working people into a political confrontation
with the Bush administration. For that reason, when the debate
moderator asked for a show of hands from the Democratic candidates
on who supported Kucinichs action against Cheney, not one
hand was raised.
In the end, Kucinich and Gravel functioned as foils during
the debate so that the leading Democratic contenders could re-assert
their commitment to defending the interests of corporate America
with military force. This point was noted by the Washington
Post, which said that Kucinich and Gravel provided a
counterpoint of left-wing ideas that drew rebukes for a lack of
seriousness from Biden and Obama. The challenges from the liberal
flank allowed almost all the others to assert that, despite their
criticisms of President Bushs Iraq policy, they are ready
to use military force to retaliate against future terrorist attacks.
Fully embracing the global war on terrorism, the
leading Democratic candidates singled out as potential future
targets of US military action not only Iran and North Korea, but
also Russia and China. Biden also specifically raised the possibility
of intervening in Darfur, which leading Democratic think tanks
hope will be a launching point for defending US interest in Africa,
while at the same time selling it to the American people as a
good, humanitarian war.
Kucinich pointed out that Obama and Clinton had told pro-Israeli
lobby groups that all options were on the table with Iran
and that this was a thinly-veiled threat to use nuclear weapons.
Obama justified his remarks by saying a nuclear-armed Iran will
be a major threat to us and to the region. Calling Iran
the largest state sponsor of terrorism because of
its support for Hezbollah and Hamas, Obama repeated the same threats
made by Bush and Cheney in the run-up to the war with Iraq, saying
Iran could place a nuclear weapon into the hands of terrorists,
posing a profound security threat for America.
Gravel pointed out that the US has carried out sanctions against
Iran for 26 years, while constantly threatening the country with
military strikes. Tell me, Barack, he said, who
do you want to nuke? Obama shrugged the question off, responding,
Im not planning to nuke anybody right now, Mike, I
promise you.
Biden was even more forceful, calling on Kucinich and Gravel
to stop all this happy talk here about the use of force
doesnt make sense. The use of force in Afghanistan is justified
and necessary; in Darfur, justified and necessary; in the Balkans,
justified and necessary. You guys can have your happy talk, theres
real life.
The debate made clear that the Democrats chief criticism
of the war in Iraq is that it has placed an enormous strain on
the fighting capacity of the US military and diverted attention
from other threats to US interests throughout the world. The plan
for strategic redeployment advocated by the Democratic
candidates is aimed at maintaining colonial control in Iraqby
waging a bloody counter-insurgency with fewer troops, primarily
US Special Forces and the Air Forceand freeing up troops
for Afghanistan and interventions in other global hot spots.
This support for militarism stems from the fact that the Democratic
Party speaks for the same financial oligarchy as the Republicans.
This truth was reiterated throughout the debate, as Clinton, Obama
and Edwards went out of their way to praise the multi-millionaire
and multi-billionaire hedge fund managers and Wall Street speculators
who have enriched themselves at the expense of the great mass
of working people. Clinton praised the people willing to invest
their money in the free market system and the entrepreneurial
economy, many of whom have poured some of that money into
her multi-million-dollar campaign war chest.
After repeating his refrain about being brought up poor and
humble in a South Carolina textile mill town for the one thousandth
time, John Edwards responded to a question about being hired by
the $30 billion hedge fund Fortress Investment Group with the
absurd claim that those people in New York who work in financial
markets understandin some ways, at leastwhat can be
done and can play a significant role in trying to lift people
who are struggling.
See Also:
Senate passes Iraq war spending bill,
paving way to Bush veto
[27 April 2007]
If elected, Hillary Clinton
vows to keep US troops in Iraq
[17 March 2007]
Anti-war
candidate boosts illusions in pro-war party: Kucinich runs again
for Democratic presidential nomination
[15 December 2006]
An exchange on the presidential
campaign of Dennis Kucinich
[12 January 2007]
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