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John McCain at VMI: A blunt statement of US imperialisms
stake in Iraq
By Patrick Martin
13 April 2007
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The speech delivered by Senator John McCain Wednesday at the
Virginia Military Institute sheds light on the deepening crisis
of the entire US political establishment over the worsening position
of the US occupation regime and the growth of mass popular opposition
to the war.
While McCains speech was portrayed by the media as an
attempt to revive his faltering presidential campaign by appealing
to the hard core of Republican Party supporters of the war, the
event had a broader significance. McCains remarks encapsulated
the contradictions wracking the US ruling elite.
The speech was a string of lies and distortions, in its depiction
of the causes of the war and the current conditions in Iraq, combined
with the assertion of a brutal truth: that American imperialism
cannot and will not accept defeat in this war, regardless of the
sentiments of the great majority of the Iraqi and American people.
McCain embraced wholeheartedly the ideological framework of
the Iraq war as it is currently presented by the Bush administration:
The United States invaded Iraq to liberate its people
from the tyranny of Saddam Hussein. As a result, Iraq has become
the focal point of the worldwide war on terror launched
by the United States after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York
and Washington.
This is a version of history that bears no relation to reality.
The Bush administration invaded Iraq claiming that Saddam Hussein
controlled stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction that he was
prepared to share with his supposed allies, the terrorists of
Al Qaeda, for use against the United States. It was on this basis
that the war was sold to the American people, with the assistance
of the Democratic Party leadership and the corporate-controlled
media.
It was only after the conquest and occupation of Iraq turned
up not a single weapon of mass destruction, and produced no evidence
of ties between Al Qaeda and Hussein, who were, in fact, political
enemies, that the Bush administration shifted its propaganda.
It now claimed, notwithstanding its longstanding and continuing
alliances with such despots as the Saudi and Gulf oil sheiks and
Egyptian President Mubarak, that its real goal was to liberate
the Iraqi people from the tyranny of the Baathist regime and spread
democracy throughout the Middle East.
McCain obediently followed the White House script. There was
no mention in his speech of WMD, nor any effort to explain why
this pretext for war had been discarded in favor of one equally
phony. America has a vital interest in preventing the emergence
of Iraq as a Wild West for terrorists, similar to Afghanistan
before 9/11, he declared. By leaving Iraq before there
is a stable Iraqi governing authority we risk precisely this,
and the potential consequence of allowing terrorists sanctuary
in Iraq is another 9/11 or worse.
McCain claimed the US government had a moral responsibility
to stay in Iraq to prevent genocide and ethnic cleansing,
warning that a premature withdrawal could lead to a bloodbath
worse than Rwanda. He naturally ignored estimates, such as that
produced by a public health survey conducted under the auspices
of Johns Hopkins University, that the death toll produced by the
American intervention in Iraq already rivals that in Rwanda. The
casualties will rise even more rapidly under conditions of American
military escalation.
In describing conditions today in Iraq, McCain retreated only
slightly from the gushing enthusiasm he voiced during last weeks
much-criticized visit to a Baghdad market. While verbally deploring
false optimism, he gave an account of progress in
Iraq that was far rosier than anything emanating from the US military
in recent weeks.
He touched on, in passing, the real material interests underlying
the war, Iraqs vast oil resources, noting, A plan
to share oil revenues equitably among all Iraqis has been approved
by Iraqi ministers and is pending approval by the parliament.
This was a reference to the agreement of the Maliki government,
under enormous US pressure, to pass legislation that would turn
over control of Iraqs oilfields to private (i.e., American)
corporations.
It was when he turned to the consequences of a US defeat in
Iraq, however, that McCain reached full stride, giving a grim
but essentially realistic appreciation of the scale of the strategic
disaster now confronting American imperialism. A power vacuum
in Iraq would invite further interference from Iran, he
said. If the government collapses in Iraq, which it surely
will if we leave prematurely, Iraqs neighbors, from Saudi
Arabia, to Jordan, Syria, Turkey and Egypt, will feel pressure
to intervene on the side of their favored factions ... We could
face a terrible choice: watch the region burn, the price of oil
escalate dramatically and our economy decline, watch the terrorists
establish new base camps or send American troops back to Iraq,
with the odds against our success much worse than they are today.
This is a clear and blunt statement of the consequences of
defeat, to which it could be added that the failure of the Bush
administration to accomplish its goal of gaining control of the
oil resources of the Persian Gulf and Central Asia will embolden
rival capitalist powers, from Western Europe to Russia and China,
and severely undermine the drive by US imperialism to establish
its hegemony in every corner of the globe.
There is no question that virtually the entire US political
establishment, both Democrats and Republicans, agree with this
assessment of the consequences of defeat in Iraq. The bitter divisions
within the ruling elite revolve around how to avoid such a defeat
or minimize its impact, and who will pay the price for the debacle.
McCain represents that faction of the ruling elite that is
the most ruthless and single-minded in its refusal to admit or
accept defeat, and which regards redoubled efforts at the military
subjugation of Iraqincluding the extermination of a large
portion of the Iraqi populationas the only viable option.
America should never undertake a war unless we are prepared
to do everything necessary to succeed, he declared. The
logic of this positionclearly derived from the bitter experience
of the US defeat in Vietnamis that all methods, including
mass murder and possibly the use of nuclear weapons, are permissible
and legitimate in pursuit of success.
This ruthlessness and determination to escalate the bloodbath
in Iraq have cost McCain considerable popular support. In the
opinion polls, his standing has fallen sharply. Last year he was
the presumptive Republican frontrunner, but the most recent poll
shows him trailing not only former New York City mayor Rudolph
Giuliani, but also former senator and current television actor
Fred Thompson, who has not even announced his candidacy.
Even more decisive than the money primary, where
McCain has fallen to third place among Republicans, is the effort
to win backing in key decision-making circles in Washington and
in the corporate and financial oligarchy. Here McCain possesses
a definite following, signaled by the extraordinary endorsement
of his campaign this week by four former Republican secretaries
of state: Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, Lawrence Eagleburger
and Alexander Haig.
All four are deeply implicated in past crimes of American imperialism,
and, despite occasional criticisms of the Bush administrations
ineptness in Iraq, they fully support efforts to win a military
victory and crush the resistance of the Iraqi people to foreign
occupation. Their support is a signal that, whatever his current
standing in the polls, McCain may well emerge as the choice of
the ruling elite for the Republican presidential nomination.
It is the very unpopularity of McCains views on the war
that recommends him to the financial oligarchy. The Wall Street
Journal, in an editorial Wednesday declaring the forthcoming
speech McCains Finest Hour, called attention
to an exchange between Scott Pelley of CBS and McCain on Sundays
60 Minutes program.
Pelley asked, referring to the growth of opposition to the
Iraq war, At what point do you stop doing what you think
is right and you start doing what the majority of the American
people want? McCain responded, I disagree with what
the majority of the American people want. The Journal
hailed this responsewhich essentially rejects popular sovereignty
as the basis of democracyas a courageous stand on principle.
New York Times columnist David Brooks articulated the
view of considerable sections of the ruling elite in an op-ed
piece published Thursday. In the long run he wrote,
his [McCains] embrace of Iraq may not hurt him as
much as now appears. In 10 months, this election wont be
about the surge, it will be about the hydra-headed crisis roiling
the Middle East. The candidate who is the most substantive, most
mature and most consistent will begin to look more attractive
and more necessary.
The anti-democratic implications of McCains defense of
the war became evident in the closing portion of his speech, where
he seemingly echoed the red-baiting senator Joseph McCarthy, denouncing
congressional Democrats as defeatists and allies of terrorists.
Citing the applause by House Democrats after the passage, by a
narrow 218-212 vote, of a resolution setting a deadline for withdrawal
of US combat troops from Iraq, McCain asked, What were they
celebrating? Defeat? Surrender?
Actually, the Democrats were celebrating their success at squaring
the circle: passing a nominally antiwar resolution
that would do nothing to restrict US military operations in Iraq.
The major goal of the congressional Democrats is to provide the
semblance of opposition to the war without the substance.
To do this, they have flatly rejected the only two mechanisms
provided under the US constitution to restrain presidential military
action: impeachment or the cutting off of military appropriations.
They adopted this straitjacket quite deliberately, as part of
their dual purpose of sustaining the war while keeping antiwar
voters within the confines of the two-party system.
McCain, of course, is well aware that the Democratic leaders
in Congress are just as committed to the defense of American imperialism
as he is. When he was not a candidate, in the 2004 presidential
campaign, he defended Democratic nominee John Kerry against Republican
attacks that all but accused Kerry of treason and giving aid and
comfort to the terrorists. But now, for his own purposes, he waves
the bloody shirt of 9/11, suggesting that opposition to the war
in Iraq constitutes a capitulation to terrorism.
His terrorist-baiting of the Democrats is more
than just an effort to curry favor with the fascistic right-wing
base of the Republican Party, which has yet to rally behind any
of the announced Republican candidates. It is an effort to smear
and de-legitimize the genuine mass popular opposition to the war.
It represents an assurance to the US ruling elite that in McCain
they have a candidate who is prepared to ride roughshod over public
opinion and, if he enters the White House, continue the Bush administrations
policy of military aggression indefinitely.
See Also:
Senate Democrats pledge funding to continue
Iraq war
[10 April 2007]
More calls for attorney general to resign
over firings of US attorneys
[9 April 2007]
Record US presidential fund-raising:
The best elections money can buy
[5 April 2007]
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