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White House wants $50 billion more for Iraq war
By Bill Van Auken
30 August 2007
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The Bush White House is preparing to ask Congress to approve
another $50 billion to continue funding the escalation of the
war against the people of Iraq well into 2008, according to a
report published Wednesday in the Washington Post.
The request for the additional funding will be timed to coincide
with the progress report on the surge
that has sent some 30,000 additional American troops into the
occupied country. That presentation will be delivered to Congress
by the senior US military commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus,
and the US ambassador in Baghdad, Ryan Crocker, in barely two
weeks.
The administrationand its ostensible political opposition
in the Democratic Partyhave both invested this upcoming
testimony with immense political significance. The congressional
Democratic leadership mandated the reports as part of its cave-in
to the Bush White House on its request for war funding last May,
and, together with the Bush administration, has essentially suspended
any debate on the Iraq war until the general speaks.
Given the back-to-back speeches delivered by President Bush
to the Veteran of Foreign Wars and the American Legion over the
past week, the content of the Petraeus-Crocker report is a foregone
conclusion. There are unmistakable signs that our strategy
is achieving the objectives we set out, Bush told the latter
veterans group Tuesday. The momentum is now on our
side. In reality, the report will be issued over Bushs
signature, with the general and ambassador merely providing advice.
In public, Petraeus and Crocker will dutifully echo Bushs
claim, affirming that the surge, which has brought
US troop levels up to 160,000, has achieved progress in bringing
greater security to Iraq and therefore must continue. This claim
will be made despite the fact that every significant measure of
the situation confronting the Iraqi peoplea doubling of
the number of people killed each day as well as a doubling of
the number of internally displaced Iraqis driven from their homesindicates
that the escalation of the US military intervention has only spelled
a sharp increase in the death and destruction inflicted upon the
ravaged country.
With the cowardly record of the Democratic-led Congress as
his guide, Bush is confident that the Congress will bow to the
authority of General Petraeuswhom the Democratic-led Senate
confirmed without a single dissenting voteand provide the
necessary votes to pay for the continued escalation of the war.
As the Post reported, citing the view of an unnamed
congressional aide: The request is being prepared now in
the belief that Congress will be unlikely to balk so soon after
hearing the two officials argue that there are promising developments
in Iraq but that they need more time to solidify the progress
they have made.
A White House official, also speaking on condition of anonymity,
told the paper that this is pretty much a done deal.
The $50 billion figure appears to be based on the assumption
that the increased military deployment in Iraq will be maintained
at least until the spring of 2008.
This additional money comes on top of the $611 billion that
the Congressional Research Service recently gave as the total
amount already approved by Congress for the so-called war on terror
(74 percent of it going to pay for the killing in Iraq, 21 percent
for Afghanistan and 5 percent for embassy security) from September
11, 2001, up to and including its vote last May 25 to give Bush
another $100 billion in war funding.
It is also in addition to another $147 billion that the administration
has already requested for war funding for fiscal 2008. It will
probably be bundled together with this request, with Congress
asked to approve a total supplemental funding request of about
$200 billion.
If approved, it is estimated that Iraq war spending would rise
to more than $3 billion a week, with the total spent surpassing
the costs of all previous wars save World War II.
This massive amount of military spending may well serve as
the stepping-stone to the preparation of an even larger war against
Iran, a prospect that Bush himself openly alluded to with the
remark in his Tuesday speech that he had authorized our
military commanders in Iraq to confront Tehrans murderous
activities.
Reaction of the Democratic congressional leadership was tepid
at best to the report of the planned request for tens of billions
of dollars more to fund the war. Neither Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid nor House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a statement in
response.
A spokesman for Reid, Jim Manley, told the Post, We
havent seen the details, but well give it the scrutiny
it deserves. Its long past time for giving blank checks
to the administration.
In other words, the American public can expect to be subjected
once again this September to the distasteful spectacle of the
Democratic congressional leadership going through the motions
of pretending to oppose the war, while in the end voting to approve
the money needed to fight it.
There is no reason to believe that this leadership will be
any more inclined this fall than it was last spring to employ
the only means at its disposal to alter the course of the Iraq
war: utilizing the power of the purse to cut off funding
and initiating impeachment proceedings against Bush for carrying
out a criminal war of aggression.
However, the attempts to posture for the benefit of the overwhelming
majority of the American people who oppose the war, while rounding
up sufficient votes to sustain the military campaign aimed at
securing US control of Iraqs oil wealth and the strategic
Persian Gulfa predatory goal that the Democratic leadership,
like the White House and the decisive sections of Americas
ruling elite, all supporthave become increasingly difficult.
The immense anger building up not only against the Bush administration,
but against its accomplices in the Democratic Party, found public
expression recently in the form of an explosive confrontation
between one Democratic congressman who voted for the war-funding
measure last May and his constituents.
According to the August 28 issue of the Oregonian, Hundreds
at a raucous and hostile town hall Monday night let US Rep. Brian
Baird know that they disapprove of his support for the troop surge
in Iraq. Many suggested the Vancouver Democrat is not representing
the will of his district.
Baird, who was first elected in 1998, attempted to defend his
support for funding the war, but was repeatedly shouted down by
a capacity crowd of some 600 people. We dont care
what your convictions are, one member of the audience told
him. Youre here to represent us.
Six hundred peoplefrom veterans
to teachers, from a Columbia River boat captain to a lady who
plays bagpipes at soldier funeralsspent nearly four hours
castigating Baird, reported Danny Westneat, a columnist
for the Seattle Times. He was called a sellout, Bushs
lap dog, a neocon pet. Some scoffed at anything he said. Some
told him to resign.
Theres an epic quality to how mad folks are,
he commented. It feels like an anger that may last well
after the war is gone.
The attempts by the various liberal pressure and protest outfits
to promote illusions in the Democratic Party notwithstanding,
the political trajectory that this party has pursued since being
placed in control of Congress by the massive outpouring of antiwar
sentiment in the 2006 midterm elections has made it increasingly
difficult to mask its role as a direct collaborator and enabler
in the crimes carried out by the Bush administration.
See Also:
Bush threatens to militarily "confront"
Iran
[29 August 2007]
President Bush's history lesson
[24 August 2007]
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