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Senate Republicans call Democrats bluff on Iraq war
resolution
By Bill Van Auken
8 February 2007
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The so-called debate over Iraq in the US Senate
suffered an ignominious collapse this week, as the Republicans,
working with the White House, exploited the two-faced position
of the Democrats to torpedo their effort to pass a non-binding
resolution opposing the administrations military escalation.
The result was no debate and no vote on a measure that would
have done nothing, in any case, to halt the deployment of an additional
21,500 American combat troops to Iraq, an escalation that is already
well underway.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Democrat of Nevada) summed
it up best in a barb that, while meant for Senate Republican leaders,
actually described the entire proceedings: This is all a
game to divert attention from the fact that we have before us
now an issue that the American people want us to address.
What Reid failed to add was that the Democratic-backed compromise
resolutiondrafted by Republican Senator John Warner of Virginia
and cosponsored by Democrat Carl Levin of Michiganwas itself
an evasion of the real demand of the majority of the American
people for an end to the Iraq war and the withdrawal of US troops.
Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (Democrat of Illinois), in
criticizing the Republican minority, acknowledged the toothless
character of the resolution he and the rest of the Democratic
leadership was backing. If the Republicans in the Senate
cannot swallow the thin soup of the Warner resolution, he
asked, how are they going to stomach a real debate on Iraq?
The resolution merely expressed disagreement with the surge
in troop levels ordered by the White House, while pledging that
Congress would not eliminate or cut funding for troops in
the field. It supported the administrations claim
that the president, as commander-in-chief, has unfettered
power to determine the course of the war. Finally, it expressed
general support for continuing the war, stating in its preamble,
[T]he United States strategy and operations in Iraq
can only be sustained and achieved with support from the American
people and with a level of bipartisanship.
The Republicans were able to easily outflank the Democratic
leadership and block a debate on the resolution by exploiting
this underlying bipartisan support for the US aggression in Iraq.
The Republicans insisted that not only the Democratic-backed
resolution be debated and brought to a vote, but also two opposing
Republican resolutions. The first, drafted by Arizona Senator
John McCain, supported the surge while calling for
benchmarks to be imposed on the Iraqi government. The second,
drafted by New Hampshire Senator Judd Gregg, took no position
on the escalation in Iraq, but affirmed that no funds should
be cut off or reduced for American troops in the field.
The White House and the Senate Republicans, as well as the
Democratic leadership, knew that the Democrats could not obtain
the 60 votes needed to initiate a debate and vote on the Warner-Levin
resolution, while the Gregg resolution would easily exceed the
60-vote hurdle. This was so because many Democrats, petrified
of being attacked for not supporting the troops, would
vote for the White House-backed measure. The result would be passage
of a resolution essentially supporting the administrations
war policy.
Consequently, the Democratic leadership refused the Republicans
offer to allow all three resolutions to be debated and voted on.
An attempt to obtain the required three-fifths majority
to bring the Warner-Levin resolution to the floor failed badly,
receiving only 49 votes. All but two Republicans voted against,
including its author, Warner, as well as other prominent Republican
backers of the anti-surge resolution such as Senator
Chuck Hagel of Nebraska.
Explaining why Greggs proposal would have garnered substantial
Democratic supportand displaying in the process the utter
cowardice and duplicity of the Democrats positionMajority
Leader Reid said, There isnt a Democrat here that
wants to take monies away from the troops.
All the talk about supporting the troops is a threadbare
political subterfuge for continuing to support the war. It is
obvious that on such a basis no serious action can to taken to
stop the mass killing of Iraqis and the mounting toll of dead
and wounded Americans.
This phony argument is used by the Democrats as an alibi for
not employing one of the constitutional means at their disposal
to end the warcutting off funds.
Greggs resolution amounted to calling the Democrats
bluff. Administration spokesmen and congressional Republicans
have dared the Democrats to back up their criticisms of Bushs
war policy by making use of the power of the purse to withhold
funds, knowing that the Democrats have no stomach for such action
and are desperate to avoid a constitutional confrontation with
the White House.
Now the Democratic leadership in the House of Representatives
has vowed to hold its own debate on a nonbinding resolution beginning
next Tuesday. Simpler House rules allow a resolution to be brought
to the floor and passed by a straight majority vote.
The House Democratic leaders had planned to introduce a carbon
copy of the Senates Warner-Levin resolution. However, the
Washington Post reported Wednesday that after assessing
the morass on the other side of the Capitol, they are now considering
a more narrow statement of objection to Bushs proposal.
The Senate Democrats evasion of Greggs resolution
is an indication of what is to come.
This will soon become apparent as Congress considers the Bush
administrations budget proposal, calling for a staggering
$245 billion more to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Included in this funding proposal is $5.6 billion to pay for deploying
the 21,500 troops that make up Bushs surge.
The failure of the Senate to even conduct a debate on the war
exposes the deepening crisis of democratic processes in the US.
An election in which a majority of the people decisively repudiated
the policies of the Bush administration and expressed a clear
desire for the Iraq war to be ended is ignored. The views of the
broad mass of people can find no reflection within the official
institutions or either of the two parties.
Both parties represent the interests of a financial oligarchy
that is determined to assert US hegemony in the oil-rich Persian
Gulf by means of military force. It is these profit interests
that lie behind the mantra repeated by both Republican and Democratic
politicians that failure is not an option.
The ludicrous spectacle of a non-vote on a nonbinding resolution
as the carnage in Iraq mounts is one more verification that the
demand for the withdrawal of US troops cannot be realized through
reliance on Congress and the Democrats. It requires the independent
political mobilization of the working people against war and the
system that creates it.
See Also:
Bushs budget priorities: war and
the wealthy
[7 February 2007]
Presidential candidates strike antiwar
pose at Democratic National Committee meeting
[7 February 2007]
Bush wants to make tax cuts for the rich
permanent
[7 February 2007]
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