|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
After House vote on non-binding resolution: Democrats wont
cut Iraq war funding
By Patrick Martin
17 February 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The US House of Representatives voted by 246 to 182 Friday
in favor of a resolution opposing President Bushs decision
to send an additional 21,500 troops into the war in Iraq. Although
Speaker Nancy Pelosi claimed, The passage of this legislation
will signal a change in direction in Iraq that will end the fighting
and bring our troops home safely and soon, the vote is not
a step towards ending the war.
The resolution and the three days of debate that preceded its
passage are a further demonstration that the Democratic Party
shares the imperialist goals of the Bush administration in Iraq,
and that its criticisms are entirely on the level of tactics.
In a literal sense, the resolution is not an antiwar measure at
all, but merely a statement of disagreement with the method chosen
by the White House to continue and escalate the war.
The resolution devotes half its 97 words to declaring support
for US troops currently occupying Iraq, while stating that Congress
disapproves of Bushs decision to escalate the
war. The resolution neither condemns the ongoing slaughter in
Iraq, nor the initial decision to invade and conquer the country.
If implementedrather than contemptuously ignored by the
White Houseit would leave American policy in Iraq exactly
where it was on January 9, the day before Bush ordered the surge
of additional troops.
The three days of speeches on the House floor included remarks
by more than three quarters of the 434 representatives. These
comments give a glimpse of the relatively narrow range of opinion
within the two big business parties in relation to the Iraq war.
The Republican speech-making was a mixture of McCarthy-style
terror-baiting (those voting for the non-binding resolution were
supposedly guilty of encouraging Al Qaeda and demoralizing US
troops), and taunts against the Democrats for their unwillingness
to put forward legislation that would actually compel an end to
the war by cutting off funding. Adam Putnam, chairman of the House
Republican Conference, noted that the resolution does nothing
to help win the war and doesnt do anything to
help stop it, either.
Few Republican speakers actually defended the latest White
House policy, following the guidelines for the debate spelled
out in a leadership memorandum that was leaked to the press. This
document was remarkably blunt in conceding the deep unpopularity
of the war and the Bush administration: The debate should
not be about the surge or its details. This debate should not
even be about the Iraq war to date, mistakes that have been made,
or whether we can, or cannot, win militarily. If we let Democrats
force us into a debate on the surge or the current situation in
Iraq, we lose.
Instead of discussing the war, much of the Republican response
consisted of hysterical abuse. House Minority Leader John Boehner
said passage of the resolution would mean that every drop
of blood thats been spilled in defense of liberty and freedom
from the American Revolution to this very for moment is for nothing.
Sam Johnson of Texas revisited every US military failure of the
past 50 years, declaring, We cannot leave a job undone like
we left in Korea, like we left in Vietnam, like we left in Somalia.
Virgil Goode of Virginia wallowed in anti-Muslim bigotry, suggesting
that the result of the Democratic policy would be to replace the
words In God We Trust on US currency with In
Mohammed We Trust.
The Democratic speeches were far more restrained, giving little
expression to the passionate antiwar sentiments of the millions
of voters who went to the polls last November to remove the Republicans
from power in Congress. Not a single Democrat accused the Bush
administration of waging a war for control of oil resources, or
suggested that the White House was guilty of a war of aggression
Only a handful made any reference to the lies about weapons of
mass destruction and Iraq-Al Qaeda ties that were employed to
sell the war to the American people as retaliation
for the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Instead, the Democrats largely opposed the surge on the grounds
that it was unlikely to be successful, while declaring that American
troops should not be engaged in policing a civil war in Iraq between
Sunnis and Shiites. The quagmire in Iraq was diverting military
resources required for other tasks, they argued, whether the war
on terror with Al Qaeda, propping up the US-backed regime
in Afghanistan, or confronting Iran, Syria, North Korea, China
and other potential antagonists of American imperialism.
Typical were the remarks of newly elected Democratic Congressman
Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania, a retired admiral who commanded an
aircraft carrier battle group in the Persian Gulf. He criticized
the continuing use of our national treasure in what is an
inconclusive, open-ended involvement within a country where the
long-term benefits do not match what we need to reap.
Iraq war veteran Patrick Murphy, a former captain in the 82nd
Airborne Division, is a newly elected Democratic congressman from
the Philadelphia suburbs. He was one of the first speakers in
the debate, saying, Walking in my own combat boots, I saw
firsthand this administrations failed policy. It is immoral
to send young Americans to fight and die in a conflict without
a real strategy for success. Presumably, by this formulation,
a more successful military strategy would have justified the sacrifice
of American (and Iraqi) lives.
The real position of the congressional Democrats is expressed
in their flat rejection of any cutoff of funding for the war (to
say nothing of filing articles of impeachment against Bush for
launching an illegal war on the basis of lies). Speaker Pelosi
was adamant that no such measure would be proposed, claiming that
to do so would harm the troops now deployed in Iraq.
In a question-and-answer piece published in the New York
Times Friday, Pelosi declared her impotence in the face of
Bushs determination to continue and escalate the war. Asked
whether the nonbinding resolution would have any effect, she replied,
I dont know that the president can completely ignore
us. Asked if the House debate had moved Bush, she said,
To be honest, I dont know if the president is moveable
in terms of the course of action he wants to take militarily.
Most significant was her response to the next question, about
demands for an urgent end to the Iraq war and asking Congress
to cut the funding immediately. Is that a bad idea?
Why would it be a bad idea not to support our troops?
she saidrephrasing a funding cutoff as an attack on the
soldiers. They are in harms way, she continued.
We have to protect them.
It is a demonstration of the entirely artificial and false
character of official US politics that sending hundreds
if not thousands more soldiers to their deaths is hailed as support,
while removing them from the battlefield and returning them safely
to their families is denounced as undermining the troops.
Equally unreal was the policy outlined Thursday by Congressman
John Murtha, chairman of the House Appropriations military subcommittee
and a leading spokesman for the Democrats on the war. At a press
announcement co-sponsored by the liberal group Move-on.org, Murtha
announced he would seek to attach amendments to an upcoming Pentagon
funding bill to require that all troops sent to Iraq be certified
by the military as fully equipped and trained for urban counterinsurgency
warfare, and that all soldiers have at least one year stateside
in between each deployment to a war zone. In other words, Bush
is free to continue sending these soldiers to their deaths. He
is merely required to get a rubberstamp from the Pentagon.
The US mass media is portraying the House vote as the first
step in a titanic confrontation between the Democratic-controlled
Congress and the Republican president. The purpose of such brazen
distortions of reality is to maintain the credibility of an increasingly
discredited and unpopular political system, in which both of the
two official parties represent the financial aristocracy and defend
its interests, both at home and abroad.
It is certainly true that the Democrats gained control of Congress
because of mass antiwar sentiment. But the Democratic Party is
not an antiwar party. It is a pro-war party that has significant
tactical differences with the Bush White House.
These differences may well spark serious conflict in Washington,
particularly as the Bush administration ratchets up its rhetoric
and its provocations against Iran, openly threatening to launch
a military strike that would vastly expand the Middle East battlefield,
with incalculable consequences. But a dispute over what methods
to pursue to best achieve the interests of corporate America is
by no means the same thing as a rejection of imperialist foreign
policy.
There is an unbridgeable gulf between the opposition to the
war in Iraq on the part of millions of working peoplewho
instinctively recognize that the war is being waged in the interests
of big businessand the criticism of Bushs lack of
success in Iraq by Democrats like Pelosi, Senator
Hillary Clinton and Senator Barack Obama.
This gulf is symbolized by Obamas hasty apology this
week after he blurted out that Bush administration had wasted
the lives of the 3,000 American soldiers killed in Iraq. For any
genuine opponent of the war in Iraq, wasted is the
least that can be said of the tragic loss of life among Americans
and Iraqis alike. Those responsible for launching the war of aggression
in Iraqincluding Democrats like Clinton as well as the Republican
cabal around Bush and Cheneyare guilty of the same crime
for which the Nazis were prosecuted at Nuremberg.
The struggle against the war in Iraq can only be conducted
through an open political struggle against both the war partiesthe
Democrats as well as the Republicansand the building of
an independent mass political movement based on the working class.
See Also:
Obamas The Audacity of Hope:
Portrait of a modern American political operative
[14 February 2007]
US Senator Barack Obama and the war in
Iraq
[13 February 2007]
Pentagon report admits fabricated intelligence
used to justify Iraq war
[10 February 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |