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As US prepares to escalate war in Iraq
Bush seeks bipartisan backing from Democratic Congress
By Bill Van Auken
4 January 2007
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President George W. Bush appeared with his Cabinet Wednesday
in the White House Rose Garden to make an appeal for bipartisan
collaboration between the administration and the incoming Democratic-led
Congress. He called upon Democrats to join him in pursuing an
agenda that includes an escalation of the US war in Iraq, intensified
political repression and a continuation of social and fiscal policies
aimed at transferring wealth from the broad mass of working people
to Americas financial oligarchy.
The brief remarks came on the eve of the 110th Congresss
opening session Thursday and expressed the White Houses
determination to continue its reactionary policies, both foreign
and domestic, despite their overwhelming defeat at the polls in
Novembers midterm electionsand its confidence that
it will be able to do so.
The Congress has changed; our obligations to the country
havent changed, said Bush.
His speech begged the question that dominated the November
elections and continues to overshadow all aspects of American
political lifethe debacle confronting the US in Iraq.
Bush spoke for little more than five minutes before turning
on his heels and marching back to the White House without taking
any questions from the assembled media. He commented on the Iraq
war only indirectly when he discussed his plan to submit a five-year
budget proposal next month. He said that this document would include
provisions to address the need to protect ourselves from
radicals and terrorists, the need to win the war on terror, the
need to maintain a strong national defense, and the need to keep
this economy growing by making tax relief permanent.
In addition to demanding that his tax cuts for the rich be
made permanent, Bush called for spending restraint
and the reform of entitlement programs, including
Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare, which he suggested were
on the verge of bankrupting our country.
His brief remarks closely tracked an opinion piece published
under his byline in Wednesdays Wall Street Journal,
headlined What Congress Can Do for America.
As examples of the ability of Democrats and Republicans to
work together, this column cited passage of the repressive USA
Patriot Act and the misnamed No Child Left Behind legislation.
It dealt more explicitly with the Iraq warwhich Bush could
have also invoked as an example of bipartisan collaboration.
Bush wrote, If democracy fails and the extremists prevail
in Iraq, Americas enemies will be stronger, more lethal,
and emboldened by our defeat. Leaders in both parties understand
the stakes in this struggle. We now have the opportunity to build
a bipartisan consensus to fight and win the war.
What Bush has in mind is to be revealed to the American people
in a speech reportedly scheduled next week. Numerous press reports
based on interviews with administration officials, however, leave
no room for doubt that in the face of mass popular opposition
to the war, the Bush White House intends to escalate the violence.
The New York Times reported Tuesday that Bush seems
all but certain not only to reverse the strategy of reducing
the US military presence in Iraq, but also to speed up the replacement
of the top military commander in the country, Gen. George Casey,
who had championed this strategy.
According to administration officials interviewed by the Times,
Bush had grown concerned that General Casey, among others,
had become more fixated on withdrawal than victory.
Whatever form the new strategy takes, it seems almost
certain to include a surge in forces, something that
General Casey insisted earlier this year he did not need and which
might even be counterproductive, the Times reported.
Similarly, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday,
For the Bush administration, deploying tens of thousands
of additional troops to Iraq may not be as tough a call as deciding
when to bring them home.
White House officials say a troop surge almost
certainly will be the centerpiece of Mr. Bushs new strategy
for Iraq to be unveiled mid-month. But while administration officials
have gone to great lengths to emphasize that the extra troops
will be in Iraq only temporarily, there is no clear definition
of how long that might be.
The Journal article indicates that the plans for an
escalation involve leaving the newly deployed troops in Iraq for
a year to 18 months, or even indefinitely. Mr. Bush has
staked his presidency on Iraq, and several White House aides say
they believe he would be inclined to leave the extra troops there
until improvement is evident, the paper reports. Senior
commanders, by contrast, have expressed concern that leaving extra
troops too long risks lasting damage to the US armed forces.
BBC News reported that the central theme in Bushs
impending war speech will be sacrifice. The British
news network added, The speech, the BBC has been told, involves
increasing troop numbers.
Less than two months after an election in which the American
people went to the polls to express their opposition to the war
in Iraq and their demand for US troops to be withdrawn, plans
are well advanced for a major escalation of the killing that has
claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and over
3,000 American troops.
In the face of this catastrophe, the political calculations
guiding the preparations of the Democratic leadership to assume
control of both houses of Congress are so transparently cowardly
and cynical as to assume the character of farce.
The Democratic farce will take the form of a 100-hour
legislative charade aimed at scoring a propaganda victory in advance
of Bushs State of the Union address. The package of bills
includes some token reform measures, few of which will clear the
Senate any time soon without significant alteration, or for that
matter survive a presidential veto.
Among them is a proposal to raise the minimum wage to $7.25
over two yearsa measure that does not even compensate for
inflations erosion of real income over the ten year period
since the last increase, and which is expected to be joined with
yet another tax break for business. Also contemplated are measures
lowering interest rates on student loans and funding stem cell
research, as well as a slight rollback of subsidies for big oil
and as another round of cosmetic congressional ethics reforms.
The Democratic agenda also includes the implementation of all
of the homeland security proposals of the 9/11 Commission,
including a raft of measures that further threaten civil liberties
and increase the police powers of the state. Its centerpiece on
economic policy is a return to the pay-as-you-go budget
rules that prevailed during the Clinton administrationa
formula for fiscal austerity and further cuts in social spending.
At the same time, the Democrats have foresworn any effort to roll
back the tax windfalls for the rich passed under Bush.
The 100 hours of incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
is presumably meant to invoke the famous 100 days
that inaugurated Franklin D. Roosevelts first term. But
any comparison between the two only underscores the steady drive
to the right by the Democratic Party over the intervening seven
decades and the bankruptcy of its current reformist pretensions.
Meanwhile, the Democratic leadership is preparing to vote next
month for another $100 billion emergency appropriation
to continue the war in Iraq, even as Bush sets in motion plans
to escalate the bloodbath. No legislative initiatives are proposed
in the first 100 hours, or the first 100 weeks for that matter,
to bring the troops home, or to repeal the reactionary legislation
that Democrats helped pass under Republican congressional leadership,
such as the USA Patriot Act or the Military Tribunals Act.
Bush has made it clear that he feels in no way compelled to
alter his policies in Iraq or at home in the face of their mass
repudiation at the polls. And the Democrats have no intention
of fighting on the basis of the popular anti-war mandate that
brought them control of Capitol Hill.
What is certain is that the slaughter in Iraq will intensify
in the coming weeks and months. An inevitable corollary of an
escalation of this war will be an intensification of political
repression at home against the mass opposition that it will provoke.
The opening of the 110th Congress and the ascension of the
Democrats in the House and Senate only underscores the basic reality
that it is impossible to wage a successful struggle against war
and in defense of democratic rights within the existing political
institutions and the two-party monopoly exercised by the corporate
and financial interests that control America.
See Also:
Saddam Hussein execution: A sectarian
lynching
[3 January 2007]
Fords funeral: the hollow pomp
of a corrupt and crisis-ridden establishment
[3 January 2007]
US death toll reaches 3,000 in Iraq,
with no let-up in sight
[3 January 2007]
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