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The struggle against war requires a break with the Democrats
By the Editorial Board
27 January 2007
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Thousands of people will converge on Washington, DC, this Saturday
to express their opposition to the war in Iraq and their outrage
over the Bush administrations decision to escalate that
war in defiance of the November elections popular mandate
for a withdrawal of US troops.
The burning political question posed by the repudiation of
the will of the people on such a fundamental question is what
political perspective is necessary to wage a successful struggle
to end this war and to prevent even bloodier interventionsagainst
Iran, Syria and countries as yet unnamedbeing prepared by
the administration.
The answer to this question given by those who have called
the January 27 protest is clear. Their perspective is that the
war in Iraq can be halted by pressuring the Democratic Party to
utilize its new majority status in Congress to de-fund the war
and force the administration to bring US troops home.
This outlook is clearly expressed by the leadership of the
main coalition organizing the demonstration, the United for Peace
and Justice (UFPJ) coalition, which has invited several Democratic
members of Congress to deliver speeches from the platform and
is urging demonstrators to stay in Washington to participate in
Congressional advocacy visits.
In its call for the demonstration, the UFPJ urges those opposed
to the war to Tell the new Congress: act NOW to bring the
troops home!
The statement continues: We call on people from every
congressional district in the country to gather in Washington,
DCto express support for those members of Congress who are
prepared to take immediate action against the war; to pressure
those who are hesitant to act; and to speak out against those
who remain tied to a failed policy....
A similar outlook is expressed in the Nation, the flagship
publication of the left-liberal protest milieu oriented toward
the Democratic Party. An editorial in its January 29 issue entitled
No to Escalation engages in wishful thinking regarding
the capacity of the congressional Democrats to wage a struggle
against Bushs deployment of another 21,500 troops to Iraq.
Even if Congress is ultimately unable to prevent the
troop increase, a series of hearings, votes and resolutions can
confront the President on his strategy and can lay the groundwork
for the larger battle of ending the war, the Nation
declares. The editorial urges participation in the January 27
demonstration on the grounds that ratcheting up the pressure
on Congress is urgent.
It is now nearly four years since massive protests against
the looming war in Iraq brought tens of millions of people into
the streets all across the world. It is high time for some hard
but essential political lessons to be drawn.
Those demonstrations, despite their massive scale, failed to
halt the US war of aggression against Iraq. Repeated demonstrations
since have not diminished this crime.
On the contrary, the death toll has risen to a horrifying level,
with an estimated 650,000 Iraqis and more than 3,000 US troops
having lost their lives, and the world has watched in horror as
atrocities like Abu Ghraib, Fallujah and Haditha unfolded.
Protest in and of itself will not alter the policy of those
who launched this war. The indifference to public opinion of those
who control the White House has become inescapably clear with
Bushs surge in the wake of the midterm elections.
The Democratic Party has acted as the administrations
willing accomplice in launching and continuing this war. In October
2002, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed the authorization
for the use of military force resolution granting Bush a blank
check to carry out an unprovoked war against Iraq. This was not
a mistake or aberration. It was the culmination of a deliberate
policy of the Democratic leadership to ignore the broad antiwar
sentiment among Democratic voters and keep the administrations
war drive out of the 2002 midterm election campaign. Thus, the
Democrats served as the enablers for the war conspirators in the
Bush administration.
During the 2004 primaries, mass antiwar sentiment was channeled
behind candidates for the Democratic presidential nominationin
particular, Howard Dean. The party leadership scuttled Deans
candidacy and threw the nomination to Senator John Kerry, who
had voted for the war and vowed to continue it, criticizing Bush
for failing to send in enough troops.
Democrats have voted nearly unanimously every year since 2003
to grant the administration massive war funding that now totals
nearly $8.5 billion a month.
And what of the new-found Democratic antiwar fervor supposedly
reflected in the nonbinding Senate resolution opposing Bushs
surge? As the text of this resolution makes clear,
the Senate Democratstogether with some Republican alliesbegin
not from a determination to end the war, but rather a concern
that Bushs proposal will provoke mass opposition, making
it harder to defeat the Iraqi resistance.
The very first passage of the resolution warns, United
States strategy and presence on the ground in Iraq can only be
sustained with the support of the American people and bipartisan
support from Congress.
Those backing the resolution voice concern that the administrations
course is weakening the war on terror. They worry
that not enough American troops are available for new warsagainst
Iran, Syria, North Korea or Venezuela. These same Democrats are
the most enthusiastic proponents of expanding the military and
have called for doubling the ranks of the Special Forces, the
Armys elite killing squads.
The differences between the congressional Democrats and the
Republican administration are over tactics, not strategic aims.
When the Democratic leadership calls for redeploying
American troops in Iraq, they mean keeping tens of thousands of
soldiers and Marines there in heavily fortified bases and utilizing
US air power to repress Iraqi resistance.
The Democrats do not oppose aggressive war or colonial occupation.
They backed the invasion of Iraq because they thought it would
enable the US to grab the countrys oil resources and establish
US hegemony in the Middle East. They are critical of Bushs
war policy now not because the war is imperialist or illegal or
because it has killed hundreds of thousands of people. They are
critical because the war has gone badly.
The Democrats, like the Republicans, are controlled by a financial
oligarchy that is determined to utilize US military force to offset
the decline of American capitalisms economic power. This
campaign of military aggression will not end with Iraq. Preparations
for war against Iran are already well advanced, and mounting global
tensions raise the nightmarish prospects of a global conflagration.
A successful struggle against war is impossible outside of
confronting the system that creates it, a system that is subordinated
entirely to profit and the piling up of vast personal fortunes
for a tiny elite. Those who claim that this can be accomplished
by pressuring the Democrats and Congress are either fooling themselves
or deliberately deceiving others. So long as mass protests are
oriented toward this perspective, they will serve not as a means
of changing society, but merely of venting popular frustration.
The struggle against war requires the independent political
mobilization of working peoplethe ones who are paying the
price for waragainst the profit system.
Demonstrations, as well as any other form of political activity,
can help achieve this goal only to the extent that they are aimed
at raising the political consciousness of broad masses. They must
serve to educate working people, students and youth about the
source of imperialist militarism within the capitalist economic
system, and about the role of the Democratic Party and the two-party
system as political instruments of a financial elite whose interests
stand in direct opposition to those of workers in the US and all
over the world.
The demands for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of all US troops from Iraq and for those responsible for this
war to be tried for war crimes must be joined with a far-reaching
program aimed at the reorganization of economic life, ending poverty
and social inequality, and breaking the domination of the banks
and corporations by transforming them into public utilities.
Such a program can be developed and fought for only through
the emergence of a new political movement forged through an irrevocable
break with the Democratic Party and fighting for the independent
mobilization of working people in their own political and social
interests.
We urge all those who are looking for a real way to stop the
slaughter in Iraq and who want to end social inequality and political
reaction to read and support the World Socialist Web Site
and join the Socialist Equality Party and the International Students
for Social Equality in the struggle to build a new mass socialist
party.
See Also:
For an international mobilization of workers
and youth against the war in Iraq: Statement of the World Socialist
Web Site and the International Committee of the Fourth International
[22 January 2007]
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