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Democrats criticize Iraq surge, but wont
cut war funds
By Patrick Martin
9 January 2007
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The two top congressional Democratic leaders have publicly
opposed the Bush administrations plans to dispatch more
troops to Iraq, while signaling to the White House that there
will be no serious effort to prevent an escalation of the slaughter
as the bloodbath in Iraq heads towards its fifth year.
The two-faced character of the Democratic posture is the product
of their need to speak to two audiences at the same time: the
American voters, largely working class and middle class, who voted
for Democratic candidates last November 7 to express their opposition
to the war; and the American ruling elite, whose social and economic
interests, within the US and worldwide, the Democratic Party is
committed to defend.
Public opinion is overwhelmingly against Bushs plan for
a surge of additional military forces into Iraq One
recent poll showed only 11 percent favoring the deployment of
more troops, while over 50 percent supported withdrawal of all
US forces by the end of 2007. A second poll found that even when
the alternatives were heavily loaded in favor of the escalation,
with those polled asked to assume that the increase in troops
would stabilize Iraq, more were opposed than in favor.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
sought to appease this massive antiwar sentiment with a letter
to Bush that was made public January 5, followed up by Reid giving
the Democratic Partys response Saturday to Bushs weekly
radio address, and Pelosi appearing Sunday on the CBS interview
program Face the Nation.
The letter offered Bush the cooperation of the Democratic Congress
in finding an end to the war in Iraq, citing the death
toll among American troops, now past the 3,000 mark, and called
for a decision to begin the phased redeployment of our forces
in the next four to six months.
Our troops and the American people have already sacrificed
a great deal for the future of Iraq, they write. After
nearly four years of combat, tens of thousands of U.S. casualties,
and over $300 billion dollars, it is time to bring the war to
a close. We, therefore, strongly encourage you to reject any plans
that call for our getting our troops any deeper into Iraq.
The Democratic letter does not challenge the basis of the war
and expresses the wish to contribute to the success
of the Bush military intervention. Not only that, the Democrats
attribute this position to the American people as well, portraying
the election results as the product of the public belief that
the Iraq intervention has failed to achieve Bushs war aims,
not to popular opposition to the war itself.
The American people demonstrated in the November elections
that they do not believe your current Iraq policy will lead to
success, Reid and Pelosi write. This effectively accepts
the argument put forward by the White House and its neo-conservative
backers that the public will support a victorious war, regardless
of the casualties, and that administration policy should therefore
be based on achieving military victory.
The Democrats differences with Bush revolve around whether
military victory is achievable, not about the legitimacy of Bushs
initial decision to invade and occupy Iraq, which the congressional
Democratic leadership largely supported, and which nearly every
Democrat in Congress has backed materially by voting to fund the
military budget.
The cringing character of the letter is underscored by its
languageit closes with Reid and Pelosi pleading, We
appreciate you taking these views into considerationand
by its timingonly a few days before Bush goes on national
television to announce an escalation plan that was largely worked
out before the Democratic Party missive was issued.
The initial inclination of the incoming Democratic congressional
leadership was to focus on a handful of cosmetic measures on domestic
policytightening ethics rules, a minimum wage increase,
minuscule improvements in the Medicare drug plan and college student
loan subsidiesand avoid as long as possible any public engagement
with the White House over the war.
One top House Democrat, Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, told the
Washington Post, I know where support for more troops
is, and I know where support is for the minimum-wage increase.
Id rather be doing what were doing.
The downplaying of the war issue was flatly in defiance of
public opinion. A CBS poll published January 4 found that 45 percent
of voters want the Congress to focus on Iraq, compared to only
7 percent regarding the economy as the first priority, 7 percent
for health care, and 6 percent for immigration.
This decision was essentially a reprise of the political strategy
carried out by the Democratic leadership in the 2002 congressional
elections, when they sought to confine campaign discussion to
domestic issues and avoid the overriding question of the war,
even though the Bush administration was seeking a vote on a resolution
to authorize military action, which passed the House and Senate
only days before the election.
The congressional Democrats were only compelled to address
the war issue by political necessity, when it became clear that
Bush would give a national television speech this week announcing
a decision to send more troops to Iraq. According to the Post,
Pelosi summoned a meeting of chairman of the committees with relevant
jurisdictionArmed Services, Foreign Affairs, Intelligence,
Homeland Security, and Oversight and Government Reformand
the decision was taken to move scheduled hearings up from the
end of January to begin on Thursday, the day after Bushs
speech.
The hearings themselves will be narrowly focused. There will
be no examination of the lies employed by the Bush administration,
about weapons of mass destruction and Iraqi ties to Al Qaeda,
to intimidate public opinion in the run-up to the war. As Senate
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joseph Biden said, Our
purpose is not to revisit the past, but to help build a consensus
behind a new course for America in Iraq.
Reids radio speech Saturday and Pelosis Sunday
appearance on Face the Nation were further demonstrations
of the half-hearted and fundamentally dishonest character of the
Democratic Party opposition to the war.
Reid cited the opposition in the Pentagon to the proposed surge
in troops into Baghdad. Based on the advice of current and
former military leaders, we believe this tactic would be a serious
mistake, he said in his reply to Bush.
Pelosi repeatedly declared in her television interview that
the Democrats would not cut off funding for the war, portraying
that as an action that would endanger the American troops now
deployed in Iraqcovering up the reality that the greatest
danger to the lives of American soldiers is the right-wing cabal
in the White House, which ordered them to Iraq in the first place.
She suggested, tentatively and timidly, that a White House
request for additional funds to expand the war would receive
the harshest scrutiny, although this language itself suggested
hearings and the raising of questions, not an actual denial of
the funding.
As in the letter, Pelosi reiterated that the outgoing US commanders
in Iraq were opposed to additional troop deployment, since it
would only further inflame the nationalist opposition to the US
occupation and provide more targets for bombs, mortars and sniper
fireparticularly if coupled with more aggressive street-level
patrols in which the US troops leave their armored vehicles.
Even this level of opposition was too much for other prominent
Democrats, including two potential presidential candidates. Biden,
an announced presidential candidate, declared on a Sunday television
interview program that it would be unconstitutional for Congress
to limit troop levels or cut funding for an escalation of the
war, since Congress had authorized the war in the first place.
He said the surge plan was a tragic mistake, but added
that as a practical matter, there is no way to say, Mr.
President, stop.
Senator Barack Obama of Illinois told Newsweek magazine
in an interview last week that Bush would likely have at least
a further year of untrammeled control over the war. To anticipate
your question, he told the magazine, is Congress going
to be willing to exercise its control over the purse strings to
affect White House policy? I am doubtful that that is something
we are willing to do in the first year.
In other words, the congressional Democrats will permit the
war to continue until the election year, when they will adopt
a (purely verbal) antiwar posture in the congressional and presidential
campaign. Newsweek observed, [d]ont expect
Obamaor most other Demsto try to block George W. Bush
when he asks Congress in the coming weeks for another billion-dollar
bundle for the war. The party wont deny the funds, and may
not even try to attach conditions to them.
The Democrats are prepared to back an even wider use of military
power. The new House Majority Leader, Steny Hoyer of Maryland,
gave an interview to the Jerusalem Post, published Sunday,
in which he called for stepped up diplomatic pressure and economic
sanctions against Iran, while not rejecting military action. I
have not ruled that out, he said, in response to a question
about possible air strikes on Irans nuclear facilities.
It is not an option we want to consider until we know there
is no other option.
See Also:
Observations on the opening of the 110th
US Congress
[8 January 2007]
Democrats take control of Congress with
pledge to work with Bush
[5 January 2007]
As US prepares to escalate war in Iraq:
Bush seeks bipartisan backing from Democratic Congress
[4 January 2007]
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