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Democrats halt Senate debate on Iraq war
By Patrick Martin
20 July 2007
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Senate Democrats abandoned an effort to impose restrictions
on the Bush administrations conduct of the war in Iraq after
losing a procedural vote Wednesday to halt a Republican filibuster.
After 24 hours of desultory debate on Iraq war policy, the Democratic
leadership caved in to the White House, effectively conceding
that there will be no change in US policy in Iraq for as long
as Bush has congressional Republican support to continue the present
course.
Just before noon the Senate fell well short of the 60 votes
required to force a vote on the plan offered by Democrats Carl
Levin of Michigan and Jack Reed of Rhode Island, which would give
the Bush administration 120 days to begin withdrawing combat troops
from Iraq. The amendment to the defense authorization bill would
have set an April 2008 deadline for withdrawal of all combat forces,
but allowed tens of thousands of US troops to remain in Iraq indefinitely
for the stated purpose of fighting terrorists, training Iraqi
troops and protecting US assets.
Only four Republicans joined 48 Democrats and one independent
to support the amendment. Majority Leader Harry Reid switched
his vote at the last minute in order to preserve his right to
seek reconsideration at a later stage, making the final margin
52-47. But minutes after this parliamentary maneuver, Reid announced
he was pulling the defense bill from the Senate calendar and would
not permit votes on any other amendments related to the Iraq war.
This sudden change of tackvotes on various amendments
had been planned, including a measure to require closure of the
US concentration camp at Guantánamo Baywas actually
decided upon at a private conclave of Senate Democratic leaders
Monday.
According to press reports, the Democrats feared that several
more modest war-related measures might pass if they reached the
floor for a vote, including a bipartisan measure to adopt the
report of the Iraq Study Group as government policy, and an amendment
by Republicans Richard Lugar and John Warner requiring Bush to
develop operational plans for a draw-down of US troops, while
not mandating any actual pullout.
Both amendments would have given Senate Republicans an opportunity
to go on record in a vote against Bush administration policy in
an effort to appease public antiwar sentiment, while doing nothing
in practice to interfere with the ongoing escalation of the war.
By blocking their consideration, Reid was essentially saying that
the privilege of offering toothless amendments that do not end
the war would be reserved for the Democrats, who need the political
cover even more than the Republicans.
One prominent Republican, Senator Lugar, spoke sympathetically
of Reids difficulties. He recognizes that Iraq is
the major issue that brought Democrats into a majority in both
houses, Lugar said. That constituency is unsatisfied
and restive, and therefore politically this becomes the top priority
by quite a distance.
The additional amendments would also have brought to the surface
divisions among the Senate Democrats. The Republican filibuster
has obscured those divisions. It is not even certain that the
Levin-Reed amendment would have passed if it had come up for a
vote, as several Democrats who voted to end the filibuster were
not committed to vote for the amendment itself.
One of the Democratic candidates elected in November 2006,
Senator Jon Tester of Montana, emphasized that he believed the
Senate should neither order removal of all troops nor set policy
for the conduct of military operations. He backed a vote on the
Levin-Reed amendment more as a symbolic gesture of the need for
a change in policy. It still gives the commander-in-chief
the flexibility he needs as commander-in-chief, Tester said.
The Montana senator added, [T]here was a significant
number of troops in the Middle East before we started this thing;
theres going to be some troops in the Middle East; theres
US interests involved and thats the nature of the beast.
Indicating his support for an open-ended US presence in Iraq,
he said, Weve been there for four years and I dont
think you can anticipate that everybody is going to be out. I
dont think thats going to be the case. Therell
be some left, as needed.
The decision to end further consideration of war-related legislation,
at least until mid-September, means that scores if not hundreds
more American soldiers and thousands more innocent Iraqi civilians
will be slaughtered. But Reid was the picture of complacency.
You cannot fight against the future, he told his Republican
counterparts. Time is on our side.
Assistant Majority Leader Richard Durbin declared during the
debate, This war was born in deception. At the highest levels
of our government, it has been waged with incompetence and arrogance.
These are, however, empty words, given that the Democrats have
flatly rejected any effort to remove Bush and Cheney from office.
In a fundamental sense, the entire framework of the Senate
debate was a fraud, since Reid, Durbin & Co. have already
pushed through the emergency funding bill required by the Bush
administration to finance the war through September 30. Pentagon
officials had warned that they would be compelled to halt military
operations in Iraq for lack of funding, but the House and Senate
buckled and passed the appropriations bill with top-heavy bipartisan
majorities at the end of May.
The congressional Democrats have thus foresworn both the constitutional
method for ending the US occupation of Iraqusing Congresss
power of the purse to force a withdrawal of US forcesand
the constitutional method for removing those responsible for a
criminal and aggressive war, impeachment.
Instead, they have devoted their efforts to a public relations
campaign aimed at portraying themselves as opponents of the war
while permitting Bush and Cheney to continue it unhindered. This
has included such measures as non-binding resolutions, resolutions
that will not be brought to a vote (in the Senate), and resolutions
that cannot survive a presidential veto (in the House), combined
with passage of the bill providing $100 billion to continue military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In this duplicitous attempt to delude the vast majority of
Democratic voters who oppose the war, the congressional Democrats
have received political assistance from liberal pressure groups
like MoveOn.org and United for Peace and Justice, and publications
like the Nation, which have portrayed the legislative play-acting
as though it were a titanic battle for the soul of the republic.
Tom Matzzie of MoveOn.org hailed Reids decision to pull
the defense authorization bill from the Senate calendar, declaring,
I think Senator Reid took an important step toward confronting
Republican obstructionism and ending the war. Matzzie told
the Washington Post that his organization would focus on
the 21 Senate Republicans facing reelection next year, with the
goal of forcing the entire Republican Party to look over
the side of the cliff in contemplating the electoral consequences
of continued support for the war. Ultimately, we end the
war by creating a toxic political environment for war supporters
like the Republicans in the Senate, he said.
A similar group, Progressive Democrats of America, admitted
in an email to supporters Tuesday, The Levin-Reed Amendment
does not end the occupation and it leaves too many troops and
all military contractors behind in Iraq. Nonetheless, it
said that passage of the amendment would be a good first
step and offered the prospect of further action in the fall
when senators would be urged to step forward to offer an
amendment to bring the troops home by the holidays.
Americans Against Escalation in Iraq, an umbrella for the pro-Democratic
Party groups critical of the warincluding MoveOn.org, Center
for American Progress, the Service Employees International Union,
Win Without War, and the Campaign for Americas Futuresaid
it would encourage lobbying to keep the heat on the
Republican senators who claimed to oppose the White House on Iraq
policy.
It was left to the Nation magazine to make a bald admission
that the antiwar pretense of the Senate Democrats was wearing
thin. In a column hailing the beginning of the round-the-clock
debate on war policy as a vigorous new effort by the Democratic
leadership, the magazine observed that because of the continuation
of the war, more than eight months after the Democratic victory
in November 2006, there was the danger that more and more
Americans came to see Reid and the Democrats as, at best, ineffective;
and, at worst, in unspoken collaboration with Bush.
This is, in truth, the real state of affairs in official Washington.
None of the crimes perpetrated by the Bush administration, whether
in Iraq or at home, could have been carried out without that unspokenand
frequently overtcollaboration by the Democratic Party.
See Also:
Bush administration releases report on
terror threat: A new pretext for American militarism and domestic
repression
[19 July 2007]
Bush prepares new Iraq escalation as
congressional Democrats blather on [18 July 2007]
Democrats, White House agree: Iraq war
will rage on regardless of Senate debate
[12 July 2007]
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