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Bush vilifies Democrats, vows veto of Iraq war funding bill
By Bill Van Auken
30 March 2007
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In a bellicose speech delivered Wednesday, on the eve of a
Senate vote approving a $122 billion spending bill directed primarily
at funding the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, US President George
W. Bush vowed to veto any legislation proposing troop withdrawals.
Insisting that the war in Iraq is being fought to prevent new
terrorist attacks on the US, and that if we leave Iraq before
the job is done, the enemy will follow us here, Bush stopped
just short of accusing the Democratic congressional leadership
of treason and aiding terrorism.
The US president delivered his address to the National Cattlemens
Beef Association (NCBA), a lobbying group representing big US
agricultural interests. In 2004, the NCBA endorsed Bush for reelection
and directed nearly 90 percent of its political contributions
to Republican candidates.
On Thursday, the US Senate cast its final vote on the supplemental
funding bill, approving the measure 51 to 47. The legislation
includes over $100 billion in war funding, plus some $20 billion
more for domestic items ranging from $1.6 billion for Gulf Coast
storm damage relief to $100 million to pay for security at the
2008 Democratic and Republican conventions.
Approval of the package was a foregone conclusion after the
defeat Tuesday of a Republican attempt to strip language from
the legislation setting a nonbinding goal for the redeployment
of US troops by March of 2008.
A similar piece of war-funding legislation was approved by
the House of Representatives last week calling for the withdrawal
of US combat troops by September 2008. Both bills
provide ample loopholes to allow the administration to continue
the war, and make clear that tens of thousands of US troops would
remain in Iraq for the stated purposes of defending US citizens
and facilities, conducting anti-terrorist operations
and training Iraqi security forces.
House and Senate Democratic leaders indicated that differences
between the two spending packages would be ironed out in conference
committee meetings beginning next week, with a final version to
be ready by the time the House returns from its two-week break
on April 16.
The actions on Capitol Hill combined with the White House threat
to veto the legislation have set the stage for a reactionary showdown
over which body is responsible for withholding support for
our troops.
In his speech before the cattlemen on Wednesday, Bush set out
to place blame squarely upon the Democratic-led Congress.
The American people will know who to hold responsible,
he told his largely sympathetic audience.
Once again he used the speech to invoke the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001 as a justification for his administrations
policies of war abroad and attacks on democratic rights at home.
It is a day that our country must never forget, he
declared, and the lessons of that day must never be forgot.
These he summed up as: The best way to protect this country
is to defeat the enemy overseas so we dont have to face
them here at home.
The enemy that Washington is now trying to defeat
in Iraq, however, is the product of Washingtons colonialist
occupation itself, which is overwhelmingly opposed by the people
of Iraq.
Defending his so-called surge of some 30,000 more
US troops into Iraq, Bush claimed that the initial escalation
of US operations in Baghdad and Anbar Province have produced some
early signs that are encouraging. As evidence, he cited
a comment praising the US surge by two Iraqi bloggers.
It was later revealed that the pair had actually written the
propaganda piece earlier this month and it had been republished
on the Wall Street Journal editorial page. Both of them
had met with Bush in the Oval Office in 2004.
He also cited a letter from a US Army sergeant claiming that
the US operation was picking up momentum.
In stark contrast to the claims of success made by Bush and
his supporters was the grim picture presented by retired Gen.
Barry McCaffrey, currently a professor at the US Military Academy
at West Point, who was given full access to US commanders in Iraq
during a recent trip and, upon his return, drafted a memo recording
what he found.
The population is in despair, the former top US
commander wrote. Life in many of the urban areas is now
desperate. He reported 2,900 IED (roadside bomb) attacks
on US forces a month, combined with thousands more small arms,
rocket and mortar attacks.
McCaffrey added: There is no function of government that
operates effectively across the nationnot health care, not
justice, not education, not transportation, not labor and commerce,
not electricity, not oil production. There is no province in the
country in which the government has dominance. The police
force, he added, is feared as a Shia militia in uniform
which is responsible for thousands of extra-judicial killings.
The general noted that The majority of the Iraqi population
support armed attacks on American forces, and that the resistance
to the occupation was popularly based, continually growing despite
the killing and imprisonment of tens of thousands of Iraqi fighters.
The general went on to describe an American military that is
being systematically eroded by the Iraq war, with current levels
of deployment unsustainable. He warned, however, that
a disaster in Iraq would endanger Americas
strategic interests (oil) in the Middle East for a generation.
This is the reality underlying the bitter political recriminations
in Washington. Bush, in his denunciations of the Democrats, is
preparing a kind of stab in the back explanation for
the debacle that confronts US imperialism in Iraq, blaming treacherous
politicians for preventing victory.
Yet at the very moment that General Petraeuss strategy
is beginning to show signs of success, the Democrats in the House
of Representatives have passed an emergency spending bill that
undercuts him and the troops under his command, Bush charged.
He accused the Democrats of setting arbitrary deadlines
and requiring that American forces begin retreating from
Iraq ... regardless of conditions on the ground.
Bush also demagogically attacked the Democrats for including
non-military appropriations in the supplemental spending bill,
as if this somehow tainted legislation thats supporting
our troops. In reality, the administrations financing
of the war through supplemental funding legislation is a means
of hiding from the public its real cost, which is now averaging
nearly $10 billion a month and is rapidly heading towards a total
of $1 trillion.
This method allows the administration to treat the war as something
off the books, not counted in budget deficit estimates
or in calculating the impact of tax cuts for the rich. After four
years of occupation, the pretense that the war costs are the result
of an unanticipated emergency is ludicrous. Politically,
it represents one more means of consolidating a presidential dictatorship
in which Congresswhich has willingly collaborated in the
processexercises no control.
Once again casting the dirty colonial war being waged by the
US in Iraq as a crusade of good against evil, Bush told the cattlemen,
If we cannot muster the resolve to defeat this evil in Iraq,
America will have lost its moral purpose in the world, and we
will endanger our citizens, because if we leave Iraq before the
job is done, the enemy will follow us here.
Democrats reacted to the heated rhetoric from the president.
Calm down with the threats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(Democrat-California) said, referring to Bush, at a Capitol Hill
press conference Wednesday. We respect your constitutional
role. We want you to respect ours.
For all the attempts to cast the clash over the supplemental
spending bill as a historic showdown between a White House bent
on military victory and a congressional leadership determined
to end the war, leading Democratic lawmakers have repeatedly stressed
that the so-called deadlines in the legislation represent goals
not mandates, and that they envision substantial numbers of US
troops remaining in the country to protect Washingtons interests.
The New York Times Thursday came to the defense of the
Democrats against Bushs attempts to vilify them. In a lead
editorial, the newspaper condemned the administration for promoting
propaganda aimed at making Americans think there is a debate
going on between those who want to win the war and those who want
to lose. Thats nonsense, and the White House knows it.
Indeed, the Democratic Party, no less than the Republican,
remains committed to defending the interests of the US corporations
and banks in the Middle East and in pursuing the aims that underlay
the war in Iraq from the beginningseizure of oil resources
and assertion of American capitalist hegemony worldwide. The dominant
section of the partyalong with a layer of Republicansis
convinced that the tactics pursued by the Bush administration
in Iraq have fundamentally weakened the US position.
In the end, the most likely resolution of the clash over the
supplemental spending bill is a Democratic retreat in the face
of hysterical charges that the partys insistence on including
its withdrawal languagenot Bushs vetois threatening
to deprive US troops of supplies and ammunition. It is already
expected that the final bill being sent to the White House will
be the more watered-down version drafted by the Senate. And there
have been suggestions from some Democrats that a presidential
veto could result in a compromise under which funding
would be provided in separate installments, with no goals for
troop redeployments attached.
The Democratic leaderships real attitude toward the war
found another revealing expression in remarks Wednesday by former
Representative Harold E. Ford Jr., the new chairman of the Democratic
Leadership Council (DLC).
In his first address to members of the DLCthe most powerful
caucus within the Democratic Party, which includes the partys
putative front-runner for the 2008 presidential nomination, New
York Senator Hillary ClintonFord echoed Bushs criticism
of setting withdrawal dates.
I think most Americans want to win, they dont want
to see us leave early, and if we leave prematurely, we may create
a broader set of conflicts and invite a bigger problem in that
region than before leaving, Ford said.
The DLC chairman called for forbearance, proposed
talks with Iran and Syria and suggested that we may end
up with a partition-type government in Iraq. He likewise
called for making the US military bigger and stronger.
This is the genuine face of the Democratic Party, which is
committed to militarism and the ruthless defense of the interests
of the American ruling elite, both at home and abroad.
The differences between the Democrats and Republicans over
the Iraq war are over tactics, not fundamental imperialist strategy.
Underlying the increasingly heated rhetoric in Washington are
the immense political tensions that are emerging as the result
of growing popular opposition to the war itself, which can find
no genuine expression in the policies advanced by either major
party.
See Also:
US Senate votes $122 billion in war funding
while suggesting withdrawal goal
[28 March 2007]
Democrats pass anti-war bill
that funds the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
[24 March 2007]
If elected, Hillary Clinton vows to keep
US troops in Iraq
[17 March 2007]
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