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Democrats withdrawal plan paves way to escalation
of Iraq war
By Bill Van Auken
9 March 2007
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Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and other Democratic congressional
leaders unveiled a toothless plan Thursday that they claim would
result in the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq a year
and a half from now. The main purpose of this political exercise,
however, is to unite the party behind supplemental funding legislation
that will provide at least $100 billion more to pay for the escalation
of the illegal war and occupation that has been waged by Washington
for the past four years.
The stated aim of the Democratic leadership is to unify
the partys congressional caucus behind a consensus
position. The instrument for doing this has been crafted to allow
the Democrats to posture as opponents of the Iraq war, while providing
the Bush White House with both the money and the unrestricted
power to continue it.
The measure, which represents the watering down of already
watered-down proposals to indirectly limit the powers of the Bush
White House in waging the war, comes only three weeks after the
House Democrats passed a symbolic, nonbinding resolution opposing
the administrations surge, which involves the
deployment of at least 26,000 more US troops in a security crackdown
in Baghdad.
In essence, this new legislation is just as nonbinding, when
it comes to tying the hands of the administration, but it will
be anything but symbolic in its provision of funds for the surge
that the Democrats ostensibly oppose, sending more US troops to
kill and be killed in the dirty colonial war that is being waged
against the Iraqi people.
The plan announced by the Democrats would require Bush to certify
to Congress on July 1 and again on October 1 that the Iraqi government
is making progress in achieving the benchmarks that
the US president himself laid out in his January speech announcing
the escalation of the US intervention. Why anyone would accept
the administrations word on the supposed progress was not
explained. Bush called the situation in Iraq encouraging
Tuesday, amid news of horrific bombings that left hundreds of
Iraqis dead and attacks that claimed the lives of at least 13
more US soldiers this week.
Given that Bush claims progress is being made, the Democratic
plan would call for US combat troops to begin redeploying
by March 1, 2008 and complete withdrawal by September 1 of next
year. Given present casualty rateswhich are expected to
rise significantly with the new counterinsurgency operation in
Baghdadthis would mean approximately 1,500 more American
soldiers killed, and many times more Iraqis.
Supposedly, if the benchmarkswhich include Iraqi forces
taking responsibility for security and the government in Baghdad
enacting legislation opening up Iraqs oil reserves for exploitationare
not achieved, the deadlines for withdrawal would be moved up.
As the Wall Street Journal noted, the proposed legislation
would give the administration a relatively free hand to
increase US forces in Iraq. The paper added, The crucial
language, threatening an earlier withdrawal, appears more of a
policy statement than a strict use of the power of the purse,
because the funding bill itself runs out Sept. 30, well
before any of the so-called deadlines for troop withdrawal
go into effect.
The plan also took out what little teeth remained in a proposal,
associated with Representative John Murtha (Democrat, Pennsylvania),
that would have required the Pentagon to fully abide by readiness
and training standards. This measure would ostensibly have barred
the redeployment of units that lacked mandated training, equipment
and recuperation, and precluded extending deployment of Army and
Marine units for more than 365 and 210 days respectively. The
result would have been to prevent the escalation of the war, as
the military does not have enough units that are adequately trained,
equipped and rested for deployment in Iraq.
The final plan, however, grants Bush the power to issue waivers
of these standards if he deems it in the national interest.
The effect of this change is not to put any roadblock in the way
of the administrations plan to send five additional combat
brigades to the Iraqi capital over the next few months.
Moreover, the bottom line of the proposed Democratic legislation
is that it does not call for a complete withdrawal of US occupation
forces from Iraq under any circumstances. Rather, it would leave
tens of thousands of American soldiers behind under various pretexts:
training Iraqi forces, conducting the war on terror,
and protecting American facilities, including a massive new embassy.
The real purpose of their continued presence would be to assert
the dominance of American energy conglomerates over Iraqs
lucrative oil fields.
A call for escalating the Afghanistan intervention
It is significant that the Democratic leadership felt compelled
to cloak even this mealy-mouthed proposal in the language of robust
militarism. Pelosi and other congressional Democrats presented
their plan for withdrawing US troops from Iraq as a means of escalating
the intervention in Afghanistan, where stepped-up US attacks have
claimed the lives of dozens of civilians in the past week.
Only then can we refocus our military efforts on Afghanistan
to the extent that we must, said Pelosi, in calling for
passage of the legislation. Representative David Obey (Wisconsin),
the Democratic chairman of the House Appropriations Committee,
added that the proposal will essentially redirect more of
our resources to the war against Al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan,
fighting the right war in the right place against the people who
attacked us and who are giving Al Qaeda sanctuary.
The Democratic proposal would add $1.2 billion to Bushs
request for supplemental funds in order to provide for an escalation
of the US intervention in Afghanistan.
On the eve of the Democrats announcement, the Pentagon
revealed plans for augmenting the surge with thousands
more American troops. Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced
on Wednesday that the Pentagon has approved a request to send
an additional 2,200 military police to Iraq. This force has been
requested by American commanders in anticipation of the mass roundup
and imprisonment of Iraqis, creating a host of new Abu Ghraibs
throughout the country.
These additional troops come on top of the 21,500 combat troops
that Bush announced he was sending in January. Another 2,400 support
troops are being sent, and Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England
told a House Budget Committee hearing Tuesday that that number
could rise to 7,000, adding billions of dollars more to the cost
of the war.
Meanwhile, the senior US commanders in Iraq made it clear that
the surge announced by Bush in January is anything
but temporary. Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno, the commanding officer of
ground troops in Iraq, indicted that the escalation force would
have to continue for a full year to achieve its goals. Gen. David
Petraeus, the commander of all US forces in the country, echoed
this assessment in press briefing Thursday, declaring, If
youre going to achieve the kinds of effects that we probably
need, than it would need to be sustained certainly for some time
well beyond the summer. He also was careful not to rule
out the prospect of an even greater number of combat troops being
deployed in the country.
The media, including most liberal commentators, have chosen
to focus on the internal wrangling within the Democratic Party,
presenting Pelosis proposal as a kind of balancing act between
a supposedly militant antiwar faction and so-called Blue
Dog Democrats, who cannot bear to be seen challenging the
president as commander-in-chief.
While no doubt the Democratic Party is sharply divided, the
essence of this conflict is not between different shades of opinion
on Capitol Hill. Rather, it is between the party leadership as
a whole, which reflects the determination of predominant layers
within the ruling elite to achieve the original goals of the Iraq
warthe domination of the region and its oil wealthand
the vast majority of those who voted for the party last November,
who want an immediate end to the war and the withdrawal of all
US troops.
It is this contradiction that underlies the appearance of weakness,
perplexity and indecision that pervades the Democrats every
action, despite the overwhelming victory that the party achieved
in the midterm election.
Congress is controlled by two right-wing parties controlled
by big business, both of which supported the invasion of Iraq.
The Democrats, however, have attempted to appeal to a constituency
that is overwhelmingly against the war, exploiting hostility to
Bush, while supporting the fundamental strategic aims that his
administration pursued in launching this war. The Democratic Party,
as its leaders continuously reiterate, remains committed to success
in Iraq, a concept that implies the suppression of Iraqi resistance
to US semi-colonial domination.
This is the essential political reality that underlies the
Democrats phony claim that intractable constitutional dilemmas
preclude them from cutting off funding for the warthough
Congress has done precisely that in a number of previous overseas
US interventionsand the assertions like that of Michigans
Democratic Senator Carl Levin that to cut off funding would be
the wrong thing to do morally in terms of the message it
sends to the troops, when the message would be a plane ride
home.
It is neither the Constitution nor troop morale that explain
the Democrats refusal to mount a serious challenge to the
war, but rather the geo-strategic aims of American imperialism
and the profit interests of the US-based energy corporations and
banks.
The so-called Out of Iraq caucus, which includes California
Democratic Representatives Maxine Waters, Barbara Lee and Lynn
Woolsey, is in the final analysis a left prop for a thoroughly
reactionary, pro-war party. Their criticism of the Democratic
leadership serves not to shift the party to the left, but rather
to feed the illusions of sections of the protest movement that
in turn promote the idea that the Democratic Party can serve as
a shortcut in the struggle against war.
According to press reports, Pelosi and the House Democratic
leadership are considering allowing this caucus to bring their
amendment calling for the withdrawal of US troops by the end of
this year to a vote as a means of letting off steam. In return,
they would expect caucus members to join fellow Democrats in approving
the increased war funding.
The struggle to end the Iraq war and to prevent even bloodier
interventions already being planned can only be successfully waged
through the building of a mass movement based upon working people
and youth that is completely independent of the Congress, the
Democratic Party and all of its factions. Such a movement must
be built on the demands for the unconditional and immediate withdrawal
of all US troops from Iraq and for all those responsible for launching
this war to be held politically and criminally responsible.
See Also:
ISSE/SEP meetings on the fourth anniversary
of the invasion of Iraq: Iraq, Iran and the eruption of American
militarism
[8 March 2007]
Wall Street drools over prospect of capturing
Iraq oil wealth
[6 March 2007]
Campaign builds for ISSE/SEP Emergency
Conference Against War
[2 March 2007]
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