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Democratic Party completes its capitulation on Iraq
By Barry Grey
24 May 2007
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The Democratic congressional leadership on Tuesday formally
accepted a supplemental war-funding bill that abandons any timelines
for withdrawing US troops from Iraq. The bill further gives President
Bush the power to waive economic penalties should the Iraqi government
fail to meet a series of benchmarks for stabilizing
the country and opening up its oil resources to exploitation by
American oil conglomerates.
The agreement is a full and abject capitulation by the Democratic
Party to the Bush administration. It is the inevitable and predictable
outcome of months of antiwar posturing by Democratic leaders.
The terms of the deal were dictated by the White House, working
in tandem with Republican Senator John W. Warner of Virginia,
who put forward the proposal last week in an amendment co-sponsored
by Democrats Ben Nelson of Nebraska and Robert Byrd of West Virginia.
The bill would grant Bushs request for more than $100 billion
in additional funds to continue the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
until the end of the current fiscal year on September 1.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, announced
the agreement Tuesday, following talks between Democratic and
Republican congressional leaders and White House Chief of Staff
Joshua B. Bolten. The negotiations were launched last Friday,
after the Senate vote 94-to-1 for a measure pledging support
for the troops, i.e., full funding for the war without any
restrictions on the administrations escalation of military
violence.
That set the stage for the final Democratic cave-in. The New
York Times reported Wednesday: Senior Democratic officials
said the final bill would probably be stripped of other features
that Mr. Bush had previously resisted, including readiness standards
that would have prevented troops from being returned to Iraq within
one year or without adequate training and equipment unless Mr.
Bush signed a waiver determining it was necessary.
Even as he admitted that the benchmark language was extremely
weak, Reid attempted to give the deal a positive gloss,
saying, No one can say with any degree of veracity that
we havent made great progress.
The hypocrisy of the Democrats was aptlyif unwittinglysummed
up by the New York Times, which sought to present the agreement
as something other than a surrender. Quoting the Democratic Speaker
of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, the newspaper wrote:
I would never vote for such a thing, Ms. Pelosi
said, as she entered the office of Senator Harry Reid of Nevada,
the majority leader, to put the final touches on the $120 billion
proposal.
Later, Pelosi called the bill, which she said she could not
support, another stage in the sequencing of ending this
war.
Other Democrats, who sought to give themselves political cover
by including in the war-funding bill some provisions for accountability
and target dates for partially withdrawing US combat troops, were
more blunt. Massachusetts Democrat James McGovern said, There
are no timetables, theres no accountability. The president
doesnt have to pay attention to any of this stuff.
Lynn Woolsey, Democrat of California and member of the Out
of Iraq Caucus in the House, said, The president prevailed.
White House spokesman Tony Snow made it clear that the agreement
gives Bush everything he had demanded, saying, What will
be seen as a victory is providing... the funding and flexibility
the forces need. Thats what we wanted all along.
A vote on the bill is expected Thursday, and leaders of both
parties say it will be passed and sent to Bush to sign prior to
the weeklong Memorial Day recess.
The inclusion of 18 unenforceable benchmarks in the spending
bill, far from signaling a move toward ending the war, has the
reactionary aim of placing the onus for the death and destruction
inflicted by the US on Iraq on the Iraqis themselves. Warner lectured
the Iraqi governmenta puppet regime entirely dependent on
the US military and despised by the mass of Iraqison the
meaning of the benchmarks, saying Were there to help
you so long as you, as a sovereign nation, pull your own weight
and do your responsible job.
It is no doubt puzzling to many that, despite the massive popular
opposition to Bush and the Iraq war, the Democrats are powerless
against the Bush administration. In the pastin the run-up
to the 2003 invasion and in the 2004 presidential electionthe
Democrats justified their prostration and complicity by the supposedly
overwhelming popular support for the president.
The fundamental reason for the Democrats impotence is
the character of the Democratic Party. It is, no less than the
Republicans, a party of US imperialism. The Democrats have from
the onset supported the basic imperialist aims underlying the
invasion and occupation of Iraq, and the broader striving of the
American financial elite to utilize its military power to dominate
the worlds resources and markets.
The war was never simply Bushs war. The Democrats
repeated the lies used by the administration to drag the American
people into the war and supplied the necessary votes in Congress
to give Bush the authority to launch an unprovoked war of aggression.
Their criticisms have been directed not against the war itself,
but rather against the administrations incompetence in conducting
it and the military and political disaster it has produced.
The Democrats have done, and will do, nothing to actually halt
the war or impede its expansion, because the overwhelming consensus
within the US ruling elite is that any outcome perceived as a
defeat for the United States would have catastrophic consequences
for the global position of American capitalism.
The Republican Party, no matter how unpopular and discredited
among the people, prevails because it represents most directly
the interests of the most determined and ruthless sections of
the ruling elite. The Democrats, on the other hand, serve a very
specific function within the political establishment. They defend
the basic interests of the ruling class, while promoting the fiction
that their party is something it is not now and never wasa
party of average working people. This is what imparts to the Democratic
Party its inveterate duplicity, half-heartedness and cowardice.
Bob Kerreys defense of war
The imperialist and militarist perspective that actually drives
the Democratic Party was spelled out in a column published in
Tuesdays Wall Street Journal by one of the partys
leading spokesmen, Bob Kerrey, former senator and current president
of The New School, a university in New York.
Kerrey is among the more forthright spokesmen for US imperialism
within the Democratic Party. In 2001, shortly after he left his
post as senator from Nebraska to assume the presidency of the
New School, it was revealed that he had commanded a Navy Seal
unit in Vietnam in 1969 that carried out a massacre against a
defenseless village, in which he and six soldiers under his command
killed 21 women, children and elderly men.
His record as a war criminal did not prevent him from being
appointed to the 9/11 Commission and continuing to hold his post
at the New School. In his Wall Street Journal column, entitled
The Lefts Iraq Muddle, Kerrey gives an unabashed
defense of the war in Iraq and argues for an extension of US military
violence far beyond Iraq.
In language that could have been lifted from a speech by Bush,
Kerrey portrays the holocaust inflicted by the US on Iraq as a
campaign for democracy.
The key question for Congress, he writes, is
whether or not Iraq has become the primary battleground against
the same radical Islamists who declared war on the US in the 1990s
and who have carried out a series of terrorist operations including
9/11. The answer is emphatically, yes.
He makes the absurd claim that Those who argue that radical
Islamic terrorism has arrived in Iraq because of the US-led invasion
are right. But they are right because radical Islam opposes democracy
in Iraq. If our purpose had been to substitute a dictator who
was more cooperative and supportive of the West, these groups
wouldnt have lasted a week. But, of course, the US
supports authoritarian regimes in a whole series of countries
where Islamic terrorists flourishPakistan, Afghanistan and
Egypt, to name a few.
In any event, Kerrey is not seeking to convince the general
public by means of a coherent argument. Rather, he is out to convince
his fellow Democrats that they can prove their right to rule to
the constituency that really countsthe ruling eliteonly
by ignoring the sentiments of the people, abandoning their antiwar
posturing and fully embracing all-out war in Iraq.
He chides American lawmakers who are watching public
opinion tell them to move away from Iraq as quickly as possible,
denounces any suggestion that the war is all about oil,
and says if Democrats shy away from war then no wonder today
we Democrats are not trusted with the reins of power.
He concludes by declaring, We must not allow terrorist
sanctuaries to develop any place on earth. Whether these fighters
are finding refuge in Syria, Iran, Pakistan or elsewhere, we cannot
afford diplomatic of political excuses to prevent us from using
military force to eliminate them.
November to May: Six months of duplicity and
lies
It is instructive to review the process by which the Democratic
leadership has come to its final capitulation to Bush. When the
Democrats took control of both houses of Congress last January,
propelled into power by the massive antiwar vote in the November
2006 congressional elections, they began by relegating the entire
question of the war to the background.
Pelosis 100 hours legislative agenda at the
start of the 110th Congress entirely ignored the issue of the
war. The resulting anger and indignation among Democratic voters,
intensified by Bushs January 10 announcement of a surge
of tens of thousands of additional troops into Iraq, compelled
the party leadership to shift tactics. What followed was an elaborate
and carefully calculated effort to dupe the population into believing
that the Democrats were seeking to end the war, while they swore
off any actions that would actually impede its prosecution.
This included the non-binding resolutions against the surge
in February. Beginning in March the Democrats passed measures
in the House and Senate that gave Bush his requested funds to
continue the war, with various timetables attached for partially
withdrawing US combat troops. All of the Democratic proposals
allowed for an indefinite continued presence of tens of thousands
of troops after the supposed deadlines for withdrawal.
When Bush, on May 1, vetoed the Democratic bill that resulted
from negotiations between the House and Senate, the end game was
already clear. Democratic leaders in both houses gave repeated
assurances that they would under no circumstances cut off funding
for the troops, even as the toll of American soldiers
killed and wounded soared, and Iraq sank ever further into a state
of hellish chaos, death and destruction.
They announced that they would come up with a bill acceptable
to Bush prior to the May 28 Memorial Day holiday, producing the
inevitable and final capitulation that has now occurred.
At every step of the way, the Democratic leadership was aided
and abetted by supposedly antiwar Democrats such as the Out of
Iraq caucus, who provided the necessary votes to pass war-funding
measures, and left-liberal forces such as the Nation magazine
and the leaders of protest groups such as United for Peace and
Justice, who presented the Democratic Party as a genuine vehicle
for opposing and ending the war.
These events have fully confirmed the analysis and perspective
of the Socialist Equality Party and the World Socialist Web
Site. On November 8, one day after the midterm elections,
the WSWS published an editorial board statement that said:
The Democratic Party is the beneficiary of overwhelming
antiwar sentiment that it did nothing to encourage and which stands
in stark opposition to its own pro-war policy. There is a vast
chasm between the massive antiwar sentiment within the electorate
and the commitment of Democratic Party leaders to victory
in Iraq and continued prosecution of the war on terror....
Those who voted for the Democratic Party in order to
express their opposition to the Bush administration and the war
will rapidly discover that a Democratic electoral victory will
produce no significant change in US policy, either abroad or at
home. Millions of working people and youth will sooner rather
than later come into direct conflict with the Democrats.
Eight days later, the WSWS published a statement of the Socialist
Equality Party that declared:
However sharp the differences within the political establishment
over the Bush administrations conduct of the war in Iraqand
more generally its reckless and ignorant approach to complex problems
of foreign policyno substantial section of the ruling elite
is prepared to countenance a withdrawal of US forces under conditions
where such action would be seen as a military defeat and represent
a devastating setback to the regional and global interests of
American imperialism.
The internal debates within the policy-making establishmentDemocratic
and Republicanare aimed at forging a new strategic consensus
on the future conduct of American policy in the Middle East. While
the depth of antiwar sentiment expressed in last weeks elections
came as something of a shock to both parties, their leaders are
not in the least inclined to allow the attitude of the broad mass
of the American people determine the foreign policy objectives
of the United States.
The experience of the past six months since the November election
has underscored the incompatibility of the interests of working
people with the entire two-party system, and the need to break
with the Democrats and build a mass, independent and socialist
movement to end the war in Iraq and prevent new imperialist wars.
See Also:
Democrats drop "withdrawal"
deadlines as administration mulls post-surge Iraq
[23 May 2007]
American military deaths soar as US extends
its surge in Iraq: Second Fallujah plan
for Baghdads Sadr City
[22 May 2007]
The US war and occupation of Iraqthe
murder of a society
[19 May 2007]
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