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Another slap in the face to antiwar voters: Democrats embrace
former Iraq commander
By Patrick Martin
27 November 2007
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Six weeks after he denounced the American media and US politicians
for undermining the war effort in Iraq and called for an all-out
mobilization of American power to win victory, the former US commander
in Baghdad, retired Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, delivered
the official Democratic Party response to President George W.
Bushs weekly Saturday radio address.
The selection of Sanchez to make the broadcast November 24
is a calculated decision by the Democratic Party leadership to
adopt a standpoint on the war in Iraq that criticizes the Bush
administration largely from the right, rather than the left. The
Democrats have rebuffed the desires of the vast majority of the
American people, including those whose votes placed the Democrats
in control of Congress a year ago, who want an end to the war
as quickly as possible.
Sanchez commanded US forces in Iraq from June 2003 to June
2004, the period immediately following the US invasion. He is
indelibly linked to two episodes in the bloody record of American
oppression in Iraq: the murderous onslaught on the city of Fallujah,
then one of the strongholds of Iraqi resistance to the occupation,
and the abuse of captured Iraqis in the American military prison
at Abu Ghraib.
The latter episode, which came to public attention in April
and May 2004, essentially put an end to Sanchezs military
career. He was replaced as Iraq commander in June, returning to
duty at the Pentagon, but was denied promotion because of the
controversy over Abu Ghraib and ultimately retired from the military
at the end of 2006.
It is extraordinary that the Democratic Party should choose
such a discredited and repugnant figure to serve as a public spokesman
criticizing the Bush administrations conduct of the war.
It demonstrates that there is within the Democratic Party leadership
not a shred of moral opposition to the crimes that have been committed
and are being committed by American imperialism in Iraq.
The sole grounds on which Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid oppose
the Bush administration on the war is that it has been conducted
incompetently and unsuccessfully. They dont object in principle
to imperialist conquest and plunder. They merely complain that
Bush has failed to deliver on his promise of a quick and profitable
war that would pay for itself through access to Iraqs vast
oil resources.
The selection of Sanchez is a further demonstration of the
rapid shift to the right in the Democratic Party as the presidential
nomination campaign enters its most critical period, with six
weeks remaining before the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire
primary. This shift to the right has been accelerated by the recent
media campaign portraying the Bush surge strategy
in Iraq as a great success.
As the New York Times noted, in a front-page report
Sunday, Advisers to Senators Hillary Rodham Clinton and
Barack Obama say that the candidates have watched security conditions
improve after the troop escalation in Iraq and concluded that
it would be folly not to acknowledge those gains.
The Times cited Sanchezs radio appearance as a
boost for the Democratic candidates, because he endorsed
a Democratic resolution in the House that proposed a goal
of withdrawing all US combat troops from Iraq by December 2008although
there are no provisions to enforce the goal, and the congressional
Democratic leadership has adamantly opposed the use of the only
constitutional means it possesses to end the war: cutting off
funds for military operations in Iraq.
The newspaper admitted that the Democratic presidential candidates
were risking alienating antiwar voters: By saying the effects
of the troop escalation have not led to a healthier political
environment, the candidates are tacitly acknowledging that the
additional troops have, in fact, made a difference on the grounda
viewpoint many Democratic voters might not embrace.
In his remarks broadcast Saturday morning, General Sanchez
criticized the administrations failure to devise a
strategy for victory in Iraq that employed, in a coordinated manner,
the political, economic, diplomatic and military power of the
United States. That failure continues today. He blamed the
Bush administration for failing to move aggressively on the diplomatic,
political and economic fronts, particularly in pressuring the
US-backed regime in Baghdad.
As a result, he said, the improvements in security produced
by the courage and blood of our troops have not been matched by
a willingness on the part of Iraqi leaders to make the hard choices
necessary to bring peace to their country. There is no evidence
that the Iraqis will choose to do so in the near future or that
we have an ability to force that result. America lost that ability
upon the transfer of sovereignty back in June of 2004.
This language is remarkable, not only for its reference to
improvements in security, but for the expression of
regret that the US restored Iraqs nominal sovereignty in
June 2004, during Sanchezs final month as commander. Evidently,
the retired general wishes that the White House had continued
the colonial-style regime of the Coalition Provisional Authority
until a satisfactory political settlement was imposed.
Sanchez hinted at the real reason for the growing opposition
to Bushs Iraq policy within the American ruling elite, declaring,
Having fewer American troops in Iraq will also allow us
to devote more resources to refit our ground forces to respond
to different contingencies in other parts of the world.
What are those different contingencies? Do they perhaps
include military attacks on Iran, on Syria, or within Pakistan?
This is certainly the main thrust of the critiques offered
by the leading Democratic presidential candidates, who have attacked
the war in Iraq as a wasteful diversion of military forces that
are needed to advance the interests of American imperialism elsewhereparticularly
against Iran, regarded as the major threat to US dominance of
the Middle East and Central Asia, the center of world oil and
gas production.
There is another and even more ominous aspect to the selection
of Sanchez as a spokesman for the Democratic Party. On October
12, Sanchez delivered an address to the annual conference of the
Military Reporters and Editors, held in Arlington, Virginia. The
World Socialist Web Site called that speech an anti-democratic
tirade, noting that the implicit message of his
speech was the incompatibility of democratic processes with the
pursuit of a global war against extremism.
Sanchez devoted half of his October 12 speech to criticizing
the role of the media in undermining public support for the Iraq
warironic, since uncritical media coverage played a major
role in promoting the war of aggression in the first place. The
ex-general was clearly embittered by his career-ending encounter
with a media firestorm over the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
He combined this attack on what he called agenda-driven
biases and political propaganda that is uncontrolled
with a denunciation of the corrosive partisan politics that
is destroying our country and killing our service members who
are at war.
Portraying democracy as incompatible with the national unity
required in wartime, he declared, Partisan politics have
hindered this war effort and America should not accept this. America
must demand a unified national strategy that goes well beyond
partisan politics and places the common good above all else...
Our politicians must remember their oath of office and recommit
themselves to serving our nation and not their own self-interests
or political party. The security of America is at stake and we
can accept nothing less.
What does it mean that an individual holding such extreme,
authoritarian and anti-democratic views has now been selected
to represent the Democratic Party on a national platform? As the
WSWS noted in analyzing Sanchezs earlier speech, The
growing political power of the military, and the weakening of
civilian control, is a process that has been developing over a
protracted period, under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
As far back as the impeachment of Bill Clinton, an attempted
political coup by the ultra-right, and then the crisis over the
vote-counting in Florida in the 2000 presidential election, we
have emphasized that there is no significant constituency for
the defense of democratic rights within the American ruling elite.
In choosing Sanchez as its spokesman the Democratic leadership
is underscoring its own subservience to the Pentagon and to those
who are drawing the most reactionary and sinister political conclusions
from the military debacle in Iraq.
See Also:
An anti-democratic tirade
Former US commander blames partisan politics and agenda-driven
media for Iraq debacle
[15 October 2007]
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