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Democrats debate in the shadow of US war threats against Iran
By Patrick Martin
31 October 2007
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The Democratic presidential debate Tuesday night in Philadelphia
was conducted under the shadow of mounting threats of a US attack
against Iran, an expansion of the US military intervention in
the Middle East that will have incalculable consequences for Iran,
America and the world.
The debate made clear that the Democratic Party establishment
believes it likely that Bush and Cheney will order a US military
strike on Iran in a matter of months, and that neither the Democratic
frontrunner Hillary Clinton nor any of her rivals for the nomination
will take any action to halt a new and criminal US war of aggression.
Clinton herself joined with half the Senates Democrats
on September 26 to approve a resolution urging the Bush administration
to classify Irans Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist
organization and deploy American military resources in Iraq in
such a way as to counter the alleged threat from Iran.
At Tuesdays debate, the other Democratic candidates attacked
Clinton for this vote. Senator Christopher Dodd pointed to the
similarities between the Iran resolution and the congressional
resolution adopted in October 2002 authorizing US military action
in Iraq. Senator Joseph Biden said the resolution was tantamount
to a declaration of war. We have emboldened Bush,
he admitted, while calling Bushs suggestion that the conflict
with Iran could produce World War III incredibly irresponsible.
Clinton twice repeated a well-crafted formulathat she
opposes a rush to war with Iran, rather than war itself.
In other words, she opposes a hasty and precipitate attack on
Iran, but not an attack on Iran that develops at a slower pace
and with congressional and international support.
While opposing this rush to war, Clinton added,
she was not in favor of doing nothing, and then proceeded
to echo the talking points of Bush and Cheney. The Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Corps was at the forefront of nuclear weapons development
and involved in promoting terrorism, she said. She claimed that
she had supported the resolution to reinforce US diplomatic pressure
on Irana piece of sophistry that echoes the claims five
years ago of herself and other leading Democrats who voted to
authorize the Bush administration to use military force against
Iraq.
Clinton concluded that the task of the Democrats is to
prevent Bush and the Republicans from going on their own
to offensive military actiona formulation that suggests
that to prevent a unilateral war by the administration, the congressional
Democrats should make it a bipartisan bloodbath.
Meet the Press host Tim Russert of NBC News, who
co-anchored the debate, seemed to be conducting a single-minded
effort to present war with Iran as legitimate and even inevitable,
focusing the first 40 minutes on the subject with questions aimed
at evoking the most hawkish responses.
After the opening discussion of the non-binding resolution,
he asked each candidate to state what their personal red
line would be for military action against Iran, and followed
up with a demand that each pledge that Iran would not acquire
nuclear weapons under his or her administration.
Clinton responded by declaring that her goal was to pressure
the Bush administration. She said, We need Republican
support to rein him in. Otherwise he can do what he wants.
Former senator John Edwards rejoined, How does a vote
for a resolution that could have been written by the neo-cons
put pressure on the Bush administration? You stand up to administration
by saying no. We have to make it clear that we have no intention
of allowing Bush and Cheney to invade Iran.
Senator Barack Obama, while attacking Clinton for her vote
on the Senate resolution, carefully crafted his remarks to leave
open the possibility of war with Iran at some future point.
Neither Edwards, Obama or Clinton suggested any action that
the Democratic-controlled Congress could or would take to prevent
such a war, or to bring a halt to the ongoing slaughter in Iraq.
Clinton was also attacked for her position on the war in Iraq,
with Edwards and Obama both seeking to appeal to antiwar sentiment
in the upcoming Democratic primaries and caucuses.
Edwards accused Clinton of doubletalk by promising
to end the war while advocating the continued stationing of US
combat troops in Iraq. His own antiwar position actually
amounted to continuation of the US occupation: He called for withdrawing
all combat troops by the end of 2009, less than half of the current
US troop strength, but gave no deadline for withdrawal of the
balance.
Clinton, asked directly whether she opposed the war in Iraq,
replied with her standard mixture of evasion and patriotic bromides.
I oppose the war but not the troops who have fought so magnificently,
she saidreferring to the operation of a killing machine
that is responsible for the deaths of more than one million Iraqis.
Clinton said she will begin to bring troops home
as soon as she takes office, then modified even this carefully
hedged statement, saying her administration will begin planning
withdrawal after she enters the White House.
Obama criticized Clinton for supporting the 2002 resolution
authorizing the war, saying, The next president should not
be one of the co-authors of the situation in Iraq. But he
gave no timetable for withdrawal and did not disagree when Clinton
replied that most of the Democratic candidates support an extended
troop presence in Iraq in the name of pursuing Al Qaeda.
The only exception to this overtly pro-war consensus was Congressman
Dennis Kucinich, who plays an important role in the Democratic
campaign, not because he has any chance at the nomination, but
to appeal to antiwar voters who are fed up with right-wing politics
and prevent them from moving toward a break with the Democratic
Party.
Kucinich flatly rejected both the continuation of the war in
Iraq and any extension of the war into Iran. He described his
fellow Democrats as enablers of Bush, and raised the
demand for the impeachment of Bush and Cheney on several occasions.
At one point he said, The war in Iraq is illegal and planning
for war with Iran is illegal. Democracy is in peril. Congress
must stand up for the constitution and impeach Bush.
Significantly, neither Russert nor his fellow moderator, NBC
Nightly News anchorman Brian Williams, asked any of the other
Democratic candidates about impeachment, or the legality of the
war in Iraq, or, for that matter, about the repeated violations
of democratic rights and the US constitutional framework by the
Bush administration. Nor did any of the major Democratic candidates
address those subjects on their own.
When the debate turned to domestic issues in its final hour
and a quarter, there was a remarkable consensus among the Democratic
candidates that the political system is corrupted by huge corporate
interests, and that all of them are part of that corruption. None
of us is pure, Edwards admitted at one point, adding, as
an example of the pernicious influence of big business, The
reason why we dont have universal health care is because
of drug companies, insurance companies and other lobbyists.
Kucinich, asked about the refusal of the congressional Democrats
to close the tax loophole enjoyed by hedge fund billionaires,
who pay a much lower tax rate than their secretaries and janitors,
declared, The Democratic Party wont stand up to Wall
Street, wont end the war, wont stand up to the health
insurance companies. People ask, what do the Democrats stand
for?
This, again, was not a call for the people to break with the
Democratic Party. It was a warning by a longtime Democratic politician
to his fellow big business politicians that they had to adopt
a more populist posture in order to forestall such a political
break.
Beyond the acknowledgment of the hammerlock which big corporate
interests have on the political process, there was next to no
discussion of the economic and social crisis confronting the vast
majority of American working people. There were no proposals to
halt the destruction of jobs and the deterioration of living standards.
The Democratic candidates, like the Republicans nearly all
multi-millionaires, are divided from the working class by an unbridgeable
social gulf.
See Also:
The New York Times and Bush's threat
of World War III
[30 October 2007]
Democrats, Republicans back Bush war
provocations against Iran
[27 October 2007]
US militarism threatens to unleash regional
conflagration
[23 October 2007]
Bush invokes threat of World War
III
[19 October 2007]
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