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Clinton-Obama row over Iraq record masks consensus on continued
occupation
By Bill Van Auken
16 January 2008
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In the week following the New Hampshire primary, the Democratic
presidential contest has been overshadowed by an increasingly
bitter and dirty squabble between front-runners Hillary Clinton
and Barack Obama in which the deliberate manipulation of racial
politics has played a prominent role.
Clinton sought to portray herself as the victim of an alleged
attempt by the Obama camp to twist a statement she made invoking
President Lyndon Johnsons role in enacting civil rights
legislation into a denigration of civil rights leader Martin Luther
King.
Others, however, saw the entire media-amplified affair as a
deliberate attempt by the Clinton camp to cast Obama as the black
candidate and thereby curry favor with more conservative
white voters. Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson
compared the episode to the moment in the 1992 presidential campaign
in which Bill Clinton chose to make an obscure racial remark by
hip-hop artist Sister Souljah an issue in a speech before Jesse
Jacksons Rainbow Coalition.
On Monday, both sides formally appealed for an end to the racial
debate, with Obama declaring he did not want the campaign to
degenerate into so much tit-for-tat and Clinton issuing
a statement declaring herself and Obama on the same side
and the Democratic Party bigger than this. No sooner
had the statement been issued, however, than New York Congressman
Charles Rangel, a leading black Clinton supporter, declared in
a television interview, How race got into this thing is
because Obama said race.
However this reactionary racial diversion plays out, there
was another issue in the escalating conflict between the two front-runners
that is certain to feature in the upcoming primary conteststhe
candidates records on the Iraq war.
Reviled by a substantial section of Democrats and indicted
by her political rivals for her 2002 vote in favor of the congressional
resolution authorizing the Iraq war, Clinton has launched an aggressive
counteroffensive against Obama, who has attempted to capitalize
on antiwar sentiment among primary voters.
This new campaign was launched by the candidates husband
and former president Bill Clinton in a January 7 speech in New
Hampshire on the eve of that states primary. He took the
press to task for what he charged was its failure to critically
examine Obamas record, particularly on the war.
Its wrong that Senator Obama got to go through
15 debates trumpeting his superior judgment and how he had been
against the war, Clinton said during a rally at Dartmouth
College. Theres no difference in your record, and
Hillarys ever since, he continued. Give me a
break. This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale Ive ever
seen.
The remark fueled the fire of racial politics, with some black
Democrats accusing Clinton of characterizing the effort to elect
a black candidate as president a fantasy, a charge the former
president rejected.
Hillary Clinton stepped up the attack Sunday in an interview
on the NBC News program Meet the Press. She dismissed
Obamas attempt to pose as an opponent of the war in Iraq,
asserting that his only antiwar credentials amounted to a speech
he gave in 2002 while still a state senator in Illinois.
By 2004, he was saying he didnt really disagree
with the way George Bush was conducting the war, she charged.
And by 2005, 6 and 7, he was voting for $300
billion in funding for the war. She further stated that
after he was elected to the US Senate in 2004, he made no statement
against the war from the Senate floor for 18 months and voted
against initial legislation proposing troop withdrawal deadlines.
She also cited statements by Obama in 2004, when, as a candidate
for the US Senate, he was tapped to give the keynote speech to
the Democratic National Convention. The speech itself praised
presidential candidate John Kerry for his willingness to use military
force, and Obama refused to criticize both Kerrys and vice
presidential candidate John Edwards votes for the war resolution,
saying he did not know how he would have voted had he been in
the Senate.
Clinton also defended her own record in response to aggressive
questions from Tim Russert of Meet the Press.
She claimed that she supported the 2002 resolutionformally
known as the resolution to authorize the use of United States
Armed Forces against Iraqonly in order to put
[weapons] inspectors back in Iraq and that it was
not a vote for preemptive war.
Asked by Russert why she failed at the time to support an amendment
proposed by Michigan Democratic Senator Carl Levin demanding that
the administration seek a United Nations resolution explicitly
authorizing the use of force and return to the Congress for such
an authorization only after exhausting all attempts at the UN,
Clinton replied that she opposed it because it would give the
UN a veto over American presidential power. She added,
I dont believe that is an appropriate policy for the
United States, no matter who is our president, a statement
that amounts to a tacit endorsement of illegal wars of aggression.
Clinton characterized the charge that her vote gave Bush a
blank check for war as a Jesuitical argument and invoked
statements by Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, whom
she described as one of the architects of the resolution
to the effect that it was not a vote for war.
Challenged by Russert over her own votes to fund the war, Clinton
responded, I did. I neverIm not premising my
campaign on something different. She claimed that she voted
to continue a war that has claimed the lives of nearly 4,000 US
military personnel and approximately one million Iraqis because
it was what I thought was best for our country and what
I thought was best for our troops.
The thrust of Clintons argument is not that her record
on the war is any better than Obamas, but rather that her
rivals hands are just as bloody as her own.
The Clinton campaigns national security director Lee
Feinstein echoed the candidates charges Tuesday. The
reality is that since 2004, Senator Obama has explicitly called
for keeping troops in Iraq and opposed a timeline for withdrawal,
only changing his position when he became a candidate for the
White House.
Meanwhile Clintons campaign web site posted a series
of quotes from Obama supporting the war. These included a 2004
statement that a withdrawal from Iraq would be a slap in
the face to the troops fighting there, a 2005 statement
that US forces are still a part of the solution in Iraq
and that he believed Washington should reduce and
not fully withdraw American forces there, and a 2006
statement in opposition to a Democratic withdrawal timeline resolution
opposing a precipitous withdrawal of troops based
upon a congressional edict rather than realities on the
ground.
Obama campaign spokesman Bill Burton responded to the posted
quotes in a statement to USA Today: None of those
statements you cite flatly contradicts removing our troopsthey
oppose a precipitous withdrawal. Obama has always believed that
our troops need to be withdrawn responsibly.
In reply to questions from a Chicago Tribune reporter
in Las Vegas Monday, Obama accused Clinton of trying to
rewrite history. Now she chose to vote for the war
and she can decide whether its a mistake or not, he
said. Apparently she has not said anything about it.
He said that his 2004 statements were driven by a desire not
to throw the Democratic nominee and vice presidential nominee
under the bus and that Clintons attempt to suggest
my position and hers is the same is ludicrous.
Asked why he repeatedly voted to fund the war, Obama responded,
Once we had our troops two years into a war, it was important
that we try to do the best possible job on it.
The New York Times substantiated Obamas charge
that Clinton was rewriting historyin relation to her own
record if not his. In an article published Monday, Times
reporter Eric Lipton pointed out that Clintons attempt to
hide behind statements of Republican maverick and opponent of
the war Chuck Hagel was based on a crude falsification.
The resolution sponsored by Hagel, together with Senators Joseph
Biden (Democrat, Delaware) and Richard Lugar (Republican, Indiana)
was scuttled in favor of more sweeping legislation dictated by
the White House and accepted by the House Democratic leadership.
It was Bushs resolutionnot Hagelsthat
Clinton voted for and supported in a bellicose speech that included
an ultimatum to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein that this
is your last chancedisarm or be disarmed and praise
for her husbands administrations missile attacks on
Iraq and its adoption of a policy of regime change
towards the country. Contrary to her current improbable claim
that she was only seeking the return of inspectors, Clinton declared
in her speech, any vote that may lead to war should be hardbut
I cast it with conviction.
The acrimonious dispute between the two Democratic frontrunners
over their respective records on Iraq is, in the final analysis,
only a political diversion from the fact that theytogether
with the political establishment as a wholeare in essential
agreement on continuing Washingtons colonial-style occupation
of the oil-rich country indefinitely.
Obama, like Clinton, has repeatedly clarified that his call
for withdrawing from Iraq does not include those forces being
used to wage counterterrorism operations, i.e., the
suppression of popular resistance to US occupation, the protection
of US facilities in Iraq and the training of Iraqi forcesa
prescription that would leave tens of thousands of American troops
in the country indefinitely.
In a debate last September, Clinton, Obama and former senator
John Edwards all refused to commit themselves to withdrawing all
American forces from the occupied country by the beginning of
their second termin 2013. Edwards, in an evident attempt
to reverse his fall in the polls, has since shifted his position,
claiming earlier this month in an interview with the New York
Times that he would withdraw all US troops from Iraq within
his first year of taking office. Even then, he added, We
obviously would keep troops there to protect the embassy in addition
to the quick reaction forces.
The reactionary character of the debate within the Democratic
primary contest, combined with the increasing claims by the Republican
camp of success for the Bush administrations
military surge, only confirm that once again the two-party system
will present the American people with no genuine alternative in
2008 and that the substantial majority of the American people,
who support the withdrawal of American troops and an end to the
war, will find themselves politically disenfranchised.
See Also:
Nevada teachers union challenges Democratic
caucus rules
[14 January 2008]
Republican candidates deny recession,
hail Iraq war as success
[12 January 2008]
The US elections: In whose interest is
the campaign for bipartisan unity?
[11 January 2008]
New Hampshire primary foreshadows protracted
contest for US presidential nominations
[9 January 2008]
A warning to the American people: Thinking
the unthinkable at the Democratic presidential debate
[8 January 2008]
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