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Obama continues lurch to the right on Iraq war and militarism
By Bill Van Auken
4 July 2008
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The embrace of key elements of the Republican agenda and jettisoning
of positions that he advanced during his Change you can
believe in primary campaign have become a daily routine,
as the Democratic Partys presumptive presidential candidate
Barack Obama carries out a dizzying turn to the right.
In speeches and press appearances on Wednesday and Thursday,
Obama continued to identify his campaign with support for American
militarism, while backing away from his primary-campaign pledge
to withdraw US combat forces from Iraq based on a definite timetable.
Appearing Wednesday in Colorado Springs, Obama delivered a
speech on national service, which hailed the US military and vowed
to swell its ranks.
While proposing the expansion of Americorps, the Peace Corps
and other civilian entities, Obama made it clear that the main
service to which he intended to call young Americans was the military.
He began by invoking the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
on New York City and Washington and lamenting the failure of the
Bush administration to issue a call to service and
a call for shared sacrifice.
There is no challenge greater than the defense of our
nation and our values, he continued, praising the actions
of US troops fighting a resurgent Taliban and persevering
in the deserts and cities of Iraq.
What values are embodied in the systematic destruction
of the Afghan and Iraqi societies and the killing and maiming
of millions of civilians in the attempt to impose US hegemony
over oil-rich regions of the planet, the Democratic candidate
did not spell out.
Instead, he insisted on the need to ease the burden on
our troops, while meeting the challenges of the 21st century.
That these challenges entail the continuation of these
wars and the launching of new ones is clear. As president, he
said, he would call on a new generation of Americans to
join our military, while vowing to increase US ground forces
by 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 Marines.
With the military struggling to meet current recruitment quotas,
this proposal raises the real question of whether the national
service envisioned by Obama will involve the reactivation of the
military draft.
Speaking at a press conference in Fargo, North Dakota Thursday
before addressing a group of veterans, Obama allowed that he expected
to refine his positions on Iraq during an upcoming
trip to the US occupied country this summer.
Backing away from his earlier pledge to carry out a 16-month
withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq, the candidate said, I
have always said I would listen to the commanders on the ground.
I have always said that the pace of withdrawal would be dictated
by the safety and security of our troops and the need to maintain
stability. Meanwhile, he couched his opposition to the continued
occupation of Iraq at current levels in terms of what he posed
as the more urgent necessity for sending troops to Afghanistan.
Obamas advisors have been more explicit. His top foreign
policy advisor, Anthony Lake, a former Clinton administration
national security advisor, told the press that an incoming Democratic
administration was committed to maintaining a residual force
for clearly defined missions in Iraq, as well as preparedness
to go back in, if needed. That is not a cut
and run and lets just see what happens,
said Lake, one of the architects of the Clinton administrations
humanitarian interventions in Somalia, Haiti and the
Balkans.
Meanwhile, there is growing speculation that Obama is prepared
to keep current US Defense Secretary Robert Gates at his post
and the campaign has agreed to participate in a series of transition
teams being set up in military, intelligence and police agencies
to assure the seamless continuation of the global war on
terrorism.
Having won the Democratic primaries in no small part by posturing
as an opponent of the Iraq war and indicting his opponent, Hillary
Clinton, for voting to authorize it, Obama is now presenting himself
as another wartime president.
The lurch to the right by the Obama campaign is so blatant
that it has aroused substantial commentary in the bourgeois press,
some of it gloating and some of it reflecting concerns that this
maneuver is so naked that it may alienate substantial layers of
the population from the electoral process and expose the fraud
of the entire two-party system.
The Christian Science Monitor, for example, cited concerns
Thursday that Obamas lurch to the right posed a particular
risk among young voters, who have turned out and volunteered in
droves for Obama and may be disillusioned by his display of old-style
politics.
In the gloating category was an editorial published Wednesday
in the Wall Street Journal entitled Bushs Third
Term. The Journal, whose editorial board has generally
reflected the views within the right-wing sections of the Republican
Party that dominate the Bush administration, pointed to Obamas
continuous warnings against McCains victory resulting in
George Bushs third term.
Maybe hes worried that someone will notice that
hes the candidate running for it, the editorial affirmed.
It went on to note Obamas announcement two weeks ago
that he will vote for legislation legalizing the Bush administrations
sweeping domestic wiretapping program, while granting retroactive
immunity to the telecom companies that helped it carry out this
unlawful spying operation. It pointed to the pullback from campaign
promises of a timetable for withdrawing US combat troops from
Iraq. And it cited his embrace of government funding for faith-based
social programs, as well as a series of calculated statements
on so-called hot button issues of the political right, ranging
from guns to the death penalty.
Another demagogic appeal that the Obama campaign has jettisoned
is the previous pretense that he opposed NAFTA and sympathized
with the protectionist outlook of the trade union bureaucracy.
In a recent interview with Fortune magazine, the candidate
declared, Ive always been a proponent of free trade,
and allowed that some of the primary rhetoric on the subject had
been overheated.
Now that he is in a general election, the Journal
commented, he cant scare the business community too
much. It would appear that the stock exchange is not at
all frightened. According to figures compiled by the Center for
Responsive Politics, Obama has netted nearly $8 million in contributions
from the securities and investment houses, almost double the amount
received by his Republican rival, McCain.
The Journal editorial concludes cynically, though justifiably,
that the next President, whether Democrat or Republican,
is going to embrace much of Mr. Bushs foreign and antiterror
policy whether he admits it or not.
In the end, this right-wing voice of Wall Street criticizes
Obama not for his policies, but rather for what it terms his questionable
political character, meaning doubts about whether
he can be trusted to carry through the wars abroad and attacks
on the working class at home that the ruling elite requires.
Obamas turn to the right is the manifestation of a system
in which the policies of both major parties are determined by
a small wealthy layer of the population, which holds the will
and sentiments of the American population in contempt.
The right-wing agenda being spelled out by the Obama campaign
sets the stage for yet another election in which the masses of
working people in the US will find themselves politically disenfranchised,
with no viable means to express their immense hostility to the
policies of war, destruction of living standards, and political
reaction identified with the Bush administration.
Obamas rapid evolution in the wake of the primaries demonstrates
the politics of deception and manipulation of public opinion that
his campaign has embodied from the outset. It has never represented
an insurgency from below, but rather a bid by elements of the
ruling elite to effect certain definite but limited changes in
policy, while using Obama to supply a fresh face for American
imperialism under conditions in which it is discredited at home
and abroad.
The attempt to use the Obama campaign to delude broad layers
of the population seeking change enjoys the active and crucial
support of most of what passes for the American left.
They seek to cover up or apologize for the right-wing trajectory
of the Democrats. Some put forward the cynical argument that Obama
is merely doing what it takes to get electedthe American
people, they would argue, are backward and right-wing. Others
maintain that he is reacting to pressure from the establishment
and must be pushed back on course through pressure from the left.
Typical of this second school is the left liberal journalist
Arianna Huffington, who posted on her web site advice to Obama,
warning him that tacking to the center is a losing strategy.
Instead, she called upon him to appeal to the 82 million
people who did not vote in 2004. She continued, Isnt
galvanizing the electorate to demand fundamental change the raison
dêtre of the Obama campaign in the first place?
In reality, Obama is now running on his real program, that
of a corrupt and reactionary big business politician. He will
leave it to figures like Huffington, the Nation, and others
on the so-called left to continue promoting illusions in his candidacy,
while he makes his pitch to his key constituencies, the financial
aristocracy and the forces of the state.
The Democrats have no interest in coming into office with a
mandate for fundamental change, because they have
no desire or intention of carrying out such transformations. In
fact, Obamas latest campaign swing is aimed in no small
part at creating a new and decidedly conservative base for politics
that will in key respects represent continuity with those of the
Bush administration.
In the end, the promotion of illusions in Obama and the Democrats
serves only to block the emergence of a genuine alternative based
upon the independent political mobilization of the broad mass
of working people.
One thing is certain. The policies of an incoming Obama administration
will not be determined by the erstwhile populist posturing of
the candidate or by the pressure exerted by the left liberals.
Rather, they will be dictated by the enormity of the economic
and political crisis confronting American capitalism and what
is required under these conditions to defend the class interests
of the ruling elite. The turn to the right on the campaign trail
is preparation for this essential task.
See Also:
Obamas patriotism tour: the last
refuge of a Democratic scoundrel
[2 July 2008]
Obama backs House Democrats
cave-in on Bush spying bill
[23 June 2008]
Obama speaks in Detroit: rhetoric
versus reality
[20 June 2008]
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