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Darcy Burner Can End the Iraq War Responsibly

Posted by ZP Heller, Meet the Bloggers at 7:00 AM on August 9, 2008.


From this week's Meet the Bloggers with host Cenk Uygur.

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When it comes to the Iraq war, the question is no longer whether the U.S. should end it, but how.  On yesterday's Meet the Bloggers, special guest Darcy Burner made the case for A Responsible Plan to End the War in Iraq, which she co-authored earlier this year.  This plan calls for the removal of U.S. troops rapidly and safely, while increasing diplomacy and foreign aid to rebuild Iraq. 

According the Burner, we're already beginning to see the Responsible Plan in action.  Any recent "success" in Iraq is NOT due to the military surge, despite what the Bush adminstration, John McCain, and the corporate media would have us believe.  Rather, the progress we've made in Iraq is due to new diplomatic, economic, and political efforts to foster stability.  What's more, the recent attempts by Congress to reform our interrogation policies, to hold private contractors in Iraq accountable, and to create the GI Bill for the 21st Century were all specifics initially recommended by the Responsible Plan, not to mention calls for a troop withdrawal timetable. 

But ending the Iraq war is only part of the Responsible Plan.  The show's panel of bloggers David Goldstein (HorsesAss.org), Joan McCarter (Daily Kos), and Matt Stoller (Open Left) pointed out that we must also repair the structural problems that led us into Iraq in the first place.  Failures across the board, from our branches of government to our media, must be fixed in order to prevent a quagmire like this from happening again.  Stoller suggested a crucial first step would be for the Bush administration to admit this war was all for oil, and that we cannot be intimidated by right-wing media, Big Oil executives, and conservatives who attempt to smear us for connecting Iraq with oil and our economy. 


Then there's the media.  As McCarter noted, the mainstream press STILL hasn't learned from its failures to confront the Bush administration in the run up to this war.  They're touting the success of the surge without looking at the non-military efforts to effect peaceful change.  

Yesterday's show coincided with a new report from NBC News that the U.S. and Iraq are close to creating a timetable for withdrawing our troops by 2010, with remaining forces out by 2012.  A timetable, of course, is what the Responsible Plan and Barack Obama have been calling for all along, and what Bush and McCain have resisted.  (David Goldstein jokingly referred to the differences between a "timetable" and a "time horizon.")  But as Stoller explained, the U.S. can't afford to leave troops in Iraq because that could mean forcing us to choose sides in an Iraqi civil war.  

While the show's bloggers disagreed as to how effective Obama might be in ending the war, all agreed that McCain has pandered too much on this issue to be the leader we need going forward.  What's more, they concluded that having Obama in office would enable Congress to the seek progressive reforms called for by the Responsible Plan.  Fortunately, Burner and others aren't waiting for November to take action.
For the full episode: http://meetthebloggers.org.  Meet the Bloggers airs live every Friday at 1pm ET/10am PT.  

Digg!

Tagged as: congress, media, diplomacy, oil, iraq war, timetable, withdrawal, george bush, barack obama, john mccain, surge, brave new foundation, 2008 election, cenk uygur, meet the bloggers, matt stoller, darcy burner, david goldstein, joan mccarter, time horizon

ZP Heller is the editorial director of Brave New Films. He has written for The American Prospect, AlterNet, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and The Huffington Post, covering everything from politics to pop culture.


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Wow, zero comments
Posted by: Jeanne on Aug 9, 2008 10:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've noted throughout today that this story has no comments. I don't feel I am informed enough to add anything to the content of the piece. However, I must say I am amazed that no interest has been shown in commenting on this by anyone else on Alternet. It seems the Edwards thing has usurped the entire quota of blogosphere interest. The American audience understands sex; apparently a plan to end the US involvement in Iraq is waaaay less compelling. Nor is there any interest, seemingly, in Ron Suskind's revelations of the concocting of "evidence" of Iraqi involvement in 9-11 by our estimable (not) white house.

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Can We Please Stop
Posted by: WaldoMaui on Aug 10, 2008 2:16 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can we please stop calling it the "Iraq War"? It is, in fact, the Iraq Occupation. The U.S. has utterly no right to be there, no right to mandate anything that happens there.

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» RE: Can We Please Stop Posted by: m/r
McCain - War You Can Believe in!
Posted by: Christie on Aug 10, 2008 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
McCain - War You Can Believe in!

Some opinions of McCain from his own party and military comrades
digg.com/2008_us_elections/Republicans_and_miltary_men_

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JUSTICE demands Bush & Co. be held
Posted by: madmax427 on Aug 11, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ACCOUNTABLE for Their CRIMES! Any "responsible plan" most definately requires this!

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responsible plan
Posted by: gk13 on Aug 11, 2008 8:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Burner touts this as her major achievement during her two years of running for office. She probably would have won the last election if she had simply stated a firm position for bringing the troops home. Every other candidate that did, won. Instead she followed the 'lead' of the DCCC. In addition this plan is mostly a copy of the plan written by McGovern/Polk and printed in Harper's in 2006. The plan seems to rely on advice from generals like War Criminal Wes Clark, as if we didn't live in a society where civilians have control over the military. Finally, a number of the bills that the plan suggests be passed wouldn't be necessary if the Democratic Party hadn't supported the Military Commissions Act, or kept voting for 'emergency' war appropriations.
I don't see how supporting Burner or this plan will end the war in Iraq and US military interventions around the world.

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The way things are set up...
Posted by: Pirate1 on Aug 11, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The US economy requires a war going on somewhere to be able to produce anything to sell. Very few of the industries that were former hallmarks of American expertise still remain. We are mainly known now for arms research and manufacture and little else.

We have absolutely no right to even BE in Iraq. We invaded under a concerted veil of lies spun from a corrupt administration and a lap dog media. They did such a great job that there are STILL people out there who think Iraq was responsible for the WTC event. These people are a large part of Mc Cain's power base. His call for military victory there is from the warped mind of a guy who will never believe that he was fighting in an unjust, un-winnable war in Vietnam. He feels this is his chance to PROVE to all of us dummies out here that bashing a nation into complete submission and declaring victory works.

The above article is weak and has no legs. Sure, I agree with the overall thrust of it but even Obama says he will "rely on the military" to best decide when we should withdraw... and then he's only talking "combat troops". If you think that means ALL troops you are DREAMING. As long as Americans chant for oil, we will have occupation forces there to guard "our" interests. And we'll still have a hot war going nearby somewhere. All the while oblivious to the environment collapsing around us.

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» RE: The way things are set up... Posted by: alternetrose
The New Cultural Revolution
Posted by: willymack on Aug 11, 2008 11:31 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While Madame Mao was credited with the brutal madness that was the Cultural Revolution, the wanton destruction of China's rich and varied history, to be replaced with slavish devotion to a flawed political philosophy, there's no doubt Mao himself was behind it and guided it. The rethugs have taken several pages from that grim story to fashion a "society" where the rich are rich, and the rest of us are screwed. They can still be stopped, but time is getting very short.

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