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The Half-Trillion Dollar Solution To Getting out of Iraq

By Bruce Ackerman and David Wu, The American Prospect. Posted February 28, 2007.


Want to end the Iraq war? Place a hard and fixed limit on the president's budget for war spending.

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This article is reprinted from the American Prospect.

The real debate on Iraq begins with Congress's consideration of the military budget. The president has requested almost three quarters of a trillion dollars to fund the military through September 30, 2008. More than $150 billion is earmarked for Iraq.

We have already spent $350 billion there, so the president's proposal pushes our Iraqi costs close to the half trillion mark. At the same time, he is demanding a $100 billion cut in health care funding, falling most heavily on poor children, while he maintains his $200 billion annual tax cut, channeled mostly to millionaires.

It is Congress's job to restore fiscal balance first, by placing an overall limit on Iraq war expenditures. Congress should limit this president to spending half a trillion dollars on the Iraq war -- and no more.

While he may not like the limit (we don't either, but for the opposite reason), the president would have no choice but to sign this ceiling to get short-term funding for his war.

In taking this step, Congress wouldn't be initiating a grand constitutional battle over the war powers of the president. It would be exerting its constitutional power of the purse and playing its traditional role as a check on another branch of government, rebalancing runaway programs that threaten to overwhelm our fiscal health and national priorities.

Limiting all future expenditures in Iraq to $150 billion, tops, can in no way harm our troops in the field. It responsibly carries out the will of the American people: that the president, with professional military advice, should be unwinding this war and planning a prudent departure for friendlier nearby countries or home.

"Fanaticism," George Santayana famously observed, "consists of redoubling your effort when you have forgotten your aim." There is nothing which sobers the mind more than a fixed budget.

Even the administration concedes that Congress has the constitutional power to cut off funds. The challenge is to use this power creatively -- both protecting the troops and requiring the president to end his war on his watch. The key point is to establish the principle that President Bush is responsible for leading America out of the impasse he created. A budget cap will also create a framework encouraging Congress to focus on the big picture, rather than engage in constant criticism of particular strategic decisions. We have fixed our ceiling at a level which assures that all troops will leave Iraq by inauguration day of 2009. But our proposal provides a framework for a debate over a more rapid redeployment: if Congress wanted a quicker termination, it need only impose a rider to the next appropriations bill that specified some smaller number (say, $450 billion) as the appropriate budgetary ceiling for our tragic misadventure.

This seems a more profitable focus than a series of debates over the next round of strategic maneuvering that will follow the president's surge. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is already assuring us that if the surge doesn't work, he is pondering the next Plan B. But Plan B is really Plan Q, or maybe Z. It is time to call this endless series of rationalizations to an end.

Our "half-trillion dollar solution" is a choice of the lesser evil. There are no good options left. The American people should know that things can get worse -- that, whether we leave today or after a decade of urban ground combat, we may have to go back if Iraq ever becomes a true threat to the world or immolates itself in genocide.

But for now, we should end this war with a minimum of domestic name-calling, a maximum of motive and opportunity for the many peoples of Iraq to solve their own problems without genocide, and a focus on finishing the job in Afghanistan (the last known mailing address for Osama bin Laden). Moreover, our proposal for a fixed budget would initiate the hard task of rebuilding America's foreign policy on its traditional bipartisan basis. By forcing President Bush to clean up the mess he has created, we would permit the next president and Congress to avoid yet another round of recrimination, and confront together the very real challenges ahead.

This article is available on The American Prospect website.

© 2007 by The American Prospect, Inc.

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See more stories tagged with: war, bush, iraq

Bruce Ackerman is a professor of law and political science at Yale. David Wu is the U.S. representative for Oregon's 1st Congressional District.

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we're sorry. you have exceeded your daily spending limit.
Posted by: underground on Feb 28, 2007 1:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
good idea. dick cheney is on record as having said the government should be run like a corporation, so let them live with a fixed budget, just a like a corporation.

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» RE: leave now Posted by: ScottP
Capping war cost won't save GI lives.
Posted by: DougScott on Feb 28, 2007 4:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Forget about capping the cost of Bush's war or passing resolutions against the troop surge.

Instead, Congress should legislate the KIND of equipment our fighting men and women deserve.

Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution states that Congress shall "provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the militia." For certain, "arming" does NOT mean sending GIs into Iraq driving unprotected Humvees and wearing "bulletproof" vests that couldn't stop AK-47 rounds, which Commander-in-Chief Bush did in 2003.

This time, Congress must mandate in the supplemental appropriations bill that all American soldiers going to Iraq and Afghanistan will have the BEST equipment possible -- such as Dragon Skin body armor, Oregon Aero helmet liner pads and Cougar transportation vehicles.

If Congress doesn't take action to insure our combat forces are protected, it will be as hated as George W. when additional Middle East casualties begin mounting.

If you agree with the above, tell your senators and representative in Congress with the email link below.

www.conservativeusa.org/mega-cong.htm.

Hugh E. Scott, Vietnam vet and creator/editor of the investigative website -- www.King-George.biz -- the ONLY one with hardcopy proof of White House corruption

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Great Idea
Posted by: Liger on Feb 28, 2007 6:55 AM   
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And we should do that for all of the other thousands of wasteful programs that our government is so happy to provide at our expense!

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Getting Out of Iraq??????? hahahahahahahahahaha
Posted by: picket on Feb 28, 2007 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The question is how much $$$$$$$$$$$does Uncle Sam need to complete the highly secretive, strategic base, Balad Air Base[LSA Anaconda] North of Baghdad, located in the Sunni Triangle???
Daniel Widome's "The Six Most Important US Bases" [5/2006] includes this Base. Do you really think it is about supporting the needs of the troops? How many more limbs are needed to feed the "BEAST"?

Defense Secretary Robert Gates told the US Senate Appropriations Committee yesterday[2/27/07].."We clearly have no desire for permanent bases in Iraq." He went on to say that the US may have a military presence in Iraq for a "prolonged period" and drew a comparison with US bases in Germany and South Korea.

Why not just tell the American Public the truth? The neocons and Big Oil outfoxed us all. I thought Congress was supposed to work for the people. Why doesn't your State's elected Senator and Representative just admit they gave Trillions to BushCo and friends. No questions asked.

Meanwhile back at the ranch the oilman just made a home delivery and is laughing all the way to the bank....and complaining, by the way, at how much all this is costing him. hahahahahahahahaha "The Father of Lies" works in mysterious ways !!!!!

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war funding
Posted by: darby1936 on Feb 28, 2007 8:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I realize it might seem like peanuts in the grand scheme of things in regards to the GOP outright theft and incompetence but is congress investigating the missing 9 billion in Iraq reconstruction?

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You've got to be kidding...
Posted by: SteveB on Feb 28, 2007 8:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If agreeing to give Bush another $150 billion for his war is considered an anti-war position, then I'm Marie Antoinette.

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» RE: You've got to be kidding... Posted by: Radicalizer
» "Liberal hawks"... Posted by: SteveB
» RE: "Liberal hawks"... Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: "Liberal hawks"... Posted by: Radicalizer
Totally off topic
Posted by: pingoo on Feb 28, 2007 9:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know, this is going to be completely off topic, but I simply could not resist!

Anyone have a decent explenation for this?

BBC reports WTC7 Collapse - 20 minutes before it happened

and:

BBC WTC7 collapse report with timestamp

If there was ever any proof that something isn't quite right - this is it!

Spread the word.

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Redress of Grievances
Posted by: mite on Feb 28, 2007 12:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Congress for 93 years have been committing treason and not upholding the U.S. Constitution or their Oath of Office.

Article 1 Sec: 8 , Congress shall have the power to coin (create) money and regulate the value of it.

The Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Reserve Board is a 'Private Company' with stockholders not publicly traded, as no one knows the names of the stockholders.

Unlike Congress, these International Bankers controls and profits by printing money through the U.S. Treasury, and regulating the value and interest of the currency. Congress illegally on Dec. 23, 1913 gave private individuals the control of this nation (U.S.) On March 07, 1932 the U.S. became officially bankrupt and fell into total control and debt to these international bankers. The FED through Federal Reserve Notes (fiat money) controls all sources of this nation.

The FED creates FRN's from air 'nothing' and lends it back to the government and citizens through banks and charges -regulates interest on our currency. search: video.google.com
and Freedomtofascism both on google.

So how much more in debt will we put our children-grandchildren into slavery to these bankers?

Stop the Federal Reserve-IRS-War on Terror and false flag acts of treason (911 is a inside job) www.givemeliberty.org

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No More Dying For Nothing, No More Vietnam
Posted by: sofla100 on Feb 28, 2007 4:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to start with what everyone pretty much universally acknowledges now, that the war in Iraq was a mistake at best, or at worst, a miscalculated or even incompetent ploy of the President. Then, once you acknowledge this, the solution is easy. Just as in Vietnam, we form a perimeter, and with helicopters to take troops out of the Green zone and planes from the airport, we bring the troops home. I am sure some cover can be provided during the operation by overhead aircraft and other actions taken to minimize casualties as we pull the troops out. But, even if America loses a few dozen soldiers or marines during what we can call Operation Evacuation, this would still be better then the hundreds, and thousands who are yet to die. And, that is not even speaking of the thousands of Iraqis who are yet to die by America staying in their country. So, it is time to face the truth. No more Americans need to die, we just get out now. As in Vietnam, this war was for nothing and everyone who has died, has died for nothing. We only need to spend as much money as is necessary to bring the troops home, now.

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» AGREE 10,000% SOFLA Posted by: Michiganman
Funding
Posted by: Maryanne on Feb 28, 2007 8:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps we should be able to indicate on the income tax we pay what we want our money to be spent on. My money can go to the restoration of our national parks (and the hiring of more rangers) which are in dire need. This would accomplish two things. We would have some say over how our money should be spent, which would give us some sense that we are in some control and the money, can be directed to something that will be positive which would give us a sense of accomplishment.

Maybe if enough money were directed away from our military-industrial complex - and the government were not allowed to borrow from other countries to pursue adventures we could have peace.

What a fantasy! At least we can dream.

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In the meantime, what the president and candidates don't want to tell you "NUCLEAR WAR"
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 28, 2007 9:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Words None Dare Say: Nuclear War
by George Lakoff


P.S.: This quote from the article sums up why the otherwise unpopular war with Iraq slipped through the cracks and why Iran might be next:

What we are seeing now is the conservative message machine preparing the country to accept the ideas of a nuclear war and nation destruction against Iran. The technique used is the "slippery slope." It is done by degrees. Like the proverbial frog in the pot of water – if the heat is turned up slowly the frog gets used to the heat and eventually boils to death – the American public is getting gradually acclimated to the idea of war with Iran.

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