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Pelosi's New Iraq Supplemental Is Outright Colonial Robbery

By Matt Taibbi, RollingStone.com. Posted May 9, 2007.


The Democrats' endorsement of this crude neocolonial exploitation plan makes them accomplices in the occupation, and further legitimizes the insurgency.
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There is a growing number of people out there who believe the Reid-Pelosi Iraq war supplemental is a gigantic crock of shit, and who think the Democratic Party leadership should now officially be labeled conspirators in the war effort. I've even seen it suggested that Reid and Pelosi should now be sent official "certificates of war ownership," to formally put them in a club with Bush, Cheney, Richard Perle and the rest of the actual war authors.

The growing tension between the real antiwar movement and the Democratic Party was reflected in a long article over the weekend in the New York Times. "Antiwar Groups Use New Clout to Influence Democrats." The piece that described how an umbrella group of antiwar activists called Americans Against the Escalation in Iraq was ready to drop the public relations hammer on the Dems, should they cave too easily in their negotiations with the president.

The thinking goes something like this: the Democrats, who are mostly the same people who voted for the war in the first place, don't really want to end it. They do, however, want to take political advantage of antiwar sentiment. So they will appear to be against the conflict but set things up in such a way that their "efforts" to end the war will fall just slightly short, like a fourth-quarter pass thrown by a point-shaving quarterback.

I was squarely in that camp until recently, when it occurred to me to wonder; if Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi were to wake up one morning with innocent, uncorrupted brains and decide, really decide, to end the war in Iraq, how exactly would they do it? And the answer, I think we all have to admit, is: they would do it exactly the way they're doing it now.

Neither of these Democratic leaders, after all, are Huey Newton, or even Benjamin Spock. They are not going to get up on a table, shake a shoe in the direction of the White House, shout "Fuck you, pig!" and just turn off the money, consequences be damned. No, these are career bureaucrats, political herd animals who survive year after year by clinging for dear life to the concept of safety in numbers. They will watch the bushes with great big eyes to see what is rustling back there, and when exactly two-thirds of the herd decides to bolt, they all will -- not just the Democrats, but the Boehners and McConnells too, leaping over logs, tearing off big chunks of fur against the bark of trees, etc.

I can certainly see a scenario in which people like Reid and Pelosi would make a secret deal to compromise now and give Bush his money, in exchange for another bite at the apple later this year -- by which time a veto-overriding coalition of Democrats and "moderate" Republicans will have magically coalesced. The Republicans crossing the picket line later this summer will inevitably claim to have done so with heavy heart, out of principle and "concern for the safety of the troops," and yet at the same time there will mysteriously appear a new raft of appropriations calling for expensive dam and highway projects in certain districts. That tends to be the blueprint for how 67% of congress will catch up to 67% of the population on major issues like these.

So maybe Reid and Pelosi really are working the phones on this one, who knows. What I do know is this; there are elements of the Democratic-crafted Iraq supplemental that are not only severely regressive but would actually tend to encourage the continuation of the insurgency. Anyone who wants an example of why the areas in which the Democrats and Republicans are in agreement are more significant than the ones in which they differ need only look at the two parties nearly unanimous endorsement of the "Benchmarks" the Iraqi government must meet, according to the supplemental. The key passage reads as follows:

(2) whether the Government of Iraq is making substantial progress in meeting its commitment to pursue reconciliation initiatives, including a hydro-carbon law...

It is notable that the hydrocarbon law comes in first place in this clause, ahead of "legislation necessary for the conduct of provincial and local elections," reform of de-Baathification laws, amendments to the constitution and allocation of revenues for reconstruction projects. For whether or not it really was "all about oil" at the beginning of the war, the fate of the occupation really does hinge almost entirely upon oil initiatives now, as the continued presence of U.S. troops in the region may depend on whether or not the Iraqi government bites the bullet and decides to eat the proposed hydrocarbon law in question.


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Matt Taibbi is a writer for Rolling Stone.

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Colonialism, imperialism, robbery and murder - right from the outset...
Posted by: Michael Boldin on May 9, 2007 9:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This war, like every aggressive war, is all that and more.

Theft of resources both home and abroad, violation of liberties and the murder of hundreds of thousands.

James Madison knew what war meant for this country over 200 years ago:

Of all the enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few.

In war, too, the discretionary power of the Executive is extended; its influence in dealing out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing the force, of the people.... [There is also an] inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud, growing out of a state of war, and ... degeneracy of manners and of morals.... No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.


Sounds familiar, doesn't it? It's the same we see today, and without strong opposition from the democrats, it will only continue.

What we need is a completely new direction. We need to start thinking about national DE-fense rather than national OF-fense. When we stop propping up dictators with billions in foreign aid, stop invading nations, stop killing people, stop basing our military in 130+ nations.....then we can have peace and prosperity......

Some further thoughts on this:

"Leaders Don't Kill People..."
http://www.populistamerica.com/leaders_dont_kill_people

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Joseph Conrad
Posted by: chiquita1 on May 9, 2007 1:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Matt:

Your article had good ideas, but consider these thoughts:

1. Forget the idea that there is an 'insurgency' with 'insurgents'. There's only the US military-industrial entity (for lack of a better term) occupying Iraq hoping to 'privatize' its Oil & Gas vs. the Iraqis (and other regional muslims) striving to get the US to leave.

2. Get to know and spread the word about US Public Law 109-234. Briefly paraphrased, the law indicates 'No funds shall be made available under Title 1 of this Act to establish permanent bases in Iraq or exercise control over its oil or oil infrastructure.' Your president once said 'This nation is a nation of laws.' Well then, let the US obey Public Law 109-234!

3. The real mission of the wealthiest 1-2% of Americans and the Trilateral Commission on which so many of them serve is to maximize and protect their wealth derived from a spectrum of international and national investments. The Iraq conflict is to privatize and secure that country's oil and gas to fuel and increase the US wealthiests' ROI from industrial globalization.

4. Forget the Iraq Waste for a moment. BILLIONS of US taxpayer dollars are going in private accounts of dictators in African 'failed states' to achieve the 'Oil Objective'. US policy and Oil company greed enabled Nigerian 'leaders' to put over $300 BILLION IN PRIVATE ACCOUNTS SINC 1958, created the 'MEND' fighters and destroyed the Niger River Delta - 2nd largest in Africa. As in Iraq, millions of citizens in West African are starving, dying and fighting US and Euro. Union backed 'leaders' and Oil companies.

5. It is vital Americans see that the Wealthiest among us are not just destroying Iraq and every Sub-Sahara Oil producing nation to ensure 'Future Oil'. They are positioning the US and the Euro Union for an Iranian incursion. At the same time, they are trying to gain control of South American energy wealth (Bolivian Gas, Ecuadorian Oil and Peruvian energy resources). Oh yes. Let us not forget to add the Congo and Sudan to the list of the Wealthiest's 'Oil Targets'.

6. Hundreds of BILLIONS of TAXPAYER DOLLARS are funding efforts of the US Wealthiest to find new sources of Oil and Gas to sustain Wealth Creation. The president has made it financially impossible to fund the needs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Look for them to all but DISAPPEAR in 10 yrs.

7. Neither Sen. Hillary Clinton nor Sen. Barak Obama will EVER take ALL US troops out of Iraq or force US Oil Companies to treat African Oil producer nations fairly. They owe too much to their corporate contributors that want the 'cheap' oil.

8. As a direct result of Iraq, the US military has become the Fourth Estate (after the Congress, presidency and Supreme Court). However, its budget and organization are totally out of the control of the other 3! As a result, Accountability, Responsibility and Culpability in DC has dissolved leaving the Non-Wealthy to foot ALL EXPENSES and hand up their Tax Dollars to the US Wealthiest.)

9. All the talk about other energy sources as alternatives to Oil, Gas & Coal? Forget it, it's all just talk. US Wealthiest know there's still too much money to be made Polluting.

Last, America surrended its 'Democracy' in 2000 and 2004 becoming a 'Banana Republic' without the violence. Two tradition-destroying, flawed national elections IN A ROW plus the loss of Habeas Corpus have made the nation a shadow of its historical self. But there's still time for Redemption. There's 2008...

Joseph Conrad

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» RE: Joseph Conrad Posted by: clainehart
hero:matt taibbi/alternet/rolling stone-THANK YOU!
Posted by: gulene on May 9, 2007 1:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NO one says "it".....OIL! THE OIL! IRAQI OIL! no one.

all this time, all these years, the continual talk around it has been maddening. still is, but for this and too very few other mentions and knowledge that once OIL contract is signed we're outta there but to defend production of OIL. just like the day shock&awe was born:protect the OIL...not for a moment the iraqi people, the cultural history of all mankind but THE OIL. you're liberating! all media and all who play dumb for bushcheney&OIL be gone. thank you.

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dayenta
Posted by: dayenta on May 9, 2007 2:12 PM   
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Thanks for telling the truth once again, Matt.

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1. "Most Iraqi legislators want the U.S. out" + 2.
Posted by: fairleft on May 9, 2007 2:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Democrats' proposed 'benchmark' to continue funding the occupation requires the fire sale of Iraqi oil wealth" = 3. The majority of Iraqi legislators, who want the U.S. out and want continued Iraqi control over its oil, will make sure the U.S. sponsored legislation dies.

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Thank you
Posted by: WhatNow? on May 9, 2007 5:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am continually admiring each of your articles more. Please keep up the work. I especially liked this,

"After all, it's impossible to justify on any level voting to give George Bush more money for more troops "in the short run" if you believe that the occupation is fundamentally evil and exploitative."

It's too bad more people do not see as clearly as yourself and actually have a consciense.

Oh, please Mr. Tiabbi write more articles on the plight of the russian people and what western neoliberal ideas have done to most of their standards of living.

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» RE: Thank you Posted by: hbw
The Democrats have rolled over onto their bellies... shameful.
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on May 9, 2007 6:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Their craven behavior marks a new low in American politics. This is disgusting - the complete failure of democracy in the United States is apparently at hand. Total rule by corporate oiligarchs...how did it come to this?

Well, that's easy to answer, I suppose: the oiligarchs own the media and they also own the public universities and the educational system. We're back to the days of the robber barons.

Get out in the streets... or resign yourself to a new Stalinist era in the United States. It's time to play hardball with these bastards.

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ALL HAIL TAIBBI!
Posted by: sfgumshoe on May 9, 2007 11:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hate to be a fatuous sycophant. But I just sent this column to everyone I know with any political sense, with the subject line: "Best. Political. Writer. In. America."

There's no one else out there, with the possible exception of Glenn Greenwald, who even comes close.

Another brilliant column Matt. The bark-tearing line was a particularly delicious knee-slapper.

Keep it up!

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Universal
Posted by: Universal on May 12, 2007 8:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Matt does it again. He reveals the deep corruption, class corruption, by both the democratic class liberals, appeasing, capitulating as class thores, to these class thugs for class society, Corporate fascism through its class ideology, and class national-imperial, fascist foreign policies.

We need to outright reject the class elites, class hierarchies, who filter out democracy, both war criminal parties, democrats and republicans, as class parties servile to Amerikan Class empire. Class corrupts democracy, and is a historical, regressive decomposing process on universal values, and on the inherent universal middle classes whose social moral compass is the center, but once exposed, subordinated by class masters above, becomes an automatic class mechanism, whose moral center is shifted to the right of a universal middle layer, towards class nationalism and class imperialism.

This degnerative process, and historical failure, general class corruption, as a class mechanism, has never been successfully dismantled, since the very first experiment of democracy in Ancient Greece, when Plato tried to graft democracy onto its patriarchical class order, which required "noble lies", class ideology, patchwork mythology, to justify the double standards of class values, in his REPUBLIC, an early theoretical attempt at a universal democratic values.

Corporate fascism is not exceptional. It is extreme but also the norm in today's Late Captialism. The German capitalists financed Hitler and its corrupted middle layers, class elites as the shock troops for this fascism, class tyranny, and Geman Nazi Empire. Today that mantle has been shifted to Amerika, where its corporate fascists finance its class thugs, and class whores in the Corporate media to cheerlead illegal wars of aggression.

If you think that Corporate fascism is an extreme term, and it is extreme in nature, I urge everyone to click on to Democracy Now, and listen to the last story, where Scahill exposes the rotten connection between fascist murder in Iraq, and corporate mercenaries, who violate international laws, while immunized against prosecution by Class thugs like Bremer, while saying with a straight face that the puppet regime of Iraq, which cannot prosecute these Nazis, is proof that Iraq has sovereignty. Scahill testified in front of a Congressional hearing on class mercenaries, that applies not only to military private nazis, but to all the class elites who make up this criminal Class empire. Listen to it...and you will see the connection between Corporate fascism, and Class despotism, class tyranny, class ideology, and Class Empire.

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Vote third party
Posted by: edith on May 12, 2007 10:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Democrats need to understand that we will put up with McCain, Romney, Thompson or whatever Bush clone the GOP nominates rather than vote for the party of Pelosi and Las Vegas Harry Reid.

The Green Party should take off its gloves about what Democrats have done. The two biggest issues are energy/environment(including climate change) and foreign policy/defense(which also has an energy component).

Even retired generals have had it with this meaningless slaughter aggravated by American occupation. Neither Shia nor Sunni want us there. The hundreds of billiions wasted in Iraq can be spent to care for the veterans whose lives are wrecked by this travesty and can be used to reduce the national debt. Once the balance sheet is in order, fundemental changes in national health care, education and retirement policy might be considered. But as long as the Democrats vote billions for the Iraq catastrophe, they are utter hypocrites to even discuss other issues.

Until the Dems change, vote Green or whatever splinters off the Democrats to protest the prowar policy of Nancy and Harry.

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» RE: Vote third party Posted by: Universal
A slight change, please
Posted by: Lincoln fan on May 12, 2007 8:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No, these are career bureaucrats, political herd animals who survive year after year by clinging for dear life to the concept of safety in numbers.

More accurately:

No, these are career bureaucrats, political herd animals who
survive year after year by clinging for dear life to the concept
that the corporate establishment will pay to finance their campaigns.
Bob Reichenbach.
Director, The Lincoln Initaitive.

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Another brilliant post...
Posted by: peace&honesty on May 13, 2007 11:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Absolutely the best political analyst out there in my opinion.

I appreciate your work Matt and can't wait to read another.

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cobblepot1
Posted by: cobblepot1 on May 14, 2007 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When pundits blather on wondering about why the US is still in iraq, it is impossible to believe that they cannot or will not factor in the hydrocarbon law/rape of iraqi oil. Even bill moyers on his "journal" last night was unable or unwilling to breathe the word; it was so depressing. My other huge concern about the dems is that i heard hillary mention that she would like to see civilian military contractors be in charge of defense in iraq once the US troops are pulled out. I surmised that she also wants to guard the bases, the pipelines, the oil ministry...and guesses that americans won't object. I object. I object to blackwater, et.al. being involved in ANY combat roles, and especially secret ones, and at such a huge expense to taxpayers. There does seem to be incredible collusion between (especially) senators, the white house, PNAC, mainstream media to avoid letting the public know that american hegemony via oil control is the primary basis of our foreign policy. With so many dems signed on, i am just sick. Great piece, matt.

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why the sycophantic replies to EVERY column?
Posted by: gretavo on May 17, 2007 11:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
trying to compensate for the fact that you're wrong about 9/11? That in fact you are knowingly LYING about 9/11? That you've failed to follow up as you promised with a column adressing the PHYSICS of 9/11?

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List of votes on the war in Iraq
Posted by: autonomie on May 18, 2007 6:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pelosi is right at home in the US congress in voting for more war. In fact, the vast majority of congress supports the Iraq war by funding it.

Who specifically is guilty?

See this list of Iraq war votes for more information. Includes links to all House and Senate votes pertaining to the war in Iraq.

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Reply
Posted by: Balans on May 20, 2007 3:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's positioning the US and the Euro Union for an Iranian incursion. At the same time, they are trying to gain control of South American energy wealth (Bolivian Gas, Ecuadorian Oil and Peruvian energy resources). Oh yes. Let us not forget to add the Congo and Sudan to the list of the Wealthiest's 'Oil Targets'

Thanks, Rezon

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