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War on Iraq

The Pragmatism of Prolonged War

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted March 13, 2007.


In an echo of Vietnam 40 years ago, the Iraq war continues while the antiwar movement loses its way among the ineffective posturing of Democratic leadership.
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The days are getting longer, but the media shadows are no shorter as they cover the war in Iraq through American eyes, squinting in Washington's pallid sun.

Debated as an issue of politics, the actual war keeps being drained of life. Abstractions thrive inside the Beltway, while the war effort continues: funded by the U.S. Treasury every day, as the original crime of invasion is replicated with occupation.

More than ever, in the aftermath of the Scooter Libby verdict, the country's major news outlets are willing to acknowledge that the political road to war in Iraq was paved with deceptions. But the same media outlets were integral to laying the flagstones along the path to war -- and they're now integral to prolonging the war.

With the same logic of one, two, and three years ago, the conformist media wisdom is that a cutoff of funds for the war is not practical. Likewise, on Capitol Hill, there's a lot of huffing and puffing about how the war must wind down -- but the money for it, we're told, must keep moving. Like two rails along the same track, the dispensers of conventional media and political wisdom carry us along to more and more and more war.

The antiwar movement is now coming to terms with measures being promoted by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi and Reid have a job to do. The antiwar movement has a job to do. The jobs are not the same.

This should be obvious -- but, judging from public and private debates now fiercely underway among progressive activists and organizations, there's a lot of confusion in the air.

No amount of savvy Capitol-speak can change the fact that "benchmarks" are euphemisms for more war. And when activists pretend otherwise, they play into the hands of those who want the war to go on ... and on ... and on.

Deferring to the Democratic leadership means endorsing loopholes that leave the door wide open for continued U.S. military actions inside Iraq -- whether justified as attacks on fighters designated as Al Qaeda in Iraq, or with reclassification of U.S. forces as "trainers" rather than "combat troops." And an escalating U.S. air war could continue to bomb Iraqi neighborhoods for years.

The position being articulated by Reps. Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters, Lynn Woolsey and others in Congress is the one that the antiwar movement should unite behind -- to fully fund bringing the troops home in a safe and orderly way, while ending the entire U.S. occupation and war effort, by the end of 2007.

We're urged to take solace from the fact that Washington's debate has shifted to "when" -- rather than "whether" -- the war should end. But the end of the U.S. war effort could be deferred for many more years while debates over "when" flourish and fester. This happened during the Vietnam War, year after year, while death came to tens of thousands more American soldiers and perhaps a million more Vietnamese people.

Pelosi is speaker of the House, and Reid is majority leader of the Senate. But neither speaks for, much less leads, the antiwar movement that we need.

When you look at the practicalities of the situation, Pelosi and Reid could be more accurately described as speaker and leader for the war-management movement.


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See more stories tagged with: iraq war, antiwar, vietnam, mlk, democrats

Norman Solomon is the author of the new book, "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death."

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View:
Iraq is not the new Vietnam
Posted by: stephenhart on Mar 13, 2007 1:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Was the situation then essentially different from today? No."

Yes, it was. Vietnam had no oil. Southeast Asia had no oil. The US had no intent to build a permanent military presence in Southeast Asia to control its natural resources. The Vietnam war was about geopolitics. The invation and occupation of Iraq are about natural resources. Essentially different.

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» RE: Iraq is not the new Vietnam Posted by: srjenkins
Tactics and Progressive Identity
Posted by: Earthian on Mar 13, 2007 2:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two key issues here.

Tactics:

Norman Solomon advocates a powerful way to end the occupation: cut off funds. *Not* passing a funding bill is something the President cannot veto, while he can veto a bill to impose rules on the military or a bill to reverse the use of force resolution of 2002. So Solomon's strategy is sound and could be accomplished by a majority of Democrats in the House or merely 41 in the Senate via filibuster.

Progressive Identity:

Solomon is a true progressive, and so he advocates a means to end the occupation. Many of the Democrats, even some of those in the Progressive Caucus, such as Pelosi, are not true progressives, but are partial progressives on policies, and, more importantly, do not advocate a new progressive regime in America. The "centrists" or "moderates" are pragmatic and hence support the corporate-militarist regime that has been in place since the election of Reagan in 1980. The progressive identity is rooted in a worldview that advocates a new progressive regime in America. To see an elaboration of this view, look at Charles Derber's book Hidden Power or see this summary of it in a free online video lecture on that book:

http://frontrow.bc.edu/program/derber2/

By this superb standard, the true progressives (Cindy Sheehan's term) such as the writer Norman Solomon, and House members like John Lewis, Jesse Jackson Jr., Barbara Lee, Lynn Woolsey, Maxine Waters, Dennis Kucinich, Jim McDermott, etc. are not willing to play politics with lives or continue an illegal, immoral occupation.

I agree with Solomon then on both tactical grounds and identity grounds.

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Finally, Norm puts the boot down
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 13, 2007 3:14 PM   
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Compared to Holly Yeager's obfuscation, Solomon puts the shovel into the dirt. Well said, Norman. Nice to see you changed your mind on Nancy's tactics since November and can see much more clearly now. One more question, though, do you think we'd be talking this b.s. about "when" if we'd not taken impeachment off the table? Seems to me you missed there too... none of this would be happening if the emperor had been dethroned. A little revolution now and then is a good thing....

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Welcome Back Norman
Posted by: Nedtheredhead on Mar 13, 2007 5:04 PM   
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Since the untimely death of Molly, there has been very little of interest to me in the writings of your guests. Norman's return at least comes close to filling that gap.

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One thing that continues to puzzle me.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Mar 13, 2007 5:52 PM   
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Why are so many members of congress lacking any decency? If I were one, I'd be concerned with the fact that if I did not oppose this war I would be complicit in war crimes. How could I consider myself any better than alot of the people that were hung because of the Nuremberg trials? OK, OK, the magnitude is not as great but that would be little solace for a truly caring person. I guess since many of them are old and see no threat of facing the consequences of their actions thus they will not condemn amerikas belligerence. I do bet they would change their tune if they were to be tried by an impartial jury for the crimes that have been committed by our federal governments imperial conquest.

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Plutocracy Corp USA
Posted by: Hal on Mar 13, 2007 6:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“When you look at the practicalities of the situation, Pelosi and Reid could be more accurately described as speaker and leader for the war-management movement… He [Martin Luther King] was speaking truthfully, and he was opposing a war forthrightly. That was imperative in 1967. It is imperative in 2007.”

Solomon makes a solid point on funding cutoff but again speaks limited hangout and denial.

The “practicalities of the situation” are that Pelosi and Reid work for the same fascist oligarchs that bulldozed a Bush/Cheney puppet farce into the White House over 2 stolen elections with its rank 911 cover-up, suppression and phony “war on terror”. This is a plutocracy that effectively runs a Washington-MSM circus like the toy poodle it is.

And the reality is Martin Luther King didn’t just oppose Vietnam war begun on a Tonkin Gulf conspiracy. MLK stood squarely against the core fascist cartel rule that pushed a war against Americans and war abroad. This confrontation of truth to fascist power is why MLK, JFK, RFK and so many others were put down. They were their own men – not beholden to the fiat monopoly that dominates the west thru a mask of false democracy.

Real democratic leaders and leadership are not tolerated at Plutocracy Corp USA.

This is the bottom line truth Solomon, Chomsky, etc and their faux MSM “alternative” left cannot and will not face.

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BORING!
Posted by: Temporary on Mar 14, 2007 2:10 AM   
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King was a black man in the 1960's! He could shout out what ever he wanted! Nobody would believe him and besides, he would get shot anyway!

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» RE: BORING! Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Nancy Doesn't Get It
Posted by: Democritus on Mar 14, 2007 10:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You would have thought that Nancy Pelosi could read the results of the 2006 election. It was essentially a vote against the war and for pulling out our troops as quickly and safely as possible. It was also a repudiation of George W. Bush's presidency. Yet Nancy announced immediately that impeachment was "off the table," and she continues to support doling out funds for supporting the war effort and not the peace effort. Is Nancy one of those whose eye is still on Iraqi oil and in maintaining the huge military bases we have constructed in Iraq with a mind to protecting that oil? If so, she's the wrong person to be Speaker of the House. She should then resign and let someone with intestinal fortitude take her place.

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Frederick
Posted by: leveller on Mar 14, 2007 1:32 PM   
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I think people should stop deluding themselves about Iraq. The US has no intention of leaving Iraq for the forseeable future. (Unless they're driven out.)The US is there to control the oil. They have to gain control of Iran's oil too. They have to control the Middle East's oil reserves if they are to have any control over their economic rivals, break OPEC, maintain their hegemony over the world, and preserve economic and political stability at home. The Democrat leadership knows this; which is why it has no intention of bringing the troops home either. It's been more or less the same old story since the last quarter of the 19th Century- and, in some respects, since 1823. The US also has to tie up Nigeria to make sure it can't slip away, and deal with Venezuela's oil- and discipline Latin America generally. They'll get round to it in good time. Plenty of profits for the arms manufacturers in the process of all this too.

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Who Can Stop The War
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Mar 14, 2007 4:32 PM   
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America has a big-BIG problem: How to end the war. So far, America doesn't have an Erwin Rommel or a Klaus von Stauffenberg in the military to stop the carnage in the Middle East. The American military is a Frankenstein that is out of control. The scientist's remote control is broken.
No one in Congress is willing to challenge our clueless leader to stop him. No one's willing to attempt a coup. There's no zest for offing Bush as it has been with Fidel Castro or Saddam Hussein.
Until anyone in Congress like Barack Obama or Nancy Pelosi can do something to halt King George's Crusade, the anti-war movement, in which I have participated in, will falter.
In Tacoma people were arrested for attempting to stop a train loaded with war materiel heading for Iraq. Sabotaging the war effort won't work because in our defense plants workers are watched. We're too busy doing drive-by shootings in our cities and joining gangs and walking around with iPods on our heads. And we're too busy hating each other and associating the hate on immigrants when times are rough.
The war rarely makes front page news unless a prominent person ventures into that hell. Can we find a happy ending to this debacle? To members of Congress: Are you willing to sacrifice your life to end the slaughter so Iraqis and Afghanis can sleep at night? That's your mission, America. You know John McCain won't do anything; he represents Arizona where Tomahawk missiles are made, so don't count on his sorry butt.
The people could stage a revolution, but we've gotten soft by consumerism. Not too many Yanks go to bed angry; thank you, American Idol and Blockbuster. The planet is in bad shape if America continues to wage war and can't do anything here to prevent needless conflicts against people of color.

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Nailed it, Norm
Posted by: SteveB on Mar 14, 2007 4:53 PM   
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Pelosi and Reid have a job to do. The antiwar movement has a job to do. The jobs are not the same.

When I hear someone, usually a loyal Democrat, explain that "we" have to compromise because "we don't have the votes", I realize I'm seeing someone who has completed the transformation from engaged citizen to compliant "junior legislator."

We are not legislators, and have no reason to make the compromises legislators make. Our job, as citizens, is to clearly and honestly communicate to our representatives what we expect of them - nothing more, nothing less.

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