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Dems Lead in Counterattack to Stop Iran Conflict

By Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. Posted November 10, 2007.


A handful of congressional Democrats including Sen. James Webb are trying to stop the White House from starting a disastrous war with Iran.
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In the past month, President Bush and his allies in the Congress have set Washington once again buzzing with speculation about the administration's end game for Iran -- having accused the Iranians of stoking a third world war and dubbed the Revolutionary Guard Corps a terrorist organization. But as everyone from antiwar activists to military insiders wring their hands over the White House's intentions, a lonely handful of Democratic legislators are working to wedge Congress between the administration and Tehran.

Massachusetts Rep. John Tierney and Virginia Sen. Jim Webb have emerged as early leaders. With a few exceptions, their efforts have drawn tepid support from their colleagues, in both parties. But Tierney points to hopeful signs of a groundswell -- and sources say influential Democratic donors have begun demanding that party leaders match Bush's saber rattling with an equally vocal chorus of caution.

In 1998, during a politically fraught moment in United States history, the Congress passed, and President Bill Clinton signed into law, the Iraq Liberation Act, which made ending Saddam Hussein's regime an official U.S. policy goal. The legislation said as much explicitly: "It should be the policy of the United States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq."

Nine years later, Sens. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., introduced an eerily similar amendment to the 2008 Department of Defense spending bill, which passed with overwhelming support and will soon be U.S. law. "It should be the policy of the United States," the Kyl-Lieberman amendment reads, "to combat, contain, and roll back the violent activities and destabilizing influence inside Iraq of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, its foreign facilitators such as Lebanese Hezbollah, and its indigenous Iraqi proxies." This should be accomplished, according to the language, with the "use of all instruments of United States national power in Iraq, including diplomatic, economic, intelligence, and military instruments."

Two, in this case, doesn't make a coincidence. It makes a pattern. But one of the key differences between 1998 and 2007 is that some on Capitol Hill -- including senators who voted against Kyl-Lieberman, and members who have opposed similar measures in the House -- see the writing on the wall. And unlike those who have been through this before -- people like Rep. Barbara Lee of California and Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin -- today's voices of caution can point to their Iraq war predecessors, who spoke out against the invasion before it was popular to do so, and were ignored.

"It was the escalating rhetoric from the Bush administration," Tierney told me on Thursday when I asked him about his new focus; a fear that "the administration may be more concerned with regime change than with behavioral changes from the Iranian government."

Tierney sits on the House Select Committee on Intelligence and chairs a National Security and Foreign Affairs subcommittee, beneath the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Two weeks ago, he initiated a series of subcommittee hearings, inviting experts to teach the Congress about Iran -- what the Iranian people support, how their government works, how they can be engaged diplomatically, and what the costs of military action against Iran would be. At Thursday's hearing, the second in the series, five former diplomats and national security experts -- four of whom sat in staunch opposition to military action -- placed the chances of an American strike against Iran at between 20 and 50 percent over the next nine months.

After the hearing, I asked Tierney which of his congressional colleagues were most concerned about the situation and most interested in participating in an effort to prevent the administration's rhetorical volleys from being supplanted with bombs. He noted members‚ heightened engagement at both hearings. But Tierney demurred on the question of naming allies -- members of a potential anti-escalation caucus. That may be because the total numbers are still too low, particularly in the Senate. And therein lies the problem.

Steve Clemons, who directs the American Strategies program at the non-partisan New America Foundation, argues that, in the wake of Kyl-Lieberman, powerful Democrats, even ones who voted for the browbeating amendment, should support Webb's efforts. "Forget about Constitutional questions. Those went out the window with Kyl-Lieberman. What the Senate can do, if it wants to stop an attack or an accidental war, is get Hillary Clinton and more powerful Democrats to get 50 votes for something -- even if it's not binding, even if it's 50 signatures on a letter -- showing that a majority of the Senate opposes a conflict."

Emily Blout, acting legislative director for the National Iranian American Council, echoes Clemons. "First and foremost, in the short term, we need more activity along the lines of what Tierney and Webb are doing," says Blout. "Ultimately we should move to legislation -- to something like Webb's bill." And that's exactly what most activists, experts, and donors would like to see as well. Some propose the possibility of interparliamentary meetings between Iranian politicians and members of the United States Congress.

And that's exactly what many activists and donors would like to see as well. According to Capitol Hill sources who asked not to be named, influential Democratic donors are planning, in the coming days, to push senior Democrats on the Senate Armed Services Committee and in the Senate leadership to invite Admiral William Fallon--the Commander of U.S. Central Command, who has cautioned against military action in Iran and criticized the continued drumbeat--to testify. They believe Fallon's views -- well known, but never attested to before the government -- could snowball Webb's efforts into something more meaningful.

Recently, Webb sent a letter to President Bush emphasizing his belief "that offensive military action should not be taken against Iran without the express consent of Congress." It was signed by 29 other members. But 60 votes would be needed if any binding legislation is to make it to the Oval Office. And with more extreme measures, like closing the purse, off of the Democratic leadership's table, the best shot may be for more of the most respected, influential figures in the country -- who see the threat before them -- to follow the leaders and raise their voices loudly.

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See more stories tagged with: congress, iran, democrats, white house, james webb, john tierney

Brian Beutler is Washington Correspondent for the Media Consortium, a network of progressive media organizations, including AlterNet.

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The plan is right on schedule
Posted by: vox persona on Nov 10, 2007 1:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Part one was to use an attack from radicals, which was ignored quite conveniently, to consolidate power and whip up a frenzy of fear among the populace. Cynical, yes. Opportunistic? Definitely. Evil? Mere semantics. It set the sgenda into high gear, no going back now. All the pieces are in place.
Part B was to invade and occupy the rich oil (killing) fields of an unrelated country, using a series of outright lies, and hopefully pull enough wool to carry out such a blatantly brazen attack on international law. New Zealand doesn't even have that much wool, and sheep there outnumber humans. As Bush would quote Lincoln: "You can fool some of the people all of the time....and that's enough".
Part Three: Once the region is sufficiently destabilized, make the same drumbeat for war on Iran while still in office, the more the insecurity, the higher the oil prices. We ain't seen nuthin' yet. After all, this was supposedly our first CEO presidency. More like our first Enron presidency.
Part 4 is optional and pure gravy to our evangelical dear leader: maybe, just maybe he can coax Jesus to return and set everybody straight by single-handedly bring on his own self-fulfilling Armegeddon. Extra brownie points for that by Beelzebub hisself. Good going George.
So now we have to rely on the 'loyal opposition' to halt this obvious end game in progress. Good Luck. We need more ballsy Dems like Webb. Go Webb, go. Maybe after next election, we will have more like him. If we had 50 mor5e like him right now, I'd bet impeachment would not be 'off the table'.
Lou Dobbs just said (on the 4AM repeat) that we've lost 3858 of our soldiers in Iraq. For what? George's ego? His chickenhawk mentality? There is a psychological term for his kind, but the word coward comes to mind, when he evaded war through privilege but is more than willing to send others' sons to die for a cause that doesn't even warrant sacrifice. Oh yeah, we were supposed to shop. Oh, the humanity!

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» Are you kidding? Posted by: vox persona
Forewarned Is Forearmed: Bush on Iran
Posted by: Roy Eidelson on Nov 10, 2007 3:24 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The White House’s propaganda campaign laying the groundwork for military action against Iran dates back almost six years—to Bush’s 2002 State of the Union address in which he designated Iran as a founding member of the “axis of evil.” Since then, this drumbeat has waxed and waned as other concerns—primarily the disastrous invasion and occupation of Iraq—have often commanded center stage. Now, with the Bush administration approaching its final year in office, a renewed push and a shorter fuse are increasingly evident. My 3-minute YouTube video entitled “Forewarned Is Forearmed: Bush On Iran” is available HERE. It offers a very brief but deeply troubling chronicle of the president’s public warmongering and demonization of Iran. As has been said before, “the hour is getting late.”

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dipconsult
Posted by: dipconsult on Nov 10, 2007 8:21 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many Democrats, like our governments here in Europe, don't want to speak out against a US or Israeli attack on Iran because they believe American sabre rattling will help get Iran to desist from making a nuclear weapon. Yet the last thing thay want is a third Bush war. In this situation there is a very grave danger of either the American or Iranian side miscalculating.

Added to this are the similar right wing US Christian and Iranian Shi'ite apocalypic visions of the return of Chrisat and the appearance o the hidden Imam - both stoking the fires for conflict.

Added too, are the reported youthful gambling habits of G W Bush - when losing always demanding 'double o quits'. Having so far lost his (neo-conservative inspired) vision of winning the New American Century by invading Iraq "shock and aweing the world with US power" he may 'double or quits' by attacking Iran and achieving US ends thereby.

And added to these is the dismal White House, Congress, Pentagon, and popular ignorance of Iran. Just one exmple - Ahmedinajad is, of course, not a dictator, nor has he threatened to 'wipe Israel from the map'. He called for regime change in Israel - removal of the Zionists - just as G W Bush - and Congress! - calls for regime change in Iran. The theocratric regime is not homogenous: only consider the wily worldly Rafsanjani - chair of the guardian council which has the power even to remove the Supreme Leader Khamenei himslef.

And far worst - Bush refuses to talk to opponents: how achieve the apparently desired diplomatic solution without discussions with the Iranian government at all levels? How gain any understanding of the complex Iranian political and popular scene and so influence the outcome unless by continuous and determined efforts to know where to push, how to gain allies inside and ouside Iran?

One more point - this ignorance is widespread in the US and other Western media. No one is making the above points forcibly to educate the US and Western publics. The Murdoch media (some 100 outlets including The Weekly Standard - mouthpiece for the neo-conservatives) far too often sets the bellicose ignoramus tone through Fox TV and papers like the UK Sun.

We in the West are wandering dangerously close to another disastrous war with our eyes at least half closed - and this at a time when Pakistan is the immenent nuclear risk.

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Stuff, nonsense and distraction.
Posted by: pig on Nov 10, 2007 12:38 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If anyone truly thinks that a movement stopping a strike on Iran is going to come from congress, they are deluded.

The only way to stop it is for mass public protest. Unfortunately the masses are asleep, mesmerized or filled with bloodlust fuelled by propaganda implanted islamophobia.

More swill, waitress.

Oink.

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