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Pressuring the Dems for Peace

By Tom Hayden, Huffington Post. Posted March 21, 2008.


The presidential candidates have passed up the chance to say something new or hopeful that might end the killing.
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The 4,000th American soldier will die in Iraq sometime this week, the fifth anniversary of the war. Hundreds of "winter soldiers" -- veterans of the war -- confess the shameful abuse inflicted on the Iraqi people during those years. Yet the presidential candidates have passed up the chance to say something new or hopeful that might end the killing.

Any possibility of ending the war this year is long over. The panic that gripped the national security elites last year that peace sentiment might end the war in 2008 is safely past. [The hawkish Democratic-leaning think tank, the Center for a New American Security, fretted last fall that "if no bipartisan consensus is reached before the Democratic and Republican primaries, the next president will likely be elected principally on a "get out of Iraq now" platform." James Miller, Shawn Brimley, "Phased Transition", June 4, 2007, Not for Outside Circulation. ]

Those of us in the peace movement are all winter soldiers now, as the war grinds on, perhaps for years, while our leaders drift. Gen. Petraeus is getting his way with "setting back the American clock" and his hope for "eight years and eight divisions." [Washington Post interview, Mar. 7, 2004]

We can count on two developments, however. A spirited, well-funded educational campaign linking Iraq to the economic recession will be waged between now and November. And like it or not, the November election will be interpreted either as a voter mandate for peace or for the status quo. That offers the opportunity for an anti-war campaign linked to the economy and oil issues, while de-linked from devotion to any single presidential candidate.

John McCain is linked with Gen. Petraeus and the "surge" in their rosy campaign to gain time for the brutal occupation to wear out the Iraqi people. The Petraeus plan, as advocated by his top counterinsurgency advisers, includes carrots-and-sticks for Sunnis and Shi'a, and a "global Phoenix program" against all insurgencies, meaning a low-visibility program of population control, detention, divide-and-conquer tactics, repression and torture in the shadows conducted by client armies with discreet American advisers. [The first approach is by Stephen Biddle in Foreign Affairs [2006]. As for the Phoenix recommendation, readers should rush to read Lt. Col. David Kilkullen, here. Kilkullen already has scrubbed the call for a Phoenix program from a later print version of the article, substituting the Pentagon's "revolutionary development" formulation that replaced the discredited Phoenix program.]

The Democratic candidates are more complicated, and perhaps more disappointing, since 80 percent of Democratic voters favor a one-year withdrawal.

Hillary Clinton repeats the phrases that these voters want to hear, "end the war", and "bring the troops home." But she must know that she doesn't mean it. Her slippery pledge is to "begin" troop withdrawals within 60 days of being sworn in, but she refuses to set a timeline for completing that withdrawal. She wants to shift the American role from combat to counterinsurgency, leaving trainers and advisers, counter-insurgency units, sufficient troops to "deter" Iran, in short; set in motion a warfighting strategy similar to Afghanistan for an unknown number of years.

Clinton's top foreign policy thinkers are Lee Feinstein at the Council on Foreign Relations and Anne-Marie Slaughter at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School, who wrote in 2004 that "the biggest problem with the Bush preemption strategy may be that it does not go far enough." Enough said. [See "A Duty to Prevent", Foreign Affairs, Jan./Feb. 2004]

Barack Obama's claims on Iraq seem to rest on what he said in October 2002, a solid difference between himself and Clinton to be sure. But as Clinton repeatedly notes, hers and Obama's positions have been mainly the same since Obama entered the Senate. This isn't fully correct, since he has shown a more flexible diplomatic approach towards Iran, while Clinton supported Bush's designation of Iran's revolutionary guard as terrorist. But the public and the media seem to accept the closeness between the two candidate's positions since Obama's anti-war speech five years ago.

Obama also was the first to issue a timetable for withdrawal of combat troops, in 16-18 months. But his credibility was undermined by the remarks of a close adviser, Samantha Power, who helped write and edit his book The Audacity of Hope, and presumably must know every nuance of his thinking. When she told a British interviewer recently that, if elected, Obama would consult the generals, review the situation in Iraq, and only then decide what to do, he became for many people another candidate whose word cannot be trusted, eerily echoing the false peace promises of Sixties presidents Johnson and Nixon.

Obama has tried to clarify his stance by loudly declaring that he will "end the war in 2009", a remarkable statement which so far contains no explanation.

There are many reasons to support Obama, but a genuine peace plan isn't one of them at this point. Obama appears trapped in the quagmire of disagreeing advisors. While more open-minded than the Clinton security coterie, they share the fear -- partly professional, partly ideological -- of advising a superpower withdrawal. Worse, they share the insider dread of following the populist instincts of the voters in foreign policy.

On the record, Obama favors a "residual force" after pulling out combat troops by 2010. This innocuous wording, which sounds like a clean-up crew, would still be in the crossfire of sectarian combat until all of Iraq's insurgents finally weary of battle. His position is more nuanced that Clinton's, limiting the counterinsurgency forces to fighting al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, and not providing training for Iraqi troops unless the Baghdad government reconciled its factions.

For both Clinton and Obama, the number of Americans left in the war zone would be staggering, even after the withdrawal of most or all combat troops. Including the backup forces and private contractors necessary to support the residual role, the numbers could be 50-100.000. That would make Iraq look like Afghanistan, or Central America in the late 1970s.

Only the pressure of the peace movement, bloggers and the mainstream media might make Clinton or Obama break with their advisers and issue an actual plan for ending the war rather than merely shifting from combat to counterinsurgency. Since the next six months are the only time the candidates can be forced to respond to voters' questions, the mission of the peace movement is becoming clear. While rejecting McCain as the neoconservative candidate of war, peace advocates can loudly refuse to support the Iraq platform of either Democratic candidate until they display more candor and commitment towards the voters. With enough voices pressuring them, inside and outside the Democratic Party, it will be difficult to silently support counterinsurgency in the name of peace.

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See more stories tagged with: iraq, clinton, obama, election 2008

Tom Hayden was a leader of the student, civil rights, peace and environmental movements of the 1960s. He served 18 years in the California legislature, where he chaired labor, higher education and natural resources committees. He is the author of ten books, including "Street Wars" (New Press, 2004). He is a professor at Occidental College, Los Angeles, and was a visiting fellow at Harvard's Institute of Politics last fall.

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"the next six months are the only time the candidates can be forced to respond"
Posted by: oregoncharles on Mar 21, 2008 8:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He's right, folks. Time is running out. Stay on their case, or the big donors will have the last word, as they always do.

Both Hillary & Barack have voted consistently to fund the war; neither has filibustered to block the funding; both are responsible, as Senators, for the egregious Harry Reid; neither is committed to a real end to the Iraq war (and what about Afghanistan?)

Make sure they know what you want, and remind them that you will have peace alternatives in November, either Nader or the Greens. Climb on the bandwagon now and the war may go on another 8 years, as the Vietnam War did.

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FIRST WE HAVE TO GET THEIR ATTENTION
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Mar 21, 2008 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Iraq & Afganistan are all but ignored by most Americans. Presidential campaigns are an insult to any serious voter. Clinton has realistic ideas but little backing. Obama wins popularity contests mith eloquent speeches defending his pastor. We need a military draft and/or a 2% tax on everything. Call it a WAR TAX. Make it personal and put a $ sign on it and they will all wake up. 4000 dead is not enough. Thanks, ANNA

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Obama has opposed the war from DAY ONE and STILL DOES!
Posted by: foreverhope on Mar 21, 2008 11:23 AM   
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Q: Can the president disregard a congressional statute limiting the deployment of troops--either by capping the number of troops, or by setting minimum home-stays between deployments?

A:" No, the President does not have that power. To date, several Congresses have imposed limitations on the number of US troops deployed in a given situation. As President, I will not assert a constitutional authority to deploy troops in a manner contrary to an express limit imposed by Congress and adopted into law."

Source: Boston Globe questionnaire on Executive Power Dec 20, 2007

"I'm going to bring this war to a close. That's why we can get our combat troops out within 16 months and have to initiate the kind of regional diplomacy, not just talking to our friends, but talking to our enemies, like Iran and Syria, to try to stabilize the situation there."

Source: 2007 Democratic debate in Las Vegas, Nevada Nov 15, 2007

OBAMA: It is important to tell the American people the truth. Military commanders indicate that they can safely get combat troops out at the pace of one to two brigades a month. That is the quickest pace that we can do it safely. I have said I will begin immediately and we will do it as rapidly as we can.

Source: 2007 Democratic primary debate at Dartmouth College Sep 6, 2007

"... we've got no good options. We got bad options and worse options. The only way we're going to stabilize Iraq and make sure that al Qaeda does not take over in the long term is to begin a phased redeployment so that we don't have anti-American sentiment as a focal point for al Qaeda in Iraq. We can still have troops in the region, outside of Iraq...we've got to make sure that they don't establish long-term bases there."

Source: 2007 AFL-CIO Democratic primary forum Aug 8, 2007


"I am proud that I opposed this war from the start.... What I've also said is if we're going to send hundreds of thousands of our young men and women there, then they have the equipment that they need to make sure that they come home safely. I'm proud of the fact that I put forward a plan in January that mirrors what Congress ultimately adopted. And it says there's no military solution to this. We've got to have a political solution, begin a phased withdrawal, and make certain that we've got benchmarks in place so that the Iraqi people can make a determination about how they want to move forward."

Source: 2007 South Carolina Democratic primary debate, on MSNBC Apr 26, 2007

"One of the enormous difficulties of this war has been the strain it's placed on our men and women in uniform.....we are one signature away or 16 votes away from ending this war. Now, if the president is not going to sign the bill then what we have to do is gather up 16 votes in order to override his veto. We can't expect that we can continue to impose a military solution on what is essentially a political problem, and that's what we have to organize around.

Source: 2007 South Carolina Democratic primary debate, on MSNBC Apr 26, 2007

"I opposed this war from the start....I have stated clearly and unequivocally that that open-ended occupation has to end. The idea that the situation in Iraq is improving is simply not credible, and it's not reflective of the facts on the ground. The hard truth is, there's no military solution to this war. Our troops have done all that they have been asked and more, but no amount of American soldiers are gonna solve the political differences that lie in the heart of the sectarian conflict. Extending the surge is just going to put more men and women in the crossfire of a civil war.

Source: Virtual Town Hall on Iraq, sponsored by MoveOn.org Apr 10, 2007

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THEY ARE ALL WORTHLESS CANDIDATES
Posted by: mindtrvlr on Mar 21, 2008 2:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Again the American public has been left to vote for candidates that are not interested in anything , but themselves. Same ole rhetoric, and useless arguments, while the real issues fall by the wayside.

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As if there's a choice
Posted by: 2dogarage on Mar 22, 2008 1:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dick Cheney just made it abundantly clear that the executive office does exactly as it pleases and the people be damned. With a simple two-letter word, so?, he let us know that our strength in numbers aren't worth a passing glance. Too bad no one can say he isn't right.

This is the administration who stole the last two elections. I suspect many others in history have been decided by the moneyed few as well.

All of this political debate is based on the naive notion that the citizenry of this country have a choice about who will be our next CEO.

The political circus is good for lively debate every 4 years and then settles down into the dictatorship it actually is until the next dog and pony show.

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Hillary scared me from day 1 of her campaign
Posted by: Ellie1 on Mar 24, 2008 9:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
because she voted for the war. Even 1 knew that this war was Bushit, with probably less information than she had. I live in an area directly affected by 9/11, and when the Iraqi war started, I remember saying, "What the heck are we doing THERE?" Wrong country-wrong strategy-wrong president-wrong war. I have no faith in either party ( or this country for that matter), but I registered as a Democrat so I might affect it (and hopefully change it) from within. I am sure conservative stupid greedy Republicans will never change. My next door neighbors still have a Bush/Cheney bumper sticker on their car! (No, I don't speak to them.)

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