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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Bush pressures Congressional Democrats on war funding
By Bill Van Auken
1 December 2007
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In a sharp escalation of the political rhetoric surrounding
the dispute between the White House and the Democratic-led Congress
over money for the Iraq war, President Bush delivered a speech
at the Pentagon Wednesday afternoon threatening mass layoffs of
civilian employees of the Defense Department, the suspension of
contracts and scaling back of operations at US bases unless his
funding request is promptly approved.
Bush couched his demand in a thinly veiled charge that the
Democrats were stabbing US troops in the back and endangering
their lives. The American people expect us to work together
to support our troops, he said. Thats what they
want. They do not want the government to create needless uncertainty
for those defending our country, and uncertainty for their families.
They do not want disputes in Washington to undermine our troops
in Iraq just as theyre seeing clear signs of success.
This is, of course, all nonsense. Poll after poll have indicated
that what the American peopleand the troops themselveswant
is the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq. As for creating
uncertainty among those sent to occupy Iraq, the repeated
deployments and the sudden extensions of their tours of duty have
already done that, producing a mounting crisis in military recruitment
and retention.
Bush insisted that the Democratic leadership pass his request
for nearly $200 billion more in emergency war funding
before adjourning for the congressional Christmas recess.
The House last month passed a bill providing a first installment
of this funding$50 billion to cover costs until Marchwhile
attaching a series of conditions aimed at painting the measure
in antiwar colors. These provisions, virtually all non-binding
or non-enforceablewould do nothing to actually end the war.
They included the call for the administration to withdraw an unspecified
number of troops in 30 dayssomething that is already happening
as the Pentagon has run out of units needed to maintain the surge
and is bringing back a brigade combat team that will not be replaced.
Also attached to the funding was a non-enforceable goal to
end combat operations in Iraq by December 2008which, by
definition, would still allow the continued deployment of tens
of thousands of US occupation troops under the pretext of combating
terrorism, training Iraqi forces and protecting US assets.
Nonetheless, the bill was effectively killed by the Republicans
in the US Senate and, in any case, would have been vetoed by the
White House, which has rejected even any symbolic restrictions
on its war powers.
With Congress having already approved nearly half a trillion
dollars in funding for the Pentagon this year, there is no immediate
need to carry out the kind of layoffs and cutbacks threatened
by Bush.
Nonetheless, there are mounting indications that the Democrats
may soon cave in to the propaganda campaign and give Bush a funding
measure he is prepared to sign.
In his response to Bushs threat, Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (Democrat, Nevada) also cast the funding issue as a
question of endangering the troops, while attempting to shift
the blame onto the White House.
Bush and the Republicans, he charged, are so afraid of
being held accountable for their failed war policy that they would
rather leave our men and women on the battlefield shorthanded
than work with us to adjust this disastrous strategy.
The Senate Democratic leaders language is significant.
It is not a question of ending the war, but rather adjusting
the strategy, in cooperation with the administration.
Reids remarks were echoed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
who said, We have provided every penny that is currently
necessary to fund Defense Department operations in Iraq, Afghanistan
and around the world. It is President Bush and his Republican
allies in the Senate who are preventing extra funds from reaching
our troops.
The idea that the money voted to continue a war that has claimed
the lives of at least 3,880 US military personnel is somehow meant
to benefit our troops is an obscene fiction subscribed
to by Democrats and Republicans alike.
The statements from the Senate and House Democratic leaders
followed even more telling remarks by Representative John Murtha,
who chairs the key House subcommittee on military spending and
was an early Democratic advocate of redeployment of
US troops in Iraq.
Having returned November 27 from a trip to Iraq, Murtha proclaimed
that the surge is working and voiced the opinion that
the security situation in the occupied country had improved substantially.
Murtha, who serves as House Speaker Nancy Pelosis top
adviser on military questions, added that he was optimistic
that the Democratic leadership and the White House could reach
an agreement on funding. Congress wants to come up with
an agreement, he said Thursday in a video press conference
from his home district office in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Leadership
may be willing to compromise, he added, in relation to the
call for a withdrawal timetable.
The Pennsylvania congressman said that his belief that a compromise
could be reached on war funding had been strengthened by a telephone
discussion Tuesday with Bushs so-called war czar, Lt. Gen.
Douglas Lutte. The deal the two reportedly discussed was that
Congress would pass additional funding and extend the suggested
timetable for withdrawing combat troops from Iraq
in return for the administrations agreement to accept other
provisions banning torture by all US personnel and establishing
readiness standards for troops deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Murtha defended the relaxed timetable by suggesting that, because
of the vast amount of military equipment deployed by the US in
Iraq, any withdrawal could take two years.
After Republicans circulated copies of Murthas remarks
as reported in a Pennsylvania newspaper, the congressman issued
a public statement to clarify what he had said.
The military surge has created a window of opportunity
for the Iraqi government, the statement said. Unfortunately,
the sacrifice of our troops has not been met by the Iraqi government
and they have failed to capitalize on the political and diplomatic
steps that the surge was designed to provide. The fact remains
that the war in Iraq cannot be won militarily, and that we must
begin an orderly redeployment of US forces from Iraq as soon as
practicable.
Murtha reiterated the position take by Reid and Pelosi, calling
for Bush to enact the legislation already passed by the House.
Murthas flip-flopping is symptomatic of the further shift
to the right by the entire Democratic Party leadership. Indeed,
his call for a compromise on funding came just days
after Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, vowed that the Democratic leadership would appropriate
the war funding, even if its attempts to tack on withdrawal goals
were blocked.
Were going to fund the troops, Levin, a Michigan
Democrat, said in a Fox News Sunday interview November
25. No ones trying to undercut the military.
While attempting to maintain a façade of opposition
to the war in order to placate the antiwar sentiment that prevails
among the vast majority of the public, the partys differences
with the Bush administration over Iraq have never been more than
tactical. Increasingly, it has criticized the White House from
the right, not for carrying out an illegal invasion and murderous
occupation, but rather for failing to achieve success
in this criminal venture.
Its calls for adjusting strategy in Iraq represent
a direct repudiation of the desire of the vast majority of the
American people for an end to the war. Like the Bush administration,
the Democratic leadership envisions tens of thousands of troops
remaining after redeployment in what amounts to a
permanent colonial occupation of the oil-rich country.
Whether the additional funding is approved before Christmas
or afterwards, it is clear that the Democratic Party will remain
the Bush administrations willing accomplice in continuing
the war.
See Also:
US signs deal for long-term
occupation of Iraq
[28 November 2007]
US, British and Australian
forces build oil-protection base in Iraq
[13 November 2007]
From the horse's mouth: Greenspan
says Iraq war was for oil
[19 September 2007]
Bush-linked Texas company
signs oil deal with Iraqi Kurds
[15 September 2007]
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