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Steny Hoyer at the Brookings Institution
House majority leader lays out Democratic position on Iraq
By Barry Grey in Washington DC
1 February 2007
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In a January 26 speech at the Brookings Institution, Steny
Hoyer, the Democratic majority leader of the House of Representatives
in the new 110th Congress, spelled out the basis on which the
Democratic leadership is criticizing the Bush administrations
military escalation in Iraq.
His speech demonstrated two essential facts: first, that whatever
the divergences over tactics, there are no principled differences
between the Democrats and the Bush administration when it comes
to the war in Iraq and the broader imperialist agenda of the United
States; and second, that there exists a vast gulf between the
revulsion most Americans feel toward the Iraq war and the duplicitous,
half-hearted opposition of Bushs critics within the political
establishment.
Introducing the 14-term congressman from Washingtons
Maryland suburbs, Brookings President Strobe Talbott, former deputy
secretary of state in the Clinton administration, stressed Hoyers
Cold War credentials as chairman of the Helsinki Commission in
the 1980s and his strong support for the US military intervention
in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, culminating in the 1999 air war against
Serbia. Mr. Hoyer is a long-time champion of human rights
and the effective use of American power, both hard and soft,
Talbott said.
In the course of his remarks, Hoyer made clear that he opposed
a cutoff of funding for the war as well as any near-term withdrawal
of US troops. He not only defended his October 2002 vote in favor
of the congressional authorization for military action against
Iraq, he underlined his support for the invasion and occupation
the following March.
Hoyer said he considered the administrations
decision to justify the war on a preemption theory due to
[Saddam Husseins] alleged possession of weapons of mass
destruction to have been a mistake, and noted
that he advised then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
at a White House meeting on February 5, 2003 to utilize a different
pretextthe claim that Iraq had violated United Nations resolutions.
The UN, he asserted, should have sanctioned military action
to overthrow Hussein because the civilized world has
a collective obligation to act against an international
lawbreaker who threatens peace and stabilitya description
which a large majority of the worlds people would more readily
apply to George W. Bush.
He then declared: I would not have supported House Joint
Resolution 114 had I known then what I know now: that the
United States of America could and would prosecute a war and manage
a nation-building effort in such an incompetent, arrogant, unplanned
and unsuccessful manner.
Not, in other words, because of the governments lies
about weapons of mass destruction and Iraq-Al Qaeda ties; not
because of the mass killing of Iraqi civilians, torture, rape,
the destruction of Iraqi societybut because the colonialist
project was carried out in an incompetent manner.
And the main reason for its failure? After the politically
mandatory praise for our men and women in uniform,
Hoyer declared: ... when the history of this war is recounted,
I believe one colossal misjudgment will stand out: the failure
of this administration to heed the advice of military experts
to put enough troops on the ground at the outset of hostilities
to secure and stabilize a nation of 26 million people.
He proceeded to argue, by analogy to the US-NATO war in Kosovo,
that the US should have dispatched 500,000 troops to conquer the
more populous Iraq and subjugate its people.
This ostensible critic of Bushs war plan went on to say,
I hope that this new strategy works. We all
do. But based upon the facts and record before us, my expectations
are not high.
Such is the content of the Democratic Party leaderships
critique of Bushs policy in Iraq. As for their alternative,
Hoyer reiterated the general Democratic mantra of a transition
[of] the principal mission of our forces from combat to training,
logistics, force protection and counterterrorism, a phased
redeployment of US forces within the next six months, and
an aggressive diplomatic strategy, both within the region
and beyond.
This is, needless to say, a formula for the indefinite maintenance
of US occupation forces in the country.
Hoyer placed the greatest stress on what he called the
continuing obligation of the international community to help stabilize
Iraq. This amounted to an effort to shift, as much as possible,
the burden of the catastrophe created by the US in Iraq onto the
rest of the world.
This would include a drive to extort money from the oil-rich
countries in the region to help finance the ongoing US occupation.
For example, Hoyer said, in the first Gulf War,
the United States contributed less than $10 billion of the total
war cost of $61 billion, while Suadi Arabia and Kuwait contributed
$36 billion and Germany and Japan gave $16 billion.
The congressman concluded by approvingly citing the recent
remark of the new UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, that Iraq
is the whole worlds problem.
In the question-and-answer period, an exchange occurred that
established in unambiguous terms the reactionary standpoint of
Hoyer and the Democratic leadership.
This reporter asked the following question: Congressman,
it seems to me in listening to your remarks that, in the end,
you are critical of the conduct of the war not because the invasion
and occupation were either wrong or illegalthe UN Security
Council did not support it and preemption, which you say is a
mistake, is a violation of the Nuremburg principlesbut because
it hasnt worked. I would like you to respond to that.
Hoyer began his lengthy reply as follows: I think there
is much truth in that, in terms of that being my position. As
I posited, I believe that action against Saddam Hussein was justified.
I believe the United Nations should have taken that action. They
failed to do so...
He continued by noting the bipartisan support for a policy
of aggression against Iraq that preceded the administration of
George W. Bush and the 2003 invasion. I think the basic
premise of your question is accurate, he said. I voted
to authorize, as you know. You may know that in 1998 Congress
almost unanimously, over 350 votes in the House and unanimously
in the United States Senate, passed a resolution saying it was
the policy of the United States to remove the Hussein regime because
of the human rights violations he was visiting on his people and
the violation of international conditions that had been imposed
on him and the violations of international law.
There could hardly be a clearer statement of the complicity
of the Democratic Party in the United States governments
criminal enterprise in Iraq.
See Also:
The politics of the January
27 rally in Washington
Organizers channel antiwar protest behind Democrats
[29 January 2007]
Iraq escalation heightens
political crisis in Washington
[13 January 2007]
Silent protesters harassed,
ejected from US Senate hearings
[13 January 2007]
Washington think tank bars
WSWS reporter
An incident that says much about the US capital
[9 January 2007]
Observations on the opening
of the 110th US Congress
[8 January 2007]
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