[Peace-discuss] Art of the possible?

C. G. Estabrook galliher at uiuc.edu
Mon Jul 23 05:00:44 CDT 2007


At the end of 2007, there will be more American troops in Iraq than when 
Democrats took over Congress in January.


"For antiwar activists to support timetables for the eventual scaling 
down of the invasion of Iraq is as if, before the Civil War, 
abolitionists agreed to postpone the emancipation of the slaves for a 
year, or two years, or five years, and coupled this with an 
appropriation of funds to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act.  Timetables 
for withdrawal are not only morally reprehensible in the case of a 
brutal occupation (would you give a thug who invaded your house, smashed 
everything in sight, and terrorized your children a timetable for 
withdrawal?) but logically nonsensical. If our troops are preventing 
civil war, helping people, controlling violence, then why withdraw at 
all? If they are in fact doing the opposite -- provoking civil war, 
hurting people, perpetuating violence -- they should withdraw as quickly 
as ships and planes can carry them home." --Howard Zinn, via Paul Street

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http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=72&ItemID=13356


     A RESPONSE TO TOM HARKIN et al.:
     NO CONGRESSIONAL WAR FUNDING, NO WAR
     by Paul Street; July 23, 2007


         If Tuesday July 17th is any indication, Iowa’s longstanding 
liberal Democratic Senator Tom Harkin is willing to pay occasional 
attention to some of his constituents who oppose the illegal United 
States occupation of Iraq.



         I saw Harkin on C-SPAN in the U.S. Senate Chambers at around 
two in the morning last Tuesday.  As part of the Senate Democrats’ 
“sleep in” effort to break through a Republican filibuster against a 
Senate vote to begin withdrawing combat troops from Iraq in four months, 
he was reading from antiwar letters he’d received from Iowans in recent 
months.



          “LET US VOTE”



         One letter came from the mother of a U.S. soldier deployed in 
“Operation Iraqi Freedom.”  By Harkin’s account, the military mom from 
rural Iowa wanted to know how many more American GIs were going to die 
in a “mistaken” and failed war that was sold to the American people on 
“fraudulent” grounds.



         She would have been right to add that the war is criminal - not 
merely mistaken – and to note that the leading victims of Washington’s 
occupation by far are the Iraqis. If she said anything along those 
lines, Harkin did not quote it.



         After reading from her note and another one like it, Harkin 
pointed to a big red, white, and blue sign positioned next to his 
podium.  The sign read “LET US VOTE.”  The Senator accused Republicans 
of defying the will of the American people by blocking a vote that could 
force a “change of course” in Iraq.



          VOTING FREELY TO AUTHORIZE THE ASSAULT



         It’s too bad Harkin didn’t pay more attention to the large 
number of Iowan and other American and world citizens who opposed the 
White House’s Iraq war plans on and before October 11th 2002.  That’s 
the terrible day when Harkin joined 28 other Democratic Senators 
(including leading presidential candidates Hillary Clinton [D-New York] 
and then Senator John Edwards [then D-North Carolina]) in voting to 
authorize Bush to use force against Saddam Hussein’s Iraq (CNN 2002).



         As many Iowans and Americans and most of the morally and 
politically cognizant human race could have told Harkin back then, the 
Cheney-Bush administration’s case for one-sided “war” (the illegal 
invasion of a defenseless state that posed no threat to the U.S.) was 
based on cooked (not “bad”) “intelligence” and on massive, media-enabled 
deception.  The fact that Cheney-Bush et al. were lying about the danger 
supposedly presented to the U.S. and the world by Saddam’s Iraq was 
widely understood at home and abroad.  You didn’t have to be some kind 
of clairvoyant, “expert,” or insider to know better than to play along 
with the administration’s preposterous case for the invasion of Mesopotamia.



          "THEY CAN STOP FUNDING IT"



         And it’s too bad Harkin doesn’t listen more to Iowa voters like 
Iowa City’s Rosemary Pesaud. Last July 6th, Ms. Pesaud gave a moving 
speech that Harkin ought to have quoted from in his “Let Us Vote” 
speech. She was speaking prior to being sentenced for “criminal 
trespass” at the Linn County District Associate Court in Cedar Rapids, 
less than half a mile from Harkin’s official eastern Iowa office. 
Explaining why she had joined 10 other activists in occupying U.S. 
Senator Tom Grassley’s (R-Iowa) Cedar Rapids office on a cold Friday 
afternoon last February, Persaud brought courtroom audience members to 
tears with her call for peace.



         “As a mother,” she said, “I have to speak against this war and 
ALL wars.  I have the responsibility to teach my children to be 
understanding of other people and to find ways to solve problems 
non-violently.  It’s hard to teach your kids these lessons,” Persaud 
added, “when their culture is violent and when their government is 
provoking war as a means to an end.”



         “I refuse,” Persaud declared, “to offer my children or anyone 
else’s children as fodder for the war machine.”



         “The American people want our troops HOME, to live,” Ms. 
Persaud noted (making an assertion that finds strong support in the 
relevant polling data), “and we want the Iraqi people to live.  It was a 
crime for the United States to invade Iraq and it’s a crime to continue 
waging a brutal war for oil.”



         Persuad told the Linn County judge that she had wanted “to ask 
Senator Grassley, as someone who has spent years of service 
investigating fraud and waste in government spending, why he sees no 
waste in human life as this war goes on and on, year after year.  Is not 
a life worth more than a dollar?  It seems,” she added, “our Congress 
has lost its ability and courage to measure what matters and has lost 
its moral compass.”



         Midway through her oration, Ms. Persaud registered a basic 
point that Tom “Let Us Vote” Harkin might wish to consider before he 
votes on the 2008 FY Pentagon Budget and the next Iraq War funding bill 
later this summer:  “Congress has the power to end this unjust war and 
illegal occupation. They can stop funding it.”



         As Stephen Lendman reminds us: “no money, no war; it’s that 
simple” (Lendman 2007).



          “THEY DID NOT NEED A TWO-THIRDS MAJORITY TO STOP FUNDING THE WAR”



         But it’s all too simple, apparently, for Harkin and most of the 
Democrats in Congress.



         Harkin’s party rode mass U.S. antiwar sentiment to a 
Congressional majority during the mid-term elections last November.  But 
last May 24th, Harkin joined 36 other Democratic U.S. Senators in 
cravenly capitulating to the Bush administration’s demand for nearly 
$100 billion of unconditionally granted supplemental military spending 
to pay for the continuing invasion of Iraq. Most Congressional Democrats 
(Harkin included) voted to keep spending a taxpayer fortune on the 
occupation with no strings attached even while polls indicated that 82 
percent of Americans wanted Congress to “either kill funding for the war 
immediately or approve funds for the war [only] with strict conditions” 
(Zunes 2007) – primarily timetables for expeditious withdrawal.



         Frustrated by Bush’s veto of their earlier effort to tie war 
funding to (merely non-binding) timetables for troop “withdrawal” and 
(more to the imperial point) “redeployment,” the congressional 
Democratic “leadership” caved to the nation’s incredibly unpopular 
president.  They had no choice, they argued, claiming that the White 
House would be able to portray them as traitorous under-cutters of the 
nation's noble freedom fighters in Iraq.  But this was transparently 
false cover for their continuing collaboration with an imperial White 
House gone wild.     Stephen Zunes’ May 31st critique of how Harkin and 
other Democrats voted on May 24th merits lengthy quotation:



         “The claim by Speaker Pelosi (D-CA) and other Democratic 
leaders that unconditional funding was necessary to ‘support the troops’ 
and to ‘not leave them in harm’s way’ is a LIE [capitalization added]. 
If they really supported the troops and wanted them out of harm’s way, 
they would have passed legislation that would bring them home. The 
Democrats had other priorities, however.”



         “Pelosi claimed that they had to provide unconditional funding 
for President Bush’s war in Iraq because they could not get enough 
Republican support to achieve the two-thirds majority necessary to 
override a presidential veto. However, they did not need a two-thirds 
majority to stop funding the war. All they needed to do was to refuse to 
pass any unconditional funding for the war and instead pass a funding 
measure that allocated money for the sole purpose of facilitating a safe 
and orderly withdrawal from Iraq, or, at the very least, a funding 
measure that set a strict deadline for the withdrawal of troops.”



         “As Speaker, Pelosi could have set the legislative agenda and 
not allowed any funding bill to come to a vote unless it had such 
provisions. And, if Bush refused to sign it, he would have been the one 
to put the troops in harm’s way, not Congress.”



         “Some apologists for the Democrats claim that to not support 
funding for the supplemental would have allowed political opponents to 
portray them as ‘not supporting our troops.’ However, three conservative 
Republican senators—Coburn, Burr, and Enzi—voted against the 
supplemental because of the $20 billion in domestic, non-war-related 
expenditures without apparent fear of such charges. So why should the 
Democrats have been afraid to oppose the measure as well?”



         “And it certainly is no longer the case—as apologists for the 
Democrats claimed when they supported supplemental spending for the war 
in previous years—that it would be politically difficult to oppose a key 
initiative of a popular president now that Bush is one of the least 
popular presidents in history, a ranking that has come largely as a 
result of the very war policy for which the Democrats have once again 
given him a blank check to continue” (Zunes 2007).



          “TO TAKE REPONSIBILITY”



         Zune’s common-sense analysis helps explain why Ms. Pesaud and 
30 other antiwar activists with the Iowa Occupation Project went over – 
I joined them  - to Harkin’s office after Pesaud and other “Cedar Rapids 
11” members were sentenced (Street 2007).



         Saying he’d been “expecting” us, Harkin’s Cedar Rapids staffer 
Tom Larkin gave activists a two-page position paper titled “Tom Harkin 
on Iraq: Change the Course, Not Stay the Course.”  This document began 
by praising “our brave men and women” [soldiers] for “having brilliantly 
completed the task for which they were sent to Iraq.” It said that 
Harkin “has fought hard to pass legislation containing a timetable to 
extricate our troops from the civil war in Iraq” and claimed that “it is 
now time for Iraq’s leaders to resolve their political differences and 
take responsibility for their own future.”



         Neither Larkin nor his handout offered any serious 
justification for Harkin’s decision to continue funding a criminal, 
brazenly imperialist oil occupation without even non-binding timetables 
for eventual withdrawal.



         Larkin seemed flustered when I reminded him that many American 
and most world citizens know that “the task for which [US troops were] 
sent” – deepening U.S. control over strategic Middle Eastern energy 
resources – is criminal and imperialist in nature and that the U.S. 
bears enormous responsibility – and owes reparations – for the enormous 
damage (including the creation of civil war in Iraq) it has inflicted on 
Iraq.



         I told Larkin that Harkin’s May 24th vote defied the majority 
antiwar citizen opinion that created his party’s congressional majority 
last fall.  I asked him why the Democrats had lacked the elementary 
political courage to have put the onus of not “supporting the troops” on 
George W. Bush.  I reminded Larkin of John Edwards’ useful slogan, 
“Support the Troops, End the War” and suggested that votes likes 
Harkin’s last spring help explain why the Democratic-majority Congress 
now receives lower U.S. approval rates than the least popular President 
in U.S. history.



         Larkin said something about Harkin’s history as a World War II 
veteran and disappeared behind a wall. A handful of University of Iowa 
students and others activists sitting on the floor of Harkin’s Cedar 
Rapids office then held an informal teach-in on U.S. foreign policy, 
politics and society.  Students read aloud the names of hundreds of 
Iraqi children and Iowa soldiers killed by the illicit war of aggression 
and occupation that Harkin and Grassley have voted to fund over and over 
again. At 5 PM, the citizen and student occupiers were arrested and 
given citations for “criminal trespass.”



         I forget to remind Larkin that many of Senator Harkin’s “brave 
men and women” (U.S. troops) have been indiscriminately killing, maiming 
and torturing Iraqi civilians in the execution of a   colonial war (see 
Hedges and Al-Arian 2007 for some especially disturbing evidence from 
fifty returning U.S. occupation soldiers)



          THE PERMANENT BIPARTISAN OCCUPATION



         The bloody petro-colonial occupation of Iraq is a richly 
bipartisan CRIME – a brazenly imperialist and racist transgression that 
has been enabled and sustained by Democrats from the start.  Both 
leading U.S. political parties are responsible for this “dark and 
depraved enterprise, one that bears a powerful resemblance to other 
misguided and brutal colonial wars and occupations, from the French 
occupation of Algeria to the American war in Vietnam and the Israeli 
occupation of Palestinian territory” (Hedges and al-Arian 2007).



         Harkin and other congressional Democrats’ main problem isn’t 
that Republicans aren’t letting them vote.  Its how they’ve been using 
the voting power they’ve already got.



         This September, when the FY 2008 Pentagon budget comes up for 
congressional approval - $649 billion plus a $142 billon “war 
supplemental” – we should not be surprised when Harkin and hundreds of 
our other Democratic “representatives” fail yet again to pull the fiscal 
plug Cheney and Bush’s imperial adventurism within and beyond Iraq.



         At the same time, we should refrain from celebration if 
Congress enacts "conditional" funding with some version of the (partial) 
withdrawal and redeployment schedules that Harkin and other Democrats 
tried to pass last March. As Howard Zinn notes, for antiwar activists to 
support “timetables” for the eventual scaling down of the invasion of 
Iraq is “as if, before the Civil War, abolitionists agreed to postpone 
the emancipation of the slaves for a year, or two years, or five years, 
and coupled this with an appropriation of funds to enforce the Fugitive 
Slave Act...Timetables for withdrawal,” Zinn argues, “are not only 
morally reprehensible in the case of a brutal occupation (would you give 
a thug who invaded your house, smashed everything in sight, and 
terrorized your children a timetable for withdrawal?) but logically 
nonsensical. If our troops are preventing civil war, helping people, 
controlling violence, then why withdraw at all? If they are in fact 
doing the opposite—provoking civil war, hurting people, perpetuating 
violence—they should withdraw as quickly as ships and planes can carry 
them home.”



         “It is four years since the United States invaded Iraq with a 
ferocious bombardment,” Zinn adds, “with ‘shock and awe.’ That is enough 
time to decide if the presence of our troops is making the lives of the 
Iraqis better or worse. The evidence is overwhelming. Since the 
invasion, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have died, and, according to 
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, about two million Iraqis have 
left the country, and an almost equal number are internal refugees, 
forced out of their homes, seeking shelter elsewhere in the country” 
(Zinn 2007).



         And what exactly do Democrats like Harkin and presidential 
candidates Hillary Clinton and Obama really mean when they say 
“withdrawal?”  Now that the occupation faces widespread opposition 
inside the U.S., leaders of both parties are “repackaging it to dampen 
domestic opposition, cut some of the worst losses and regroup.” As 
Anthony Arnove explains, the “new approach” of many congressional 
Republicans and Democrats is “troop reduction, not withdrawal; a greater 
reliance on air power and ‘over the horizon’ forces rather than boots on 
the ground; a retreat to bases and the Green Zone in Baghdad; and a 
shifting of the blame from the United States and its allies to the Iraqis.”



         “In effect,” Arnove notes, “it’s a ‘blame and hold’ strategy. 
Blame the Iraqis for all the problems we created.  Hold onto whatever 
the U.S. military can salvage in terms of military bases in Iraq – to 
have some influence over the future of Iraq’s massive oil reserves and 
some ability to continue military operations in Iraq, and to project 
power against other countries in the region, particularly Iran” (Arnove 
2007).



         The imperial and bipartisan task is to mask continued permanent 
petro-imperialist occupation and control as “withdrawal” and 
“counterterrrorism” while deflecting and undermining legitimate calls 
for the payment of reparations for the monumental damage the United 
States Empire has inflicted on Mesopotamia.



         And “here’s why” the occupation is not going to truly end until 
many thousands more Americans and Iraqis die, according to Lendman: 
“The Afghan and Iraq wars are for resources, primarily oil, and in the 
parts of the world where more than four-fifths of proved reserves are 
located. Canadian journalist and author Linda McQuaig explains the 
grandest of grand prizes is ‘hidden in plain sight’ in Iraq.  It's the 
country's oil treasure - the planet's last remaining bonanza of easily 
harvested ‘low-hanging fruit’ with more potential reserves than Saudi 
Arabia, the great majority of them untapped.”



         “It makes the country ‘the most sought after real estate on the 
face of the earth’ according to one Wall Street oil analyst…Even with 
dated information on its potential, Iraq has at least 10% of the world’s 
dwindling oil reserves.  But it's potential was ‘frozen in time’  with 
no new development in over two decades because of intervening wars in 
the 1980s, economic sanctions following the Gulf war in 1991, and the 
current war ongoing since March, 2003.  If the country's potential 
doubles or triples, as Saudi Arabia's did in the last 20 years, it 
would, in fact, have the world's largest (mostly untapped) proven 
reserves making Iraq too rich a prize for America and its Big Oil allies 
to pass up.  It's worth trillions of dollars and immense geopolitical 
power at a time of peak oil in the face of future dwindling supplies, 
except in this resource-rich country the US won't ever leave as long as 
there's enough of them in the ground and region to justify staying” 
(Lendman 2007).



         Such is the deep dark and oily imperial truth – readily 
available to anyone with “three functioning grey cells,” according to 
Noam Chomsky (Chomsky 2005) – behind Harkin and other leading 
congressional Democrats’ need to take superficially antiwar postures 
while using their policymaking authority to continue funding and 
justifying the persistent U.S. assault on the people of Iraq.



          Veteran radical historian, journalist, and activist Paul 
Street (paulstreet99 at yahoo.com) is a Left commentator in Iowa City, IA. 
Street’s latest book is Racial Oppression in the Global Metropolis: A 
Living Black Chicago History (New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2007). 
Street is the author of Empire and Inequality: America and the World 
Since 9/11 (Boulder, CO: Paradigm, 2004), Segregated Schools: 
Educational Apartheid in the Post-Civil Rights Era (New York, NY: 
Routledge, 2005), and the semi-weekly Empire and Inequality Report.







          SOURCES



          Anthony Arnove 2007.  “Why Bush Won’t Admit Failure in Iraq,” 
Socialist Worker (July 20, 2007), available online at 
http://socialistworker.org/2007-2/638/638_04_Arnove.shtml.



         CNN 2002. “Senate Approves Iraq War Resolution,” CNN (October 
11, 2002), available online at: 
(http://archives.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/10/11/iraq.us/



         Noam Chomsky 2005.  “There is No War on Terror,” Noam Chomsky 
interviewed by Geov Parrish (December 23, 2005), available online at 
http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/20051223.html



          Chris Hedges and Laila Al-Arian 2007.  “The Other War: Iraq 
Vets Bear Witness,” The Nation (July 30, 2007).



         Stephen Lendman 2007.  “Plan Iraq – Permanent Occupation,” ZNet 
(July 17, 2007), available online at 
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=13304 
Paul Street 2007.  “The Courage of Their Convictions: Confronting 
Criminal Trespass with the Iowa Occupation Project,” ZNet (July 13, 
2007), available online at 
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=13280



         Howard Zinn 2007. “Are We Politicians or Citizens?” The 
Progressive (April 2007), reproduced on ZNet (March 27, 2007) at 
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=51&ItemID=12413



          Stephen Zunes 2007. “The Democrats’ Support for Bush’s War,” 
Foreign Policy in Focus (May 31, 2007), available online at 
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4278




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