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Pentagon Fighting Off Peace Majorities in Iraq and US, A Crisis of Democracy
There's an emerging story that Iraqi leaders -- notably Nouri al-Maliki -- are standing up to the US by demanding a timeline for withdrawal. [See, for example, the latest New York Times account on July 11, one of many in recent days.] But far from this portrayal, it is more likely that al-Maliki and the Pentagon are conspiring to fool public opinion in both countries during an election year by finally promising a withdrawal deadline, with vague parameters of three to five years -- if conditions allow, says an al-Maliki spokesman. What's going on here?
As congressional leaders like Rep. William Delahunt are beginning to point out, public opinion in both countries strongly favors a one-year deadline for American troop withdrawals. This has been the case for at least two years, as i pointed out in my 2007 book Ending the War in Iraq. In addition, the tide of Iraqi parliamentarians petitioning for a rapid end of the occupation has been a majority since last summer, mirroring the majority sentiment in the US Congress.
Official Iraqi pandering to public opinion is an old story by now. Even before the first January 2005 Iraqi election, the CIA issued a "grim" warning that the new government "promised they wlll press Washington for a timetable, and [CIA] assessments say the new government will feel bound, at least publicly, to meet that commitment." [NYT, Jan.19, 2005] Three years later, the public pressure on al-Maliki -- from Iraqis and from American opinion -- is far worse.
This, then, is a crisis of democracy in both countries, one that is little if ever mentioned in the New York Times or the mainstream media.
The flurry of posturing now arises from three realities: [1] the United Nations authorization of the American-led occupation [Multi-National Force Iraq-MNF] expires December 31, [2] the November US election features a leading candidate, Barack Obama, who favors the withdrawal of combat troops by 2010, and [3] the US-backed Iraq government has agreed, reluctantly, to hold provincial elections by this November, as well. The Iraqi elections, when and if they occur, will result in gains for disenfranchised Sunnis and for Moktada al-Sadr's Shi'a forces who long have favored expelling the Americans.
In other words, the electorates in both countries are threatening to topple the principle warmakers at the ballot box.
Such a popular democratic outcome is intolerable to al-Maliki's circle, to the Pentagon, to the Republicans to neo-conservatives, and apparently unthinkable to the mainstream media.
That's why al-Maliki's forces have been trying to wreck Sadrist strongholds in the South and even in Sadr City while at the same time currying favor with voters by posturing as favoring some sort of American withdrawal deadline. The Sadrists have mainly avoided bloody clashes with al-Maliki's troops and the Americans behind them, so as to preserve their organizational capacity to challenge the regime at the polls in November. Since the Iranians have ties to both Shi'a factions, it can be assumed that they favor an outcome that leaves the Pentagon at a further disadvantage in its quest for permanent occupation.
On the US side, as I have written before, there has been a two-fold strategy. The Biddle Plan, named for Stephen Biddle, an adviser to Gen. David Petreaus, aims to make both Shi'a and Sunni dependent on a continued American military presence, allegedly to keep the sectarian factions from descending into civil war. Then there's the America homefront, where Petraeus' strategy is to "set back the clock" of public pressure for troop withdrawals. Think tanks like the Center for a New American Security favor a five-to-eight year withdrawal in order to avoid their nightmare of a more rapid pullout forced by American voters in November. Their dueling rivals at the Center for American Progress favor a one-year withdrawal, but clearly have lost the think-tank competition [which may not matter since they have overlapping boards].
The most that can be expected at this stage are November electoral mandates for peace and a speedy withdrawal from both American and Iraqi voters. This will not be easy, despite the peace majorities entrenched in both countries. In the meantime, Congressional debate over the secret US-Iraq "status of forces" agreement will keep the issues front-and-center.
If Barack Obama goes through with his high-risk plan to visit Iraq [and Afghanistan], he may be confronted by US military commanders and Iraqi leaders questioning his 16-month timetable as naive and threatening to national security. On the other hand, Obama risks demoralization within his electoral base if he wavers on basics.
Meanwhile, in John McCain, the hawks have found the perfect iconic candidate for keeping the Iraq war alive through the present depths of its democratic legitimacy crisis. McCain's election would serve the interests of the Pentagon, revive the neo-conservative era, and further deepen the conflict between democracy and empire.
Tom Hayden is the author of Ending the War in Iraq [Akashic, 2007]. For more information, go to www.tomhayden.com and www.stopfundingtorture.com.
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
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27 Comments so far
Show AllYes, they are Peace Majorities -- but with no Mouthpiece. Majorities without a full-throated voice can never challenge a minority with the ability to lie to everyone in the country 24/7.
Unless we actively challenge Corporate Media, BY IMPOSING A COST FOR THEIR CENSORSHIP, we will continue to be a French Horn without a mouth piece.
The Alternative Media has shown that they are not a real alternative, becaue their comments are never integrated into the wider debate, and are never allowed to challenge the 24/7 lie machine. Even worse(?) they get people to leave the realm of public discussion for web sites. The bad part of this is that these arguments on the anti-war web sites have no way of returning to the wider discussion. That is how PARADOXICALLY SITES LIKE THIS ONE MAY WELL BE HELPING BUSH-- unless you take actions to remedy this situation.
The media reform movement has to move from foundation funded "alternatives" to VISIBLY challenging the credibility of the Ten-Million-Dollar-War Anchorpeople. Change to a fly in the ointment strategy. The fundation funded Democracy Now stategy is not working-- and no this does not mean there is not some good stuff on Democracy Now. It means that there is no way to integrate the information back into the public sphere
(What 300 million people hear and can therefor have a basis for discussion). Challengen the Crediblility of the Networks! Corporate Elections 08! "The Election is not ON TV: The Election IS TV"
RichM glad you found it meaningful. Please help spread the word on websites. I think few things are more relevent to THIS election, because it shows more clearly than ever how the public is entirely shut out of the big stuff.
My goal is to keep it inside the Amazon top 3,000 or so for two more weeks. If this happens I think it will soon go
Amazon top 100 (im not kidding) and actually THIS ONE could have some unknowns consequences.
Nathaniel---love your french horn without a mouthpiece---that is great.
Maybe there is another way---let's just start "waging" peace one at a time ----a grassroots effort to by-pass the corpstream media's megaphone message.
I passionately desire peace and that is not an anti-war message. Anti means resistence and what we resist persists. Let's follow John Lennon's advice and "Imagine " the world we want to live in with our children and theirs.
Mr. Hayden is a bit behind things; the Obamamanics are already becoming dissilusioned with their messiah. I just hope this doesn't turn them off of politics. hayden doesn't help the situation by his apologetics for the DP.
The US is working to keep violence alive and well, Barack can't piss anybody off and end things. Full on exploitation, misery for the natives. Part of the business plan is to keep troops in place, contractors "contracting" and so forth. If it ain't broken, why fix it.
"...Obama risks demoralization within his electoral base if he wavers on basics."
Joke, right? Waffle, hedge, spin, leverage, desert, flip-flop, dissemble, deceive and straight-face lie are realities... but when describing his behavior, "waiver" is the worse definition that you can imagine?
The guy is just one more Republican disguising himself as a Democrat. I am not demoralized, I am actively opposed to his candidacy. Is this country THAT blind?
Obama's integrity is all tapped out - he had me at hope and change. He lost me with lies and deceit.
"the electorates in both countries are threatening to topple the principle warmakers at the ballot box. Such a popular democratic outcome is intolerable to al-Maliki's circle, to the Pentagon, to the Republicans to neo-conservatives"
Tom Hayden is up to his propaganda antics again. Such an outcome that he refers to as "popular democratic" is no such thing at all. With record low approval rating of the Demok-majority US Congress, toppling BOTH the principles warmakers (Repuks) AND their co-conspirators (Demoks), is the ONLY "popular democratic outcome".
We got a third way alternative ya know. Maybe this fact will inspire Tom's Demoks to get something meaningful accomplished before election day, ya think?
According to polls we can't change, Ralph, Kucinich, McKinney, Paul, etc. won't win and not voting would benefit McCain. So who shall we choose, Obama the apparent dirtbag or McCain the Zionist Corpo-fascist heir to the Antichrist's throne who would let corporations pollute, invade and kill people of color, and let war profiteers start WWIII and kill all life on earth?
No rationalizations, please.
"But far from this portrayal, it is more likely that al-Maliki and the Pentagon are conspiring to fool public opinion in both countries during an election year by finally promising a withdrawal deadline"
Obama's 16 month plan is no different.
I love hearing the comments on Tom Hayden's articles here at Common Dreams. RichM lays it out quite well above.
I guess Hayden is writing for a more gullible readership at the Huffington Post, where his articles are abstracted.
Hayden can recall facts like anyone else, but here he falls down on the job when he writes:
"If Barack Obama goes through with his high-risk plan to visit Iraq [and Afghanistan], he may be confronted by US military commanders and Iraqi leaders questioning his 16-month timetable as naive and threatening to national security. On the other hand, Obama risks demoralization within his electoral base if he wavers on basics."
Obama's heavily nuanced Iraq "withdrawal" plans were already compromised by Obama's own statements that he will be ruled by the assessments of U.S. commanders on the ground. As far as I know, Obama has no Afghanistan troop withdrawal plans.
Obama is counting on following General Petraeus' advice on troop staffing in Iraq, which might as well have come from Bush himself, especially after Bush purged dissenting military leaders to make way for Petraeus. So this is the perfect cover for continuing the wars and occupations.
As for "demoralization within his electoral base," that is no big matter. Obama expects Democratic loyalists to vote for him as if they had no other choice (such as a third party, "hint, hint"). Contradictions are no great matter. For instance, Obama's vote to let the telecom companies off the hook for violating the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution - it was really no matter at all for Obama do, all contradictions aside.
Tom Hayden should not pretend to both understand real politics and simultaneously be naive about them when it comes to Obama. Propagandists persuade by withholding the whole truth about a matter and omitting facts, and Hayden is doing yeoman's service to the Democratic Party war machine in these ostensibly anti-war essays.
TH is now, officially, a hack. I know I shouldn't speak ill of the dead, especially when they're still walking around BUT he's a has-been. A used-to-be. Read his hack nonsense but only for amuzement. He hasn't led anything in 40 years and didn't do too good a job at the time. Maybe he's angling for a post election appointment - he-he-he-ha-ha-ha-he-he-ho-ho. What a fucking nightmare world you folks have got here. And you make babies in this place? You give children to this? Boy you are brave. That's courage. Go through all that trouble, just so you can throw the screaming little bugger into the maw of Moloch? I guess it must be fun for some.
This place will definitely be highlighted in the next Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Entry will read: "CAUTION. CAUTION. This planet inhabited by mentally ill cannibals who feed their children to demon gods."
If there truly is, as Hayden asserts, a strong (as opposed to soft and mushy) anti-war sentiment in the US, then how can it be that upwards of 85 percent of Americans are prepared to vote for either Barack Obama or John McCain?
Neither is inevitable.
There is an alternative.
Vote Nader.
Just a quick note on the FISA bill and Obama's vote.
Obama's vote for this is more than just letting the telecoms of the hook for violating the Constitution, it is a violation of his oath to uphold the Constitution itself.
Whatever legal or oratorical or political B.S. the Dems who voted for this bill try to throw up -Obama included- cannot change the line in the body of the Constitution that forbids Congress from making any "ex post facto" Laws.
This FISA "revisal" is "ex post facto" it changes the Law to fit the behavior of those who broke the Law -it is a Law "after the fact".
When the supposed "opposition candidate" stomps on the Republic in this sort of direct but sneaky manner for the benefit of Government, Military, and Private Corporate Institutions, and to the detriment of the People and the protection of their Rights -in an ELECTION YEAR no less- without any fear of rebuke or even response, and solely for the accumulation of political Power - then you can just kiss the whole friggen Constitutional "Democracy" idea of "America" goodbye already.
Obama's support of this bill is really, really, really, really BAD, its super-duper AWFUL, it is an absolute DEAL-BREAKER for anyone still concerned with old-fashioned things like "democracy" and "liberty" and "justice" and "fairness".
Don't let anyone -including yourself- tell you it is merely "disappointing" or -as appears to be the case with Mr. Hayden- skip over it like it was nothing and return to discussing the small, nuanced differences between Obama and McCain.
Elected officials acting as pure politicos and political parties acting as service providers to the wealthy -both Corporate and Individual- is THE REAL CRISIS OF DEMOCRACY. The Agressive War against and Illegal Occupation of Iraq by the United States Military and Corporate Mercenaries and Pirates is only one SYMPTOM of this crisis, as is the trashing of the Law in this FISA debacle.
Unfortunately, (or perhaps Fotunately?) unless he recants his support for this Criminal Act by the U.S. Congress, the only remaining legitimate reason to vote Obama is to keep your name of some sort of spook "subversive list" that will cause one to get hassled any time one travels.
So if your worried about that, take a couple of minutes while you're in the Booth, voting on Local, State, and Federal issues and seats wear you might still do some good by participating, and pull the level or mark the bubble for "Barack Obama -D" or whatever.
It probably won't do much good, but it probably won't do much harm either.
And then after this face of an "Election Season" is over, maybe everyone will pull their heads out of there asses and we can all work together on the REAL problems we face, and the REAL solutions we could apply to them.
In the meantime, remember the slogan of the Mille Lacs band Ojibwe Indian Casino:
"Have Fun"
-matti.
I hope all of this excellent criticism of the Corporate Democrats is making it onto Corporate media websites such as those affiliated with big city newspapers. Otherwise we are helping the Corporate Parties by marginalizing dissent.
Why go roundabout and vote for Nader and not directly for BombMcCaine/Bush/Repugs? Maybe God will rapture us into heaven faster if we vote Republican directly.
matti, an ex post facto Law is a law making something ILLEGAL where as before it was LEGAL, the opposite of your explaination.
The fact Tom Hayden doesn't just come out and say vote Third Party for president is a sign that he is somehow beholden to the corporate elite when it comes to actions and choices that could actually effect something.
I wonder if Tom Hayden supported Kerry in 2004 and Gore in 2000. That would explain a lot as to his continued support for Obama. Notice the pattern anybody?
Vote Third Party.
The DPAs (Democratic Pastry apologists) are at it again:
"...features a leading candidate, Barack Obama, who favors the withdrawal of combat troops by 2010, and [3] the US-backed Iraq government has agreed,..."
-pure bullshit
During the presidential debates Obama would not commit to withdrawing all troops even by the end of his first term (2013) if elected.
Recently The Post reported rather ominously:
Some advisers acknowledge privately that Obama is now emphasizing the need to be "responsible" in handling Iraq -- rather than emphasizing urgency in getting troops out -- to appear more centrist, a substantial adjustment of his original antiwar stance.
"...threatening to topple the principle warmakers at the ballot box."
-disingenuous
The Democrats are the principle war makers because they have enabled the Republicans and continue to fund the war. 41 Democratic Senators could stop this war if they wanted to. Obama just voted to fund the war (H.R.2642 77-21) The bill funds the slaughtering, raping and plundering through the middle of 2009 to ensure against the embarrassing specter of it coming up again during the election.
"...Petraeus' strategy is to "set back the clock" of public pressure for troop withdrawals."
-Former Democratic Pastry candidate for president Hillary Clinton on General David Petraeus: "an extraordinary leader and a wonderful advocate for our military."
"Iraqi leaders questioning his 16-month timetable..."
-misinformation, up to 100,000 troops will remain
From Obama's website:
He will keep some troops in Iraq to protect our embassy and diplomats; if al Qaeda attempts to build a base within Iraq, he will keep troops in Iraq or elsewhere in the region to carry out targeted strikes on al Qaeda.
-Obviously al Qaeda isn't pulling out because a Democrat takes office there tons of troops need to stay to guard our "interests" (OIL) in the region and to carry out the so-called "targeted strikes" that seem to end up killing a kid looking out a window or a group celebrating a wedding.
Meanwhile, in John McCain, the hawks have found the perfect iconic candidate for keeping the Iraq war alive
-DPA Hayden attempts to contrast the candidates as polar opposites when in reality the war will continue through hook or crook whether a Democrat or a Republican is in the White House. They are really just shades of the same thing. One promises 100 years of war the other many. If you are antiwar neither one is acceptable.
Vote for and support 3rd parties. A vote for a Democratic-Republican is a vote for Bush III.
ezeflyer July 13th, 2008 10:30 pm
Just curious, what have the Democrats done in the last 8 years, or even the last two since they took over the Congress?
This is what they've done:
1) Refuse to stop funding the war
2) Refuse to impeach Bush
3) Refuse to hold Bush accountable for torturing
4) Allow right-wingers like Mukasey and others to be confirmed
5) Confirmed right-wingers into the Supreme Court
6) Rubber stamp gargantuan military budgets
7) Allow Bush to spew 935 lies about the war
8) Allow Cheny to out CIA agents and defy subpoenas
9) Granted Bush and the Telecoms immunity
10) Insert your favorite Democratic Party capitulation here:_______________________
Take (1) ezeflyer, do you realize how easy to stop the war? All that is needed is to find 41 resolute and principled Demcratic Senators (which apparently is not that easy to do) to stand against it and it's dead.
ezeflyer I notice you are regularly offering weak arguments in favor of the Democratic candidate. Can you give any reasons to vote for Democrats that aren't lesser-evilisms? Do you have anything stronger than voting against Republicans?
Your logic is weak because if followed to its logical conclusion you would be arguing in favor of McCain if he ran against Joseph Stalin.
Are you capable of making a strong argument that isn't based on not voting for Republicans?
Hayden is always on the inside looking out. I am sure he remains a legend in his own mind. He likes to characterize himself as an "environmentalist" and "leader" of the progressive movement when in point of fact the true authentic voice of progressives are the comments following his diluted and beholden views crafted by his handlers in the do nothing parties. He has a long HIStory of equivocation, obfuscation, rationalizations, excuses, clever turnarounds, all the while disseminating meaningless proposals, accepting crumbs from his Masters, in his otherwise pathetic attempts for attention.
Hayden threw his claim for progressive leadership away the moment he became a member of the Democratic Party. Hayden further does not know the first thing about a progressive environmental sensibility other than holding a placard above his head. I suppose if one holds the card long enough or expends enough hot air on the subject, enough of the herd will begin to believe the rhetoric despite the fact that the results of his agendas NEVER PRODUCE THE INTENDED RESULTS OF HIS RHETORIC.
Progressivism is a bottom up proposal and not a top down agenda that he has been representing for years. The progressive voices are always found with the people. If Hayden wants to represent us he better get off the corporate gravy train he is feeding from, and out of the pockets of a guy like Obama and the Board of The Nation Magazine who is trying to silence the voices of Cindy Sheehan, Cindy Mckinney, and Nader.
And here is another little known fact obscured by a guy like Hayden: if the Green Party gets 5% of the National vote that would insure a true progressive voice at the table (and the only one) rather than the watered down trip, lip service bullshit Hayden can currently offer.
Huck July 14th, 2008 10:52 am
Thanks for saying it for me. Though Hayden will remain exactly as he is, he has always been for Tom Hayden, first, last and always.
Nathaniel,
Your points are very well taken. Iv'e been trying to say the same thing -that the the internet is NO substitute for a free broadcast media and has the opposite effect of coralling dissenting opinions into obscure dead-end, side-street-web-sites like this one. Blogging becomes a self-absorbing activity - contracting left discourse rather than expanding it to the broad public sphere.
One alternative I held out hope for was the Indymedia movement, which included newspapers, and in my city, a radio program on a local station, but it is, oddly, in decline, due to lack of help producing articles and programming.
The elite's themselves are aware of this useful (to them) aspect of the internet. The war-"scholar" Ralph Peters even mentioned it, back in 1997, in this bluster-filled Tom Friedmanesque piece in the Army War College's "scholarly" journal linked below. If you haven't already read it please do - it is a practically a manifesto for a neoliberal capitalist, post-democracy world, and reads almost like a planning document for what we have seen since:
http://www.carlisle.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/97summer/peters.htm
tailcap,
It's been much longer than 8 years, the Democrat party has been busy destroying democracy at least back through the Clinton/Gore years as well.
"If Hayden wants to represent us he better get off the corporate gravy train he is feeding from, and out of the pockets of a guy like Obama and the Board of The Nation Magazine who is trying to silence the voices of Cindy Sheehan, Cindy Mckinney, and Nader." That is the problem, Hayden "wants to represent us" and thinking progressively outside the two Corporate Party box won't make that happen FOR HIM. So, he is stuck being just another cheerleader for the team that can win and then give him a privileged position within the establishment. Hayden has become the problem he once abhorred.