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It's Obama's War, Now
This is the text of a talk by Chris Hedges that will be read at anti-war gatherings to be held by The World Can't Wait in New York's Union Square, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Nashville, Louisville, Chicago and Berkeley on March 19 to protest the sixth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.
Barack Obama has shown that he is as capable of doublespeak as any other politician when he announced an end to the war in Iraq. Combat troops are to be pulled out of Iraq by August 2010, he said, but some 50,000 occupation troops will remain behind. Someone should let the Iraqis know the distinction. I doubt any soldier or Marine in Iraq will notice much difference in 19 months. Many combat units will simply be relabeled as noncombat units. And what about our small army of well-paid contractors and mercenaries? Will Dyncorp, Bechtel, Blackwater (which recently changed its name to Xe), all of whom have made fortunes off the war, pack up and go home? What about the three large super-bases, dozens of smaller military outposts and our imperial city, the Green Zone? Will American corporations give up their lucrative control of Iraqi oil?
The occupation of Iraq will not be disrupted. Lies and deception, which launched the war in the first place, are being employed by Democrats to maintain it. This is not a withdrawal. It is occupation lite. And as long as American troops are on Iraqi soil the war will grind on, the death toll on each side will continue to mount and we will remain a lightning rod for hatred and rage in the Middle East. Add to this Obama's decision to increase troop levels in Afghanistan and even his most purblind supporters will have to admit the new president is as intent on maintaining American empire as the old.
The occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan has not promoted U.S. security or stability in the Middle East. These occupations have furthered the spread of failed states, increased authoritarianism and unleashed savage violence. They have opened up voids of lawlessness, including in the tribal areas of Pakistan, where our real enemies can operate and plot against us. These occupations have scuttled the art of diplomacy and mocked the rule of law. We have become an outlaw state intent on creating more outlaw states. The occupations have, finally, empowered Iran, as well as Russia and China, which gleefully watch our self-immolation. And, in the end, we cannot win these wars. We will withdraw all our troops in an orderly manner or see these occupations collapse in an orgy of bloodshed.
Iraq, because of our invasion and occupation, no longer exists as a unified country. The experiment that was Iraq, the cobbling together of disparate and antagonistic patches of the Ottoman Empire by the victorious powers in the wake of World War I, will never come back. The Kurds have set up a de facto state in the north. The Shiites control most of the south. The center of the country is a battleground. There are at least 2 million Iraqis who have fled their homes and are internally displaced. Another 2 million have left the country, most to Syria and Jordan, which now has the largest number of refugees per capita of any country on Earth. And perhaps as many as 1.2 million Iraqis are dead because of what we have done.
The eight-year war in Afghanistan has seen the Taliban re-emerge from the ashes. An additional 30,000 troops will do little to prop up the detested and corrupt regime of Hamid Karzai. Our attempt to buy off Afghan tribal groups with money and even weapons has collapsed, with most slipping back into the arms of the Taliban insurgents. The U.N. estimates that the Taliban is now raking in $300 million a year from the expanded poppy trade to fund the resistance. The Taliban controlled about 75 percent of Afghan territory when we invaded eight years ago. It has recaptured about half of the country since its initial defeat, and its reach has expanded to the outskirts of major cities such as Kabul and Kandahar. Twenty-nine American troops died in Afghanistan the first two months of 2009, a threefold increase compared with the eight who died during the same period last year. And more Afghan civilians are dying in allied operations than at the hands of the Taliban, according to a count by the Associated Press. In the first two months of the year, American, NATO or Afghan forces have killed 100 civilians, while militants have killed 60.
Do the cheerleaders for an expanded war in Afghanistan know any history? Have they studied what happened to the Soviets, who lost 15,000 Red Army soldiers between 1979 and 1988, or even the British in the 19th century? Do they remember why we went into Afghanistan? It was, we were told, to hunt down Osama bin Laden, who is now apparently in Pakistan. Has anyone asked what our end goal is in Afghanistan? Is it nation-building? Have we declared war on the Taliban? Or is this simply the forever war on terror?
Al-Qaida, which we have also inadvertently resurrected, still finds plenty of recruits. It still runs training facilities. It still carries out attacks in London, Madrid, Iraq and now Afghanistan, which did not experience suicide bombings until December 2005. Al-Qaida has moved on. But we remain stuck, confused and lashing about wildly like a wounded and lumbering beast.
Obama, during the campaign, promised that he would pull out one combat brigade per month over a 16-month period from Iraq. But this promise has been scrapped. Instead, troop levels will remain steady for most of this year and into the first few months of 2010. Troops will only start leaving, we are told, in large numbers in the spring and summer of next year, but even the pace of this downsizing will be left to the discretion of commanders. The troops left in Iraq after the "withdrawal" will, the Obama administration says, train Iraqi soldiers, protect U.S. assets and conduct "anti-terror operations."
The U.S. agreement with Iraq, known as SOFA, or status of forces agreement, calls for all U.S. forces to be out of Iraq by the end of December 2011. But this seems very unlikely. The Pentagon has, despite the SOFA agreement, built its long-range planning around the assumption that anywhere from 30,000 to 50,000 troops will be based in Iraq long after 2011. The U.S.-Iraq agreement (which was ratified by the Iraqi parliament but never brought to the U.S. Senate for ratification, as mandated by the Constitution) calls for a national referendum to be held in Iraq during the summer of 2009. Iraqis will supposedly be able to approve or reject the agreement. The some 50 U.S. bases in Iraq are, under the agreement, to be turned over to the Iraqis.
Will Obama defy the results of a referendum and ram the continued occupation down the throats of Iraqi voters? It certainly looks like it. Of course, all this will be handled, I suspect, by having our client government in Baghdad "request" that we remain, making an even greater farce of our public commitment to democracy.
There are huge corporations who are making a lot of money off this war. Obama seems intent on not impeding the profits. So much for our anti-war candidate. We should have known better than to trust the Democrats after they rode to power in Congress in 2006 on an anti-war platform and then continued to fund our wars and approve increased troop levels in Iraq and Afghanistan.
If the delicate cease-fire we have negotiated with the former Sunni insurgents in Iraq breaks down, how will we respond? Suppose the some 100,000 Sunnis, who have been allowed to ethnically cleanse the areas they control and build militias, turn on the central Shiite-led government. Suppose we can no longer buy off these Sunni "Awakening" militias with the $300-a-month salaries we dispense to these fighters. Suppose the war heats up again. This is what happened in Afghanistan when we tried to bribe tribal groups with money and support. A deterioration of the security situation in Iraq could instantly scuttle even a reduction of forces.
And the military, if some troops do leave Iraq, will have to rely more heavily on airstrikes to control territory and keep insurgents at bay. The airstrikes in Afghanistan have, along with the expanded fighting, driven tens of thousands of Afghan refugees into Iran and Pakistan. Even the Karzai government has vigorously protested these airstrikes, which feed scores of recruits to the Taliban. Expect the same ugly backlash in Iraq.
I could live with the prolonged injustice of the occupation in Iraq if I thought there would really be peace, that we could then help rebuild the country we destroyed and that we had restored the rule of law by rejecting the Bush doctrine of pre-emptive war, something that under post-Nuremberg laws is defined as a criminal "war of aggression." I could live with 19 months more of the war if I knew it would really be the end. But the war in Iraq, like Afghanistan, will go on. Our imperial projects and killing will continue under the Obama presidency. Many more, including some of our own, will die.
The only hope now lies in renewed protests against the war and a reinvigorated anti-war movement. This time the movement should hold fast, as stalwarts like Cindy Sheehan, Cynthia McKinney and Ralph Nader have, to the moral imperative of peace and not the false hopes offered by the Democrats. They cannot be trusted. Politics is a game of pressure. Abandon that pressure and you lose.
- Posted in




107 Comments so far
Show AllThis is just more folly.The U.S. will never completely leave Iraq and a continuation of the afghan war until who knows when .Not to mention israels push to attack iran .Add to thiS further incursions into pakistan NONE OF THIS LEADS TO ANYWHERE GOOD
There is already significant evidence that President Obama has caved in to the demands of Generals Odierno and Petraeus to leave 50,000 troops with combat possibility after his vaunted 16 month withdrawal charade. So much for our anti-war "hero". Yes, it is Obama's war but not NOW. Read his interviews with the Chicago Times to realize that he intended to have his own war already several years ago.
"So much for our anti-war "hero". "
Did you really believe that Obama was Anti-War? I guess you never listened to anything he said or read anything he wrote or paid any attention to his voting record. Obama IS NOT Anti-War. Never has been and never will be. Obama believes in America's destiny and right to rule the world. Obama believes in War and in American's right to wage it. For all his posturing, Obama voted for every War Bill that has come his way. His advisers during the campaign were a bunch of hawks. He's filled his cabinet with some of the biggest hawks the Dems have and kept some of the Bush hawks. Anti-war? Obama??? There's a better chance of the sun rising in the west and setting in the east.
I have known that he is a phony; but during the campaign he lead people to believe he would withdraw all the troops. I know people hear what they desire to be true; but Mr. Obama knew he was misstating the scope of his withdrawal plans and never clarified.
Anyway, I have known he is a liar and a House Negro (even though many of you are offended by this characterization, it fits).
MALCOLM X: THE HOUSE NEGRO AND THE FIELD NEGRO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znQe9nUKzvQ
"The house negro always looked out for his master..."
Isn't this Mr. Obama and the plutocracy?
Obama's refusal to re-regulate the financial industry, coupled with the billions of taxpayer dollars he continues to send them without meaningful conditions assures that the economy's freefall will accelerate.
The Military Industrial Media Complex is one of the few solvent sectors of the economy and no politician wants to get blamed for impacting it, so don't expect politicians to make any serious effort to reduce military spending or reduce the size of any wars. Do expect lots of re-labelling.
Increasing Iraqi nationalism in the wake of the sectarian violence demands that every decent Iraqi has a patriotic duty to kill Americans. (Not defending one's homeland from brutal attack and occupation would be "un-American".)
How could we possibly win ANYTHING there?
one old atheist
Zbigniew Brzezinski will go down in history for destroying both cold war empires by getting both Russia & the US bogged down in a ground war in Afghanistan... The campaign antiwar rhetoric was sweet golden vapor of vague platitudes... Feel Good pronouncements like Ending the war in Iraq were designed to keep the liberal Dems in the flock while simultaneously appeasing the hawkish dems with Obama's campaign sabre ratting about escalation in Afghanistan and Pakistan... Obama sought out Leiberman as a mentor once he got to the senate... And with Zbig whispering into Obama's ear and Kissinger whispering into geithner's, I think it is safe to assume that Obama will continue the same foreign policy agenda set forth by the CFR and PNAC...
"sweet golden vapor of vague platitudes"
That is good.
odoco
We will leave when 1) the oil pipeline through Afghanistan is completed, or 2)we developed green sources of energy to the extent we are no longer reliant on Middle Eastern oil, or 3) they kick our asses and the populace at large becomes disillusioned enough to force the government to quit.
We have to remember that this is a resource war - has nothing to do with democracy, ending dictatorships, or any of the rest of the bullshit that corporate-owned MSM dispenses to the public.
No. 3 is least likely to happen because of the success of the Pentagon in propagandizing the American public into believing that all things military are good, godly, and glorious. The junction of the military and the corporate is the true definition of fascism - we are there, however be it a mild form at this point.
If progressives who still believe in the Constitution (yes - I know it's flawed - but it's all we've got to work with)don't unite, we are doomed. We need to rebuild the labor unions, become much more effective in educating our youth, begin our own schools - get charters - play the same game the corporatists play - take public money for private interests - but this time it will be used for the public good.
It is no time to quit. I heard Hedges in Columbia, MO a few weeks ago. He gave the most trenchant, incisive and accurate portrayal of this society that I have yet heard. Rise up my friends - if we don't - our friends at CPAC, despite their minority numbers, will win the game.
Regarding number 2), if we manage to wean ourselves completely off oil (unlikely, but possible), we will still want to control the world's oil supply:-
* Its about power - See PNAC (by your friendly zionist neocons).
* If not that, AIPAC would still find ways to keep us there.
Well folks, you keep voting for the one party system of war and corporations.... And you think things will change?
http://www.theyorkshirelad.ca/12loweringtheante/loweringtheante.html
of course obama during campaign always pledged more resources for our "good war" (and was always rather vague/non-committal about "withdrawing" from iraq.)
off topic of the war, but on topic for obama's capitulation to bush's precedents: in the case of Salehn Kahla al-Marri, 'enemy combatant', obama's doj initiated criminal proceedings against him in order to prevent SCOTUS from ruling on whether POTUS can arbitrarily designate someone in the US an 'enemy combatant', hold them indefinitely, torture them, etc. an exact repeat of bush doj's treatment of jose padilla.
i was being cajoled two years ago for saying the americans would never leave iraq
as chomsky says: if america ran on solar energy completely the imperium would still want to control the oil - and who gets it
operation enduring freedom - remember that is what the mission is called - is a farce as chris points out and yet another occupation by the us - paid for by the savings of the chinese peasant
as hillary proclaimed to the chinese in a hasty news release last week: "please buy our debt - we're fucked without you"
cheers, b
Nobody in power learns from history. Maybe the world needs the utter collapse of the US Empire and corporatism in order to rebuild something better.
But there will always be greed, and bullies in power...
Seek your peace within.
www.davedubya.com
-- Have we declared war on the Taliban? --
Yes, our announced enemies are al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Our unannounced enemies are those on the 'secret list' that the President has of people who can be offed (if the article I read about a recent air-strike in Pak. was accurate).
--Or is this simply the forever war on terror? --
As I have ranted endlessly, Congress specified that the goal of using the military against those responsible for 9/11 was 'preventing future terrorism' by our enemies.
It's been over seven years and nobody has even yet explained what that means, let alone found a way to prevent future behavior that America doesn't like.
So yes, it looks like a forever war, a global military effort to stifle potential terrorists, which of course means everybody, since we're all capable of future behavior.
AND again I ask - Where is Congress? They started this mess. No matter how many Democrats we elect into office there never seem to be enough to make progress.
Obama's wars are no surprise, he made that clear during his campaign. His support of the massive Pentagon budget is also expected, he did not campaign as a non-militarist, or as a peace candidate. He's planned to send more gunfighters to get in more gunfights with Moslems ever since he started his campaign. But it is still so tragic to see this unfold.
If we are to end the wars, close down the foreign bases, eliminate nuclear weapons, and reign in the Pentagon, it is really up to us. We have the power to do that, we have to be the people we have been waiting for. If Obama wants "guns and butter", he should know by now, guns always win.
Veitnam ------- CIA/Military --- Heroin --- Laos -- Bangkok -- USA military Bases in Coffins.
Contras --------- CIA --- Cocaine --- Columbia ---- Costa Rica --- Los Angeles crack epidemic
Afghanistan ---- CIA/Military --- Heroin -- Kabul --- Europe? -- USA?
The occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan has not promoted U.S. security or stability in the Middle East. These occupations have furthered the spread of failed states . . .
. . . the United States being the latest.
Okay, I'm taking The Pledge here and now: I, Mordechai Shiblikov, do solemnly swear that I will never again vote for Democrats. I promise.
Does that apply to Congress as well as the Presidential candidate? Local offices?
Please say yes.
Yes. In fact, YES! YES! YES!
Bravo, and I join in that pledge as well...
"Most people would sooner die than think, in fact they do so." Bertrand Russell
Who benefits from our occupation, the Afghans, Iraqis, our economy, our troops, our country, our reputation, the American public? Who???
Who benefits?
It's the military-industrial complex that benefits you numbnuts:
Exxon, Halliburton, KBR, Boeing, General Dynamics, Lockheed, etc, etc, etc.
Rhetorical question to make you feel smart.
NYTimes Feb. 27, 2009: " Mr. Obama promised that all of them will leave as well by December 2011 in accordance with a security agreement with Iraq negotiated by President George W. Bush before he left office last month.
At the same time, Mr. Obama vowed to continue the American commitment to building a new Iraqi society and to resettling millions of displaced Iraqis still away from home — elsewhere in their own nation or in neighboring countries. And he promised to escalate diplomatic involvement in the broader region, including new lines of communication with Iran and Syria."
Has Hedges completely lost touch with reality?
Yeah boy! Did you notice that Hedges was a NYTimes reporter for two decades? That's 20 years. If you think that propaganda only comes from the right---then you've lost touch with reality. It works both ways. Have you noticed that the "left-wing" media---including the so-called liberal Hedges---has nearly always left out the SOFA agreement and that ALL troops will be out by 2011? Ask yourself why. What's to be gained by fracturing the left and dividing Obama's support?
They work from both directions to bring down anything they think is a threat. Hedges is a tool of the oligarchy just like the NYTimes.
Hedges left the Times as a result of his belief that the war was unjustified,and their resultant attempts to silence him. Have you ever heard him speak? Read any of his books?
"They"---The oligarchy. Do you really think the CIA wouldn't work to fragment the left? Maybe even send out some "radical" reporters to spew socialism. The Times is full of CIA, and I would question anyone who has spent 20 years working there.
The NYTimes also reports facts---like the above quote taken from Feb.27. The fact is Obama has said explicitly that ALL troops will be gone by 2011---a fact that the left and Hedges choose to ignore. It's got to make you wonder.
Now you're putting words into my mouth. I never said the NYT is good. But they do have an obligation to report facts---and it is a fact that Obama said that. I read the Times with the knowledge that it is what the "they" want us to think. Just as I read CD, and writers like Hedges.
You want to debate me, but you don't respond to any of my queries. Do you really believe that the CIA would not try to fragment the left?
Why do you suppose the left is leaving out Obama's promise to have all troops out by 2011?
Obama IS moving to the left of Bush and his fascistic agenda. I'm sure he's seen as a threat to the more reactionary right-wing nutjobs who believe he's the most socialist President we've ever seen. I don't really know who Hedges is, but I question his motives when he writes articles like this---it's filled with speculation and "what if's" that have little to do with fact.
Notice how Hedges the "socialist" attacks our "enemies"
"They have opened up voids of lawlessness, including in the tribal areas of Pakistan, where our real enemies can operate and plot against us. These occupations have scuttled the art of diplomacy and mocked the rule of law. We have become an outlaw state intent on creating more outlaw states. The occupations have, finally, empowered Iran, as well as Russia and China, which gleefully watch our self-immolation"
So the "terrorists" ARE our real enemies? Iran, Russia, and China are our enemies too?????
And I have noticed what seems almost a concerted effort by left-leaning pundits to leave out his promise to have them all out, and also a fixation on 50,000 troops, when that number is the maximum he's allowed. It could be much less.
"Note also that the Wall St Journal (which also "has an obligation to report facts") called Obama's Friday speech at Camp Lejeune "Obama's Bush Vindication.""
Mixing fact with opinion....
The Bush administration fought against the SOFA, but the Iraqis held firm.
Your whole argument is based on the false claim that Obama is continuing the same policies as Bush. You can't see any difference other than PR---if you do your whole house of cards falls down. The policies ARE changing.
And no that doesn't mean Obama will demolish the MIC, and bring down the empire---no one person can do that. The empire is entrenched. But he is pushing back. Internationalism, energy policy, ending the Iraq war, changing the Afghan strategy, accepting science and global warming, pushing for healthcare reform---ALL to the left of Bush.
What are you going to say when all our troops are gone from Iraq and Afghanistan?
Here's some more leftward movement:
Stem-cell research enabled
SCHIP passed
Largest infrastructure plan since New Deal
Mideast peace envoy--Mitchell
Torture banned
Gitmo to close within the year
Science is ascendent in policy making
Climate change is accepted
Talks with Iran in the works
Green energy programs
Oversight and openness are back
Iraq war is ending
Russia talks on missiles
Hybrid cars for Gov't fleet
Internationalism is back
Secret CIA prisons closed
Bush's relaxed green-rules are blocked
FOIA restored
Equal pay bill
Executive pay limits
Halt of land lease for gas drilling
Worldwide abortion gag-rule lifted
Afghan strategy under review
Blackwater banned from Iraq (not really Obama, but I didn't hear him complain)
New overtures to N. Korea
New Limits on Wall St. Bonuses
But you, and others like you, will only focus on the policies that remain similar.
Obama's promised to not have permanent bases in Iraq. The Afghan strategy is under review, and there's talk of approaching the "moderate" Taliban.
Here's some of your adjectives from this little exchange:
naive
flapping your jaw around
ridiculous
laughably self-contradictory
confused person
desperate desire
confused
lying to yourself
confused
foolishly
pathetic
Seems like I really hit a nerve there DB. You have a lot to learn about civil discourse.
Civil discourse is almost as important as actual fact, Madcow. You are entitled to your support of Obama but you are not entitled to your own facts. Much of your list is based on statements and not supported by actions. Perhaps many of us are tired of words and require deeds.
Rendition continues, secret prisons continue, escalation of war continues, the looting of our treasury by the elite who ruined our economy continues,support for a real terrorist nation, Israel, continues unabated and the sad and misguided belief that "terrorism" can be defeated by arms and men continues as well.
I do not insult you for your sincere and well intentioned support of the new administration but I question the way you almost blindly ignore the argument from the other side. Your list is far more a wish list than an actuality, and, as you seem a fairly intelligent fellow I wonder why you refuse to note such?
"Most people would sooner die than think, in fact they do so." Bertrand Russell
Fair enough Red Rick. I concede that Obama has not gone far enough to totally ban rendition. I believe he envisions a case where there's a "terrorist" in a foreign country who's walking about, and he wants to be able to snatch him and send him to a place where he can be imprisoned. I don't believe he wants to send him to a torture chamber or a secret prison---he's explicitly banned these. Rendition is state-kidnapping, and it should be outlawed. I've been critical of Obama on this score before. Just as I've been critical of his failure to prosecute the Bush crimes, and his covering-up of the more heinous Bush transgressions. As to not backing Israel---at least we're seeing some movement away from total blind support. Wanting to talk to Syria and Iran is a good start. It would be political suicide for a politician to move too strongly against Israel. Obama does seem to buy the whole "war on terror" construct. But he also is moving to improve the situations in these countries that move the people to strap bombs on themselves. I think he gets it.
I am cheering this post, madcow, as a great start to a better type of dialogue. I would question your reasoning on rendition and its ultimate purpose, which I believe to be sending the guy to a place where he can be tortured without legal questions. But I would rather bask in the glow of agreeing with much of what you posted here.
The Obama administration is certainly addressing things I think need attention, and speaking in terms with which I can agree. I await the necessary follow through on those items.
The more pressing issues are those that relate to our system of governance and those who really wield the power. I seek, obviously enough, a progressive shift in that governence, a shift I sadly think lacking. I envision Barack Obama as one wedded to a system in desperate need of change, one that he himself is rather expert at negotiating thus why would he seek to change it?
I could go on and discuss his fund raising and the litany of things not mentioned as yet by Barack Obama or his cabinet, but let us save that for another time.
"Most people would sooner die than think, in fact they do so." Bertrand Russell
dig even just a little below the surface on 95% of these issues (i'll grant you your stem cells), and as bronstein says, mostly b.s.
>>What are you going to say when all our troops are gone from Iraq and Afghanistan?
What are you going to say about that recent surge of troops in Afghanistan? What are you going to say when war with Iran finally breaks out?
Just more "leftward movement" and "change we can believe in?"
madcow, some of the things you've said are rather silly.
hedges, btw, was not sitting in manhattan rubbing shoulders w/tom friedman, but in the worst war zones and hell holes in the world when he was at the NYTimes. he was a war correspondent, on the front lines in bosnia, lebanon, iraq, etc. for twenty years.
Where do you suppose the CIA would want its agents?
...in the White House??
yeah, a cia plant wrote "war is a force that gives us meaning" and "american fascists." yep. sounds plausible to me. please point out another cia stooge writing scathing critiques of our addiction to war or the christian right. or coming out for a kind of socialism (socialism lite IMHO, but nonetheless). yeah. happens all the time.
Mr. Hedges, like many of us, has lost faith in promises and vows.
A friend's son, who served a year in Afghanistan three years ago, just settled into college. Last week he was called up again, urgent, non negotiable. He's had to quit school and report to base this week. He's considering CO status but they are threatening him.
Onward marches Empire.
So much for the military program of join up to get college money. Yeah, if you live long enough you will get the money for college.
That's the much adored U.S. military for you.
And end of the fight
is the tombstone white
with the name of the late deceased
the epitaph drear
A fool lies here
who tried to hustle the east
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rudyard Kipling
An addendum:
"I will cheer the peace when all the soldiers are dead."
Elder Vietnamese woman in Michael Del Vecchio's marvelous tale of the "American War" in Vietnam, THE 13TH VALLEY
It has always been Obama's war. President George W. Brown voted to fund it as a senator and he's keeping 50,000 troops after the "withdrawal" next year.
The Lesser Evilist, Dem Party Apologist multitude of white and black sheep who voted for this career corporatist SCOUNDREL deserve exactly what they got: Cheney's first term.
Obama is just the latest talking-head for the military-industrial complex. Who you vote for does not change the military-industrial complex.
The pols in order to fill their Swiss bank accounts do as they are told.