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-----Original Message-----
From: A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
- mailto:ANSWER@InternationalANSWER.org;
Action@VoteNoWar.org
Sent: Friday, 1 December 2006 4:28 PM
To: info@adelaideinstitute.org
Subject: Politicians fiddle, Iraq burns: Baker Commission Another Study Group Charade
Baker Commission -- Another Study Group Charade
Politicians Fiddle: Iraq Burns
By Brian Becker and Mara Verheyden-Hilliard
In 1970, Henry Kissinger chaired the
Vietnam War’s version of the Iraq Study Group (ISG). Its name was virtually the
same as today’s bi-partisan commission headed by James Baker. Kissinger’s
commission was called the Vietnam Special Study Group (VSSG). Both the 1970 and
2006 commissions have the same goal: to extricate the United States from a
losing war of aggression. The Baker Commission will have as much success as
Kissinger’s “Study Group” from a generation ago. After the Kissinger Commission
made its report for a phased disengagement, the U.S. war effort dragged on for
three more years. Thousands more U.S. soldiers and hundreds of thousands more
Vietnamese were killed before the U.S. acknowledged its defeat in 1973.
Bush’s criminal war against Iraq has failed. Military victory is unachievable.
Now the two parties of imperialism are attempting to avoid a catastrophic defeat
or the appearance of a catastrophic defeat. This is pretty much how the Vietnam
War appeared to the policymakers of both parties by 1968.
How many more Iraqis will have to be killed, raped or maimed so that the U.S.
government can avoid the appearance of defeat? Should one more U.S. soldier give
their life so that the Pentagon can spin its losses for the media?
A lesson From the Vietnam War: Phased Withdrawal is the Prolongation of the War
For all the chatter about the similarities or dissimilarities between the Iraq
war and the Vietnam War there is little useful study of how the U.S.
disengagement from Vietnam actually took place and what role the U.S. anti-war
movement played in bringing the conflict to an end.
Even under pressure from a truly massive movement against the war in Southeast
Asia, Congress followed the lead of the generals and the president. Today, some
people in the peace movement are excited that some members of Congress favor a
phased withdrawal instead of what is called an open-ended commitment.
The lesson of Vietnam should not be lost on those who are putting their faith in
the “pragmatists” or so-called doves in Congress. Anything less than an
immediate, unconditional withdrawal is a disaster for the people of Iraq and for
U.S. soldiers. But Congress today, as during Vietnam, will not accept
responsibility for the military defeat of U.S. imperialism. The euphoric and
gushing utterances from some in the peace movement about the makeup of the new
Congress will not alter this reality one iota.
Just as in Vietnam, the policymakers in Washington have redefined the mission in
Iraq. Avoiding catastrophic defeat is now the primary objective.
It took five years for the U.S. military to withdraw from Vietnam following the
recognition by President Johnson, and Nixon who succeeded him in 1969, that a
military victory was impossible.
"Withdrawal" Simultaneous with the Escalation of Mass Murder
Between 1968 and the final exit of U.S. forces in 1973, the U.S. government
engaged in a phased withdrawal of troops, similar to what the Iraq Study Group
is likely promoting. Nixon announced in May 1969 that 25,000 troops would be
withdrawn, then 35,000 more in September 1969. In April 1970, he announced that
another 150,000 soldiers would be withdrawn by May 1971.
Did that mean peace was at hand in 1969? On the contrary. As Henry Kissinger put
it in an article in the December 1968 Foreign Affairs magazine, “The United
States cannot accept military defeat.”
While Nixon and Kissinger’s phased withdrawal of soldiers was underway the war
not only raged on -- it dramatically escalated. Between 1969 and 1973 more than
20,000 GIs were killed. The number of Vietnamese who died during those years is
unknown but it was many hundreds of thousands. During that time, the U.S. Air
Force carried out the “secret” bombing of Cambodia. More than 500,000 tons of
explosives were dropped on Cambodia during this period -- more than double the
bombs that were dropped on North Vietnam during the Nixon Administration. Half
the population of Cambodia was made refugees by the bombing. Hundreds of
thousands were killed.
It was during this same period of “phased withdrawal of U.S. troops” from
Vietnam that Nixon invaded Cambodia (April 30, 1970) with 32,000 soldiers.
Students rebelled against the invasion of Cambodia and were shot dead at Kent
State, Ohio (May 4, 1970) and in Jackson State, Mississippi (May 15, 1970). It
was not just at college campuses, but in high schools, in communities, and most
importantly among rank-and-file soldiers that militant anti-war confrontations
became a central feature of every day life. It was this growing, angry
grassroots protest that changed the political climate in the country.
Congress Did Not End the War
What role did Congress play in this epoch-shaping confrontation? Although
Congress is the only body that has the legal authority to declare war under the
Constitution, the Nixon Administration decided to tell only two members of
Congress that he and the generals had decided to invade Cambodia in 1970. Did
Congress move to impeach for this illegal escalation of the conflict or for the
blatant usurpation of their constitutionally mandated-authority? The question is
pure rhetoric. History knows that Congress only cut funding for the Cambodia
operation in the summer of 1973 (they never prohibited the on going aerial
slaughter in Cambodia by the U.S. Air Force.) And Congress cut off funding for
Vietnam in 1974, more than one year after U.S. troops had already been
withdrawn.
The bombing of Cambodia was undertaken in 1969 and was a complete secret.
Congressional oversight committees were by-passed and no member of Congress was
informed of this massive, sustained attack against another country. When news of
the bombing became public through press reports in late 1969 and 1970, Congress
took no action against Nixon or the generals.
Congress Then and Now
Congress is a talk shop. Dominated by a caste of professional politicians, who
with few exceptions are feeding at the trough of corporate donations, Congress
today is a relic of earlier era. Power today resides in the executive branch of
government. The White House, Pentagon, FBI and CIA are the centers of
decision-making.
Howard Dean, in his capacity as chairperson of the Democratic Party, went out of
his way to make the point that the Democrats’ new control of Congress won’t mean
anything significant. “The President is still Commander in Chief,” Dean repeated
over and over again as to assure the real power that Congress will only tinker,
or pretend to tinker, with war policy. Despite having the “power of the purse"
-- the power to decide whether to finance an illegal war - Nancy Pelosi
pointedly stated that Congress won’t reduce, much less end funding, for the Iraq
war. Harry Reid has now outlined his program for the new Congress, which does
not include any spending cuts for the war in Iraq. Directly dismissing the
voters and pledging obedience to Bush he announced: “Now he's the
commander-in-chief, and we're not going to do anything to limit funding or cut
off funds.”
Disengagement from Southeast Asia was hard for the U.S. ruling elite to accept.
Disengagement from the Middle East is not a fathomable option for U.S.
imperialism. Oil is not just a source of immense profit. It is a vital strategic
resource. If the U.S. was compelled to leave, the void would be filled by
Germany, Japan, France, the UK or another imperial power. Or anti-U.S.
resistance could sweep away the governments of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
It is this over-arching and fundamental reality that makes a so-called exit
strategy so difficult in the Iraq war.
The problem with Congress is not simply that they are "spineless" in the face of
the real power in the White House, Pentagon, FBI and CIA. The leaders and
overwhelming majority of the Democratic as well as Republican representatives
embrace the same imperial foreign policy objectives. They share the objective of
U.S. domination of the world economy and over peoples and countries trying to
chart an independent course.
Solidarity with the Arab People, Not Congress
Attempting to make the program of the anti-war movement acceptable to the
mythological “anti-war” wing of Congress requires the exclusion of Palestinian,
Lebanese and other Arab people who are targeted by the U.S.-Israeli military
alliance. It requires the abandonment of the fundamental struggle against U.S.
imperial ambitions in the Middle East -- the basis for the Iraq war to begin
with. The Democratic Party is not only unwilling to take responsibility for the
defeat of the U.S. in the Middle East. It is a wholehearted supporter of the
U.S.-Israeli terror against the Palestinian and Arab people. On July 22, 2006,
as Israel rained cluster bombs and high explosives down on the Lebanese people,
the House of Representatives passed a resolution saluting Israel for its
“longstanding commitment to minimizing civilian loss.” This breathtakingly
cynical resolution passed by a thoroughly bi-partisan vote of 410-8.
Congressional representatives cannot pretend to be “anti-war” while they support
the endless war against the Palestinians and other peoples of the region.
On March 17 and 18, the 4th anniversary of the start of the war against Iraq,
there will be a global day of action. We will demand an immediate unconditional
withdrawal from Iraq and reparations for the Iraqi people as well as an end to
colonial occupation in Palestine, Haiti and everywhere. The real challenge to
the warmakers will come not in the halls of Congress, but by continuing to forge
a global movement of protest and resistance.
The Bush White House, the Pentagon, and Congress intend to maintain a large U.S.
military presence in Iraq for many years to come. Even those advocating phased
withdrawal and "redeployment" will support maintaining tens of thousands of U.S.
troops in Iraq or in the region in order to maintain and defend the gigantic
U.S. embassy in downtown Baghdad; to function as a shadow government in Iraq;
and to serve as a force designed to intimidate and obstruct the ability of the
people of the region to exercise genuine self-determination.
This is a war for empire and the people of the United States must let the rest
of the world know that it is not our war, not our empire. The United States
contingent in the global movement must make clear that we stand with all those
throughout the Middle East and the world who are resisting in a just struggle
for liberation.
(First of two parts)
Brian Becker is the National Coordinator of the A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition. Mara
Verheyden-Hilliard is a civil rights attorney and co-founder of the Partnership
for Civil Justice.
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
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