by Ira Chernus
Pity
the poor Democratic candidates for president, caught between Iraq and a
hard place. Every day, more and more voters decide that we must end the
war and set a date to start withdrawing our troops from Iraq. Most who
will vote in the Democratic primaries concluded long ago that we must
leave Iraq, and they are unlikely to let anyone who disagrees with them
have the party's nomination in 2008.
But what does it mean to
"leave Iraq"? Here's where most of the Democratic candidates come smack
up against that hard place. There is a longstanding bipartisan
consensus in the foreign-policy establishment that the U.S. must
control every strategically valuable region of the world -- and none
more so than the oil heartlands of the planet. That's been a
hard-and-fast rule of the elite for some six decades now. No matter how
hard the task may be, they demand that presidents be rock-hard enough
to get the job done.
So whatever "leave Iraq" might mean, no
candidate of either party likely to enter the White House on January
20, 2009 can think it means letting Iraqis determine their own national
policies or fate. The powers that be just wouldn't stand for that. They
see themselves as the guardians of world "order." They feel a sacred
obligation to maintain "stability" throughout the imperial domains,
which now means most of planet Earth -- regardless of what voters may
think. The Democratic front-runners know that "order" and "stability"
are code words for American hegemony. They also know that voters,
especially Democratic ones, see the price of hegemony in Iraq and just
don't want to pay it anymore.
So the Democratic front-runners
must promise voters that they will end the war -- with not too many
ideologically laden ifs, ands, or buts -- while they assure the
foreign-policy establishment that they will never abandon the drive for
hegemony in the Middle East (or anywhere else). In other words, the
candidates have to be able to talk out of both sides of their mouths at
the same time.
No worries, it turns out. Fluency in
doublespeak is a prime qualification for high political office. On
Iraq, candidates Dennis Kucinich and Bill Richardson don't meet that
test. They tell anyone and everyone that they want "all" U.S. troops
out of Iraq, but they register only 1-4% in the polls and are generally
ignored in the media. The Democrats currently topping the polls, on the
other hand, are proving themselves eminently qualified in doublespeak.
Clinton: "We got it right, mostly, during the Cold War"
Hillary
Clinton declares forthrightly: "It is time to begin ending this war….
Start bringing home America's troops…. within 90 days." Troops home: It
sounds clear enough. But she is always careful to avoid the crucial
word all. A few months ago she told an interviewer: "We have remaining
vital national security interests in Iraq…. What we can do is to almost
take a line sort of north of, between Baghdad and Kirkuk, and basically
put our troops into that region." A senior Pentagon officer who has
briefed Clinton told NPR commentator Ted Koppel that Clinton expects
U.S. troops to be in Iraq when she ends her second term in 2017.
Why
all these troops? We have "very real strategic national interests in
this region," Clinton explains. "I will order specialized units to
engage in narrow and targeted operations against al Qaeda and other
terrorist organizations in the region. They will also provide security
for U.S. troops and personnel and train and equip Iraqi security
services to keep order and promote stability." There would be U.S.
forces to protect the Kurds and "our efforts must also involve a
regional recommitment to success in Afghanistan." Perhaps that's why
Clinton has proposed "that we expand the Army by 80,000 troops, that we
move faster to expand the Special Forces."
Says her deputy
campaign manager Bob Nash, "She'll be as tough as any Republican on our
enemies." And on our friends, he might have added, if they don't shape
up. At the Take Back America conference in June the candidate drew boos
when she declared that "the American military has done its job.… They
gave the Iraqi government the chance to begin to demonstrate that it
understood its responsibilities.… It is the Iraqi government which has
failed." It's the old innocent-Americans-blame-the-foreigners ploy.
More
importantly, it's the old
tough-Americans-reward-friends-who-help-America ploy. We should start
withdrawing some troops, Clinton says, "to make it clear to the Iraqis
that … we're going to look out for American interests, for the region's
interests." If the Iraqi government is not "striving for sustainable
stability…. we'll consider providing aid to provincial governments and
reliable non-governmental organizations that are making progress."
Clinton's
message to the Iraqi leaders is clear: You had your chance to join "the
international community," to get with the U.S. program, and to reap the
same benefits as the leaders of other oil-rich nations -- but you blew
it. So, now you can fend for yourselves while we look for new, more
capable allies in Iraq and keep who-knows-how-many troops there to
"protect our interests" -- and increase our global clout. The draw-down
in Iraq, our signal that we've given up on the al-Maliki government,
"will be a first step towards restoring Americans moral and strategic
leadership in the world," Clinton swears.
"America must be the
world's leader," she declared last month. "We must widen the scope of
our strength by leading strong alliances which can apply military force
when required." And, when necessary, cut off useless puppet governments
that won't let their strings be pulled often enough.
Hillary
is speaking to at least three audiences: the voters at home, the
foreign-policy elite, and a global elite she would have to deal with as
president. Her recent fierce criticism of the way President Bush has
handled Iraq, like her somewhat muddled antiwar rhetoric, is meant as a
message of reassurance to voters, but also to our elite -- and as a
warning to foreigners: The next President Clinton will be tough on
allies as well as foes, as tough as the old cold warriors. "We got it
right, mostly, during the Cold War.… Nothing is more urgent than for us
to begin again to rebuild a bipartisan consensus," she said last year
in a speech that cut right to the bottom line: "American foreign policy
exists to maintain our security and serve our national interests."
That's what the bipartisan consensus has always believed.
Obama and Edwards: Don't Tread on Us
That
seems to be what Barack Obama, another loyal member of the
foreign-policy establishment, believes too. "The single most important
job of any president is to protect the American people," he affirmed in
a major foreign-policy statement last April. But "the threats we face….
can no longer be contained by borders and boundaries…. The security of
the American people is inextricably linked to the security of all
people." That's why the U.S. must be the "leader of the free world."
It's hard to find much difference on foreign policy between Clinton and
Obama, except that Barack is more likely to dress up the imperial march
of U.S. interests in such old-fashioned Cold War flourishes.
That
delights neoconservative guru Robert Kagan, who summed up Obama's
message succinctly: "His critique is not that we've meddled too much
but that we haven't meddled enough.… To Obama, everything and everyone
everywhere is of strategic concern to the United States." To control
everything and everyone, he wants "the strongest, best-equipped
military in the world.… A 21st century military to stay on the
offense." That, he says, will take at least 92,000 more soldiers and
Marines -- precisely the number Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has
recommended to President Bush.
Like Hillary, Barack would
remove all "combat brigades" from Iraq, but keep U.S. troops there "for
a more extended period of time" -- even "redeploy additional troops to
Northern Iraq" -- to support the Kurds, train Iraqi forces, fight al
Qaeda, "reassure allies in the Gulf," "send a clear message to hostile
countries like Iran and Syria," and "prevent chaos in the wider
region." "Most importantly, some of these troops could be redeployed to
Afghanistan…. to stop Afghanistan from backsliding toward instability."
Barack also agrees with Hillary that the Iraqi government needs
a good scolding "to pressure the Iraqi leadership to finally come to a
political agreement between the warring factions that can create some
sense of stability…. Only through this phased redeployment can we send
a clear message to the Iraqi factions that the U.S. is not going to
hold together this country indefinitely.… No more coddling, no more
equivocation."
But Obama offers a carrot as well as a stick to
the Iraqis: "The redeployment could be temporarily suspended if the
parties in Iraq reach an effective political arrangement that
stabilizes the situation and they offer us a clear and compelling
rationale for maintaining certain troop levels…. The United States
would not be maintaining permanent military bases in Iraq." What,
however, does "permanent" mean when language is being used so subtly?
It's a question that needs an answer, but no one asks it -- and no
answer is volunteered.
John Edwards offers variations on the
same themes. He wants a continuing U.S. troop presence "to prevent a
genocide, deter a regional spillover of the civil war, and prevent an
Al Qaeda safe haven." But he goes further than either Obama or Clinton
in spelling out that we "will also need some presence in Baghdad,
inside the Green Zone, to protect the American Embassy and other
personnel."
Around the world, Edwards would use military force
for "deterring and responding to aggressors, making sure that weak and
failing states do not threaten our interests, and … maintaining our
strategic advantage against major competitor states that could do us
harm and otherwise threaten our interests." His distinctive touch is to
stress coordinated military and civilian efforts for "stabilizing
states with weak governments…. I would put stabilization first."
"Stabilization" is yet another establishment code word for insuring
U.S. control, as Edwards certainly knows. His ultimate aim, he says, is
to ensure that the U.S. will "lead and shape the world."
Running for the Imperial Presidency
The
top Democrats agree that we must leave significant numbers of U.S.
troops in Iraq, not only for selfish reasons, but because we Americans
are so altruistic. We want to prevent chaos and bring order and
stabilization to that country -- as if U.S. troops were not already
creating chaos and instability there every day. But among the foreign
policy elite, the U.S. is always a force for order, "helping" naturally
chaotic foreigners achieve "stability." For the elite, it's axiomatic
that the global "stability" that keeps us secure and prosperous is also
a boon for the people we "stabilize." For this to happen in Iraq, time
must be bought with partial "withdrawal" plans. (It matters little how
many foreigners we kill in the process, as long as U.S. casualties are
reduced enough to appease public opinion at home.) This is not open to
question; most of the time, it's not something that even crosses
anyone's mind to question.
Well, perhaps it's time we started
asking such questions. A lost war should be the occasion for a great
public debate on the policies and the geopolitical assumptions that led
to the war. Americans blew that opportunity after the Vietnam War.
Instead of a genuine debate, we had a few years of apathy, verging on
amnesia, toward foreign affairs followed by the Reagan revolution,
whose disastrous effects in matters foreign (and domestic) still plague
us. Now, we have another precious -- and preciously bought --
opportunity to raise fundamental issues about foreign policy. But in
the mainstream, all we are getting is a false substitute for real
public debate.
With an election looming, the Democrats portray
themselves as the polar opposite of the Republicans. They blame the
Iraq fiasco entirely on Bush and the neocons, conveniently overlooking
all the support Bush got from the Democratic elite before his military
venture went sour. They talk as if the only issue that matters is
whether or not we begin to withdraw some troops from Iraq sometime next
year. The media report this debate in excruciating detail, with no
larger context at all. So most Americans think this is the only debate
there is, or could be.
The other debate about Iraq -- the one
that may matter more in the long run -- is the one going on in the
private chambers of the policymakers about what messages they should
send, not so much to enemies as to allies. Bush, Cheney, and their
supporters say the most important message is a reassuring one: "When
the U.S. starts a fight, it stays in until it wins. You can count on
us." For key Democrats, including congressional leaders and major
candidates for the imperial Presidency, the primary message is a
warning: "U.S. support for friendly governments and factions is not an
open-ended blank check. If you are not producing, we'll find someone
else who can."
The two sides are hashing this one out in a
sometimes strident, sometimes relatively chummy manner. The outcome
will undoubtedly make a real difference, especially to the people of
Iraq, but it's still only a dispute about tactics, never about goals,
which have been agreed upon in advance.
Yet it's those
long-range goals of the bipartisan consensus that add up to the
seven-decade-old drive for imperial hegemony, which got us into
Vietnam, Iraq, and wherever we fight the next large, disastrous war.
It's those goals that should be addressed. Someone has to question that
drive. And what better moment to do it than now, in the midst of
another failed war? Unfortunately, the leading Democratic candidates
aren't about to take up the task. I guess it must be up to us.
Ira
Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado
at Boulder and author of Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War
on Terror and Sin. He can be contacted at chernus@colorado.edu
Copyright 2007 Ira Chernus