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Saorsa
18th July 2008, 02:49
http://www.uruknet.de/?s1=1&p=45753&s2=17


Obama outlines policy of endless war

</U>Bill Van Auken, WSWS


</B>

</U></I></B></STRONG>16 July 2008

Any misconception that Barack Obama is running in the 2008 election as an "antiwar" candidate should have been cleared up Tuesday in what was billed by the Democratic presidential campaign as a "major speech" on national security and the US war in Iraq.

Speaking before a backdrop of massed American flags at the Reagan Building in Washington, Obama made it clear that he opposes the present US policy in Iraq not on the basis of any principled opposition to neo-colonialism or aggressive war, but rather on the grounds that the Iraq war is a mistaken deployment of power that fails to advance the global strategic interests of American imperialism.

What emerges from the speech by the junior senator from Illinois is that the November election will not provide the American people with the opportunity to vote for or against war, but merely to choose which of the two colonial-style wars that US forces are presently fighting should be escalated.

As in his op-ed piece published in the New York Times on Monday, his call on Tuesday for the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraq was linked to the proposal to dispatch as many as 10,000 troops to Afghanistan to escalate the war there.

The thrust of Obama’s speech was a critique of the Bush administration’s incompetence in pursuing an imperialist strategy, combined with an implicit commitment to advance the same basic strategy in a more rational and effective manner once he enters the White House.

He summed up his policy as "a responsible redeployment of our combat troops that pushes Iraq’s leaders toward a political solution, rebuilds our military, and refocuses on Afghanistan and our broader security interests."

Obama reiterated his campaign pledge to bring US "combat brigades" out of Iraq within 16 months of his inauguration. After this "redeployment," however, a "residual force" would remain in Iraq carrying out counter-insurgency operations, protecting US facilities and training and supporting Iraqi puppet forces—tasks that would undoubtedly keep tens of thousands of American troops occupying the country indefinitely.

Obama stressed that he would make "tactical adjustments" to his plan based upon consultations with "commanders on the ground and the Iraqi government," suggesting that even the partial withdrawal he proposes would unlikely unfold as quickly as promised.

The speech was scheduled in advance of a "fact-finding" tour that Obama is set to embark upon in the next week, visiting both Iraq and Afghanistan and conducting meetings with US military commanders in both countries.

Obama began his speech by invoking the legacy of US imperialism’s strategy in the aftermath of World War II, when it acted to "foster new international institutions like the United Nations, NATO and the World Bank" and rebuilt shattered European capitalism through the Marshall Plan. He contrasted that six-decade policy with what he presented as the squandered opportunity for Washington to again seize global leadership following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

"The world, too, was united against the perpetrators of this evil act, as old allies, new friends and even long-time adversaries stood by our side," said Obama. "It was time—once again—for America’s might and moral suasion to be harnessed; it was time to once again shape a new security strategy for an ever-changing world."

The starting point for seizing this golden opportunity, according to Obama, was to "have deployed the full force of American power to hunt down and destroy Osama bin Laden, Al Qaeda, the Taliban and all of the terrorists responsible for 9/11, while supporting real security in Afghanistan."

Instead, he charged, the Bush administration diverted these military resources into the war against Iraq, "a country that had absolutely nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks." He continued: "By any measure, our single-minded and open-ended focus on Iraq is not a sound strategy for keeping America safe."

This presentation is a gross and deliberate distortion of the motives underlying both the war in Afghanistan and the one in Iraq. Neither of them was launched with the aim of "keeping America safe," but rather to advance definite strategic interests of American imperialism.

The central aim of the war in Afghanistan—planned well before the attacks of 9/11—was to take advantage of the power vacuum in Central Asia created by the Soviet Union’s dissolution to assert US domination over a region containing the second largest proven reserves of petroleum and natural gas in the world.

As for the supposed targets of this operation—Osama bin Laden, Al Qaeda and the Taliban—all of them are, in the final analysis, the products of US imperialism’s own bloody history of intervention in the region, particularly in the 1980s, when Washington poured billions of dollars into funding the Mujahedin forces fighting the Soviet-backed government of Afghanistan and the Soviet army when it intervened there. Among these forces were bin Laden and those who went on to set up both Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

The legacy of this CIA-directed war was the devastation of Afghanistan and protracted political chaos, which Washington sought to curb by supporting the Taliban’s coming to power.

Now, nearly seven years after the US invaded Afghanistan, Obama proclaims, "As president, I will make the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban the top priority that it should be. This is a war that we have to win."

To that end, Obama vowed to send "two additional combat brigades to Afghanistan" and to press Washington’s NATO allies to make "greater contributions—with fewer restrictions" in terms of deploying their own troops.

He continued by vowing to expand the intervention in Afghanistan into neighboring Pakistan.

"The greatest threat to that security lies in the tribal regions of Pakistan, where terrorists train and insurgents strike into Afghanistan," he warned. "We cannot tolerate a terrorist sanctuary, and as president, I won’t. We need a stronger and sustained partnership between Afghanistan, Pakistan and NATO to secure the border, to take out terrorist camps and to crack down on cross-border insurgents. We need more troops, more helicopters, more satellites, more Predator drones in the Afghan border region. And we must make it clear that if Pakistan cannot or will not act, we will take out high-level terrorist targets like bin Laden if we have them in our sights."

There is no evidence that US forces are fighting Al Qaeda in Afghanistan or that the bulk of those attacking American and NATO forces are following orders issued by the remnants of the Taliban. The Pentagon has not reported the capture of Al Qaeda operatives in the stepped-up fighting that has claimed the lives of 69 US and NATO soldiers in the months of May and June.

The reality is that the resistance to the US-led occupation has grown dramatically as a direct product of the escalating slaughter of civilians, as seen in the July 6 US air strike that killed 47 members of a wedding party, the vast majority of them women and children. Anger has also been generated by the arbitrary detention and frequent torture of those picked up by US units and Afghan puppet troops, as well as by the gross corruption of the US-backed regime of President Hamid Karzai.

In the attack on a US base last Sunday that claimed the lives of nine US soldiers, local villagers reportedly participated, providing direct support to the insurgents who carried out the assault.

With "more troops, more helicopters, more satellites, more Predator drones," Obama is proposing to escalate this slaughter, which will generate greater resistance and an expanded war involving more US troops and, inevitably, their deployment across the border into Pakistan.

Obama vowed to beef up the US military for a war that threatens to prove far more intense than the one in Iraq. He called for an overall increase of American ground forces by 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 marines, and "investing in the capabilities we need to defeat conventional foes and meet the unconventional challenges of our time."

Much of the media reaction to Obama’s speech centered on speculation over whether it was aimed at reassuring his Democratic base that he is still committed to effecting a withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, or if it indicated a further "move to the center" by stressing his willingness to use force as the US commander-in-chief.

In reality, the speech reflected what is becoming a consensus position within much of the American political establishment, Democratic and Republican alike. There is a growing conviction that the US can secure its strategic interests in Iraq with fewer troops and without expending the more than $10 billion a month that is compounding the deepening economic crisis of American capitalism.

To underscore this message, Obama was introduced Tuesday by former Democratic congressman Lee Hamilton, who, together with Republican ex-Secretary of State James Baker, chaired the Iraq Study Group, the bipartisan panel that called for a revamped US military and diplomatic policy aimed at salvaging the American intervention in Iraq.

Both Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen, have expressed concern that there are insufficient troop levels in Afghanistan to secure US domination of the country. They have indicated that they would like to deploy another 10,000 there—the same number proposed by Obama.

Even Bush, in a White House press conference Tuesday morning, sounded this theme, claiming that Washington and its NATO allies were already initiating a "surge" in Afghanistan.

As for the speech signaling a shift to the right, the reality is that Obama has sounded the same themes repeatedly since initiating his run for the presidency. While in the Democratic primaries he stressed his opposition to the 2002 Senate vote to grant Bush authorization to launch the Iraq war—a resolution that was supported by his principal rivals Hillary Clinton and John Edwards—he always made it clear that he embraced the ideological framework of the "global war on terrorism" used to justify both the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions.

Given this position and his subsequent votes to fund the war once he entered the Senate in 2005, there is little reason to believe that he would not have joined his rivals in giving Bush a blank check for an Iraq invasion had he been a US senator at the time.

Writing in Foreign Affairs a year ago, Obama stressed that the lesson of the Iraq debacle was the necessity to prepare for new US wars. "We must use this moment both to rebuild our military and to prepare it for the missions of the future," he stressed. "We must retain the capacity to swiftly defeat any conventional threat to our country and our vital interests. But we must also become better prepared to put boots on the ground in order to take on foes that fight asymmetrical and highly adaptive campaigns on a global scale."

While Obama’s "left" apologists will no doubt excuse the blatant militarism and warmongering in the candidate’s speech as a mere political device aimed at winning over "centrist" voters, the reality is that the candidate is spelling out what can be expected from an incoming Democratic administration in 2009.

Its policies will be determined not by the hollow campaign rhetoric about "change" that has been Obama’s specialty, but rather by the deepening economic and social crisis of American capitalism and the determination of the American ruling elite to continue using military force as a means of offsetting its economic decline.

Sendo
18th July 2008, 03:26
well, all of my worst fears confirmed. I hope to God the excited leftist around Obama, read this stuff (and that of Pilger and Nader on Obama), become disillusioned, build consciousness, and hold his feet to the fire when he's elected. For Christ's sake, it looks like Nixon will go down as the most left-wing presidents in practice of the past 40 years. And why is that? Because people were involved in non-electoral democratic action. Fucking shame how many people rally under his banner but have no clue who he is. I think they've now entered a state of denial. When I try to argue Obama's phoniness to them I hit a brick wall of sentimentality.

ipollux
18th July 2008, 03:29
What does criticizing him achieve when the only alternative is someone who has said we will be in Iraq for 100 years? If Ho Chi Minh or Che was running, I would understand ...

Sendo
18th July 2008, 03:37
I think we've hit the point where it doesn't matter AT ALL who gets elected. There are two factions of the ruling class and they will get away with a much as we let them get away with. Neither can be trusted. Unfortunately it will be another year before many Americans realize this, some Brits, too. (Some Brits seem to be under the illusion that Obama is somehow progressive for a US election. I think mainly b/c of lack of awareness of Obama's real "blackness" or lack thereof)

I'd rather have Nixon as president again. At least he was an obvious crook and you could rally people against him. He was also without pretentions.

ipollux
18th July 2008, 03:44
I do agree that neither can be trusted and that for the most part, it doesn't matter.

F9
18th July 2008, 03:49
oh obama is black,lets vote him as a respond to racism
obama is anti-war .....etc etc
you forget the most important thing he is a bloody fucking capitalist!:mad:

Fuserg9:star:

Lost In Translation
18th July 2008, 03:56
I hate to point out the obvious, but America is being really obnoxious and has been for 8 years now. First you "rid Iraq of it's evil dictatorship", but you don't leave after that. Then, you "promote democracy" in Afghanistan by banishing the Taliban, and you continue to waste the place. Now it's Pakistan. What have they done to you, America, besides their existence?

So to quote Rev. Jeremiah Wright: "Not God Bless America; God DAMN America!" (No, I'm not religious, I just feel this quote is very fitting for commenting on America)

Sendo
18th July 2008, 03:59
oh obama is black,lets vote him as a respond to racism
obama is anti-war .....etc etc
you forget the most important thing he is a bloody fucking capitalist!:mad:

Fuserg9:star:

Obama is isn't black. He has disowned all of his fake Afro-American trappings. He is a white bourgeois racist with the biological accident of having 50% of his DNA from East Africa.

Ismail
18th July 2008, 10:02
How about we don't vote. If we do vote, it should only be so people stop saying "WELL IF YOU WANT CHANGE VOTE FOR IT!" and you can say "Not only did the person I vote for win, but he/she didn't do a damn thing to bring us any closer to socialism, much less Communism. So eat my ass."

Saorsa
18th July 2008, 11:59
... Or perhaps we run revolutionary candidates, and vote for them, encouraging others to dot he same?

Comrade Vasilev
18th July 2008, 12:05
... Or perhaps we run revolutionary candidates, and vote for them, encouraging others to dot he same?
At this point I think running in elections would be more damaging than beneficial to any revolutionary movement. There are two big dangers to it:
1. You risk having your organization lumped in under the whole reformist unworkable parliamentary system
2. You risk having your movement being infected by 'electoralism', which is basically getting all your comrades' hopes up for an election win only to be disappointed. That gives the false impression that your revolutionary movement is failing and that bourgeois politics can accomplish revolution.

Both of these things are very dangerous to the morale of comrades'. Participation in parliaments can be helpful, but I think their is a big difference between the Constituent Russian Assembly of 1917 and the parliaments of today.

Saorsa
18th July 2008, 12:33
1. You risk having your organization lumped in under the whole reformist unworkable parliamentary system


Not at all. That depends on you're program and you're actions once you are elected to a position of power. If you use the position to promote consistently revolutionary, anti-imperialist and pro-working class policies, why would you be lumped in with the mainstream parties? It's possible to be a revolutionary without a gun in you're hand all the time!



2. You risk having your movement being infected by 'electoralism', which is basically getting all your comrades' hopes up for an election win only to be disappointed. That gives the false impression that your revolutionary movement is failing and that bourgeois politics can accomplish revolution.


That's not a danger at all. You just have to make very clear to all you're comrades, espescially the newer ones, that you're not doing this with the intention of winning a large number of votes, and you don't expect to do so - you're using the election as a platform to put you're ideas out.

Obviously you go in to win, and if it's possible to win you go for it! But not's the main reason you're running in the election.

RHIZOMES
18th July 2008, 12:34
I hate to point out the obvious, but America is being really obnoxious and has been for 8 years now.

Wasn't just 8 years! Pretty much their entire history. :lol:

YKTMX
18th July 2008, 18:24
His position on Afghanistan is bad.

But it seems rather self-righteous for us to be moaning about it, since lots and lots of members on this board (including at least 1 admin) support, or supported, the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, using almost exactly the same reasoning about that that Obama uses about the American occupation - that it modernizes, protects women, defends democracy, prevents the creation of a "base" for Islamists etc.

Obama is certainly not an anti-imperialist, however I don't think he's a "militarist", unlike his opponent.

Lost In Translation
18th July 2008, 18:25
Wasn't just 8 years! Pretty much their entire history. :lol:
let's see now...Boston Tea Party...WWI...Great Depression....Herbert Hoover...Hiroshima (and World War II)...Vietnam...McCarthyism...Nixon...everybody else that came after Nixon...Iraq and co.

Holy crap you're right!!! :bored::bored:

Ismail
18th July 2008, 19:17
But it seems rather self-righteous for us to be moaning about it, since lots and lots of members on this board (including at least 1 admin) support, or supported, the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, using almost exactly the same reasoning about that that Obama uses about the American occupation - that it modernizes, protects women, defends democracy, prevents the creation of a "base" for Islamists etc.Yes, I dislike hypocrisy. Imperialism is imperialism, doesn't matter if the new puppet state will have puppies be the national animal or if the invading nation has a red flag.

Saorsa
19th July 2008, 03:51
But it seems rather self-righteous for us to be moaning about it, since lots and lots of members on this board (including at least 1 admin) support, or supported, the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, using almost exactly the same reasoning about that that Obama uses about the American occupation - that it modernizes, protects women, defends democracy, prevents the creation of a "base" for Islamists etc.


It'd only be self righteous for us to be moaning about it if we were a bunch of counter-revolutionary tankies - thankfully, I'm not, so I'm entitled to be as anti-imperialist as I like.