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Dennis Kucinich: Democrats: It's the War

 
 
Reply Wed 2 Nov, 2005 06:01 pm
Democrats: It's the War
By Dennis Kucinich
In These Times
Monday 31 October 2005

Ending the war in Iraq is right for a lot of reasons. The war was unjustified, unnecessary and unprovoked. It is counterproductive, strengthening al-Qaeda and weakening the moral authority of the United States. It is deadly: Many Americans, and many, many more Iraqis, have been killed or injured as a result of the fighting. And it is costly: Well over $250 billion in taxpayer funds have already been spent, with no end in sight.

It is also increasingly unpopular. For all these reasons, plus the increased spotlight that Hurricanes Katrina and Rita put on how much the war is draining resources desperately needed at home, Democrats should clearly call for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq. If Democrats do not make this the centerpiece of their campaign in 2006, they risk repeating recent history, in which they failed to recover seats in the House and Senate.

National Democratic leaders have already tried, and tried again, to ignore the war, and it didn't work politically. During the 2002 election cycle, when Democrats felt they had historical precedent on their side - the president's party always loses seats in the mid-term election - the Democratic leadership in Congress cut a deal with the president to bring the war resolution to a vote, and appeared with him in a Rose Garden ceremony. "Let no light show" between Democrats and President Bush on foreign policy was the leadership's strategy, and it yielded a historic result: For the first time since Franklin Roosevelt, a president increased his majorities in both houses of Congress during a recession.

Then, in 2004, with the president vulnerable on the war, the Democratic Party again sacrificed the opportunity to distinguish itself from Bush. Members avoided the issue of withdrawal from Iraq in the Party platform, omitted it from campaign speeches and deleted it from the national convention.

Why is it an unconscionable political blunder to sweep the war and occupation of Iraq under the rug? Because the war is one of the most potent political scandals of all time, and it has energized grassroots activity all over the country.

President Bush led the country into war based on false information, falsified threats and a fictitious estimate of the consequences. His war and the continuing occupation transformed Iraq into a training ground for jihadists who want to kill Americans, and a cause célèbre for stoking resentment in the Muslim world.

Bush's war and occupation squandered the abundant good will felt by the world for America after our 9/11 losses. He enriched his cronies at Halliburton and other private interests through the occupation. And he diverted our attention and abilities away from apprehending the masterminds of the 9/11 attack. Instead, we are mired in an occupation which has already cost over 2,000 American lives and the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqis.

The issue of the war clearly distinguishes what is wrong with Republican rule. Republicans in Congress won't extricate the United States from the quagmire the president has gotten us into. They have refused to investigate what role the White House played in manipulating pre-war intelligence. They refused to investigate the Downing Street memo. Democrats, on the other hand, mostly voted against the war: Two-thirds of House Democrats and half of Senate Democrats opposed the war in Iraq. Democrats can draw no clearer distinction with the president and the Republican Congress than over this war.

Every major poll confirms that the war is a loser for the president and his party. Consider one of the most prominent: The ABC/Washington Post poll, which has surveyed public opinion on the war regularly since March 2003. Responses to all pertinent key questions clearly show eroding support for the war. Support for the president's handling of Iraq has steadily fallen; belief that the war was worth fighting has fallen; belief that the number of US casualties are an acceptable cost of the war has steadily fallen; belief that the war has contributed to US long-term security has steadily fallen, and support for keeping forces in Iraq has steadily fallen. There are no exceptions to this trend.

Right is on our side, and public opinion is trending our way. In 2006, Democrats must break from the past and run on the issue of quick withdrawal of all troops from Iraq. The stakes are high: Unless Democrats stand for ending the war in Iraq, this country will not leave Iraq, and Democrats their minority status in Washington, for a long time to come.

Of course, no party can win votes on the strength of one issue. Ending the war in Iraq must be at the centerpiece of a campaign that includes standing for national health care and preserving Social Security. This is the constellation of issues with which Democrats can take back the country.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 544 • Replies: 10
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panzade
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Nov, 2005 06:11 pm
Where were all the Democrats when we invaded Iraq.? What a shameful party...they can't even be called the oppsition.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Nov, 2005 06:20 pm
Asslickers, most of the elected ones.
0 Replies
 
panzade
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Nov, 2005 06:29 pm
Edgar, gotta agree. I've lost so much respect for the party of Humphrey and Muskie, Robert Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy. Someone must come along and fill the shoes.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Nov, 2005 07:04 pm
The media is so cowed by the Republicans that they help tear down any likely Democrats in the public mind. The next candidate has to do much better than a 50/50 split to get any respect at all.
0 Replies
 
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:22 pm
The corporate sector and right-wing Jewish control have
a lot to do with the media. That is the source of the GWB dictatorship.
0 Replies
 
goodfielder
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Nov, 2005 10:39 pm
talk72000 wrote:
The corporate sector and right-wing Jewish control have a lot to do with the media. That is the source of the GWB dictatorship.


Do you mean the neocon Straussians associated with PNAC? Writing something like "right-wing Jewish control" just makes you sound bigoted.
0 Replies
 
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 12:18 am
Okay it is the neocons like Wolfowitz (Likudnik), Feith (Likudnik), Kristol (Likudnik), Murdoch (selfish psychopath), Clear Channel, etc.
0 Replies
 
twinpeaksnikki2
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 12:26 am
panzade wrote:
Where were all the Democrats when we invaded Iraq.?


Yeah, they actually believed that Bush would not falsify intelleigence to lie us into a war. How stupid of them.
0 Replies
 
goodfielder
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:05 am
talk72000 wrote:
Okay it is the neocons like Wolfowitz (Likudnik), Feith (Likudnik), Kristol (Likudnik), Murdoch (selfish psychopath), Clear Channel, etc.


Don't you feel better for being more specific? Very Happy

Personally I can't stomach Likud. I do like Labour though (yes I know they're Zionist). As for Murdoch......couldn't agree more.
0 Replies
 
goodfielder
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Nov, 2005 03:07 am
twin_peaks_nikki wrote:
panzade wrote:
Where were all the Democrats when we invaded Iraq.?


Yeah, they actually believed that Bush would not falsify intelleigence to lie us into a war. How stupid of them.


I don't think so. I think they were too gutless to stand up to Bush and the Republicans, too frightened of what America might say with the blood well and truly in its eye. America wanted an invasion and occupation and the Dems were too gutless to say no. The same thing happened here in Australia, our Opposition was gutless. Both the Dems and Labor in my country failed their democratic duty.
0 Replies
 
 

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