Obama's Iraq withdrawal plans and MoveOn
Date: Wednesday, March 04 @ 10:49:50 UTC
Topic: Barack Obama


By Stephen Gowans
March 01, 2009
gowans.wordpress.com


Michael D. Yates wrote an MRZine article accusing Fox and CNN journalists, and Michael Steele, the first black person to be selected to chair the Republican National Committee, of being complete boneheads. That Yates chose MRZine as his vehicle for launching a diatribe against the intellectual failings of the likes of Lou Dobbs and Wolf Blitzer means he must have been looking for an easy sell. He might as well have told Palestinians that Zionists are not their friends.

Everyone on the Left knows there are plenty of right-wing morons, but rarely acknowledged is the plenitude of liberal morons. Progressives, for obvious reasons, don't talk about them, though liberal morons are no less deserving of invective than Dobbs, Blitzer and Steele are.

Consider, for example, Justin Ruben, executive director of MoveOn.org. MoveOn.org, to quote directly from Sourcewatch.org,
"is a web-based liberal advocacy organization that raises tens of millions of dollars for Democratic Party politicians and causes from the millions of people on its e-mail list. MoveOn funds or sponsors with other liberal advocacy organizations various coalitions such as Americans Against Escalation in Iraq (AAEI), SavetheInternet.com Coalition, and Win Without War. It endorsed Barack Obama in the 2008 Democratic Party primaries, fundraised and organized for him, and has become perhaps the lead lobby organization for his policies in 2009, apart from Obama's own Organizing for America."
My evidence for Ruben's gobsmacking stupidity lies in the following four paragraphs from the New York Times of February 26. Discussing President Obama's plans for "withdrawal" from Iraq, Times' reporters Peter Baker and Thom Shanker note that "Even after August 2010 (the target date for withdrawal) as many as 50,000 of the 142,000 troops now in Iraq would remain."

Obama says he intends to withdraw the remaining 50,000 "by 2011 in accordance with a strategic agreement negotiated by President George W. Bush before he left office," (1) but has carefully chosen his words "to avoid a firm commitment." (2) Intending to withdraw is different from committing to withdraw, and is reminiscent of the Bush administration's talk of aspirational goals, as in: I aspire to do something, but that doesn't mean I will.

Obama, the February 26 New York Times article continued,"plans to seek more money for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan from a separate fund outside the Pentagon's base budget, which will also grow beyond the 2009 spending plan of $513 billion. The separate 'war costs' budget proposal for 2010 could reach $130 billion to $140 billion, officials said."

These are hardly the actions of a president preparing to wind down the war, but are entirely in keeping with the actions of a president whose country is structurally compelled to pursue an aggressive foreign policy.

"Word of Mr. Obama's impending decision generated little of the anger that has flavored the Iraq debate for years," The New York Times' reporters noted. "Justin Ruben, executive director of MoveOn.org, a group that has strongly opposed the war, said activists were willing to give Mr. Obama the benefit of the doubt."

"'People have confidence that the president is committed to ending the war'," Mr. Ruben said. "'This is basically what he promised in the election.'"

What Obama promised and what people think he promised are not often the same. But even in the face of Obama acting against what people thought he promised, morons like Ruben are willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. In the divide between those selling you a bill of goods, and those being suckered, Obama sits on one side and Ruben on the other. Or is Ruben on Obama's side? Is he the confederate who shouts from the crowd, "I'll take ten of those," after the snake oil salesman finishes his spiel on his amazing elixir that cures cancer, heart disease, flagging libido and the fleas?

It should be noted that plans for a stay-behind-force of around 50,000 troops were in the works under the Bush administration — another brick in the wall of evidence showing there are no foreign policy discontinuities of significance between Republican and Democrat administrations. Regime change in Iraq was official policy under the Clinton administration and the permanent military occupation of Iraq is as much a fixture of Obama's foreign policy as it was of Bush's. Indeed, that Obama has chosen to retain the Bush team's Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates (who has served under seven previous presidents (3)) and Generals Petraeus and Odierno, shows he has not only "decided not to challenge the fundamental strategic orientation" of the Bush administration, but that he has chosen not to break to with the US policy of permanent military aggression. Obama's carry-overs from the Bush administration will "oversee and manage the Iraq occupation" and "the widening U.S war in Afghanistan and the aerial assaults on Pakistan." (4) Nothing has changed.

That Obama is carrying on in the traditions of previous US presidents should come as no surprise. What matters are not the personnel in Washington, and whether the president is black, brown, yellow, red, white, liberal or conservative, but the systemic imperatives that structure US policy and the interests of the corporate class whose wealth and connections are used to place people with the right politics in senior state positions.

1. Peter Baker, "With pledges to troops and Iraqis, Obama details pullout," The New York Times, February 28, 2009.

2. ANSWER coalition response to President Obama's Iraq Speech of Friday, February 27.

3. "Iraq: Will Obama's 'change' be more of the same?" Proletarian, Issue 28 (February 2009)

4. ANSWER coalition response







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