The position being articulated by Reps. Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters,
Lynn Woolsey and others in Congress is the one that the antiwar
movement should unite behind — to fully fund bringing the troops
home in a safe and orderly way, while ending the entire U.S.
occupation and war effort, by the end of 2007.
We’re urged to take solace from the fact that Washington’s debate has
shifted to “when” — rather than “whether” — the war should end. But the
end of the U.S. war effort could be deferred for many more years while
debates over “when” flourish and fester. This happened during the Vietnam
War, year after year, while death came to tens of
thousands more American soldiers and perhaps a million more
Vietnamese people.
Pelosi is speaker of the House, and Reid is majority leader of the
Senate. But neither speaks for, much less leads, the antiwar movement that
we need.
When you look at the practicalities of the situation, Pelosi and Reid
could be more accurately described as speaker and leader for the
war-management movement.
A historic tragedy is that the most hefty progressive organization,
MoveOn, seems to have wrapped itself around the political
sensibilities of Reid, Pelosi and others at the top of Capitol Hill
leadership. Deference to that leadership is a big mistake. We already have
a Democratic Party. Over time, a vibrant progressive group loses vibrance
by forfeiting independence and becoming a virtual appendage of party
leaders.
Last week, while MoveOn was sending out a mass e-mail to its 3.2
million members offering free bumper stickers urging “End This War,” the
MoveOn leadership was continuing its failure to back the efforts of the
Congressional Progressive Caucus for “a fully funded, and
systematic, withdrawal of U.S. soldiers and military contractors from Iraq.”
There are rationales for uniting behind practical measures, and
sometimes they make sense. But the MoveOn pattern has been unsettling and
recurring. Power brokerage is not antiwar leadership.
The U.S. Constitution and the federal courts are clear: Only through
the “power of the purse” can Congress end a war. It’s good to see
MoveOn churning out bumper stickers that advocate an end to the Iraq war
— but sad to see its handful of decision-makers failing to
support a measure to fund an orderly and prompt withdrawal from the war.
On Capitol Hill, most Democrats seem to have settled on a tactical
approach of simultaneously ratifying and deploring the continuation of the
war. The approach may or may not be savvy politics in a narrow sense of
gaining temporary partisan political advantage. But it is ultimately
destructive to refuse to do the one thing that the
Constitution empowers Congress to do to halt a U.S. war — stop
appropriating taxpayer money for it.
In retrospect, such congressional behavior during the Vietnam War —
while attracting sober approval from much of the era’s punditocracy —
ended up prolonging a horrific war that could have ended years
sooner. Now, as then, pandering to the news media and other powerful
pressures, most politicians are busy trying to pick “low-hanging
fruit” that turns out to be poisonous.
“Somehow this madness must cease,” Martin Luther King Jr. said 40
years ago about the Vietnam War. “We must stop now.”
Was the situation then essentially different from today? No.
“We are called to speak for the weak, for the voiceless, for victims
of our nation and for those it calls enemy,” King said. And: “We are now
faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted
with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and
history there is such a thing as being too late.”
When King denounced “the madness of militarism,” he wasn’t trying to
cozy up to the majority leader of the Senate or impress the House
speaker with how he could deliver support. He was speaking
truthfully, and he was opposing a war forthrightly. That was
imperative in 1967. It is imperative in 2007.
Norman Solomon’s book “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep
Spinning Us to Death” is out in paperback. For information, go to: www.normansolomon.com