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Untitled Document
by Stephen Lendman
The US electorate sent a clear, unequivocal message in the November mid-term elections. End the Iraq war and bring home the troops. Many supporting war in the 109th Congress lost out to more moderate voices taking over their seats because voters want change and expect new faces to deliver starting with the top issue on voters' minds in recent polls - Iraq. A majority of the public demands it, protests and heated rhetoric continue building over it, and the Congress is about to disappoint again proving getting into war is easy but even an act of Congress can't get us out because doing nothing is less risky than taking a stand against the prevailing view in Washington.
So the best this Congress can offer is non-binding stuff with no meaning and a wishy binding proposal rolled out March 8 guaranteeing support for the war with billions more spending than the administration wants. It also sets a timetable for partial withdrawal far enough in the future to be laughable. It proves again expecting elections to change things in Washington is like betting on an early end to winter in Chicago. Hope springs eternal but never fails to disappoint.
The House proved it February 16 sending a pathetic non-binding no-action message repudiating the administration's decision to "surge" more troops to Iraq showing its spirit lay in its rhetoric, not in its actions where it counts. The floor language was long, loud and toothless with pieties from House Speaker Pelosi saying "We owe our troops a course of action in Iraq that is worthy of their sacrifice" but failing to provide one. So much for resolve. The Senate was even more non-binging than the House failing for second time February 17 even to pass a procedural measure to allow for a full vote on a resolution opposing more troops guaranteed to make things worse as they're sent. Once again with chips on the line, both Houses of Congress show party member profiles in courage are as rare as ones with honor and integrity or like finding a friend in a city Harry Truman once complained about saying if you want one in Washington, "get a dog."
Politics, Washington-style proves again campaign promises are empty,
the criminal class is bipartisan, and the atmosphere is charged with
empty rhetoric and business as usual. Instead of ending the war,
Democrats propose continued war with more funding in new legislation
sounding like an old Miller Lite commercial. Their plan is drafted to
sound good, but not be ful-filling as it won't work and won't pass both
Houses or override a presidential veto signaled by White House
spokesman Dan Bartlett saying...."it's safe to say it's a nonstarter
for the president." So much for Democrat intentions, good or otherwise.
The new legislation calls for withdrawing US combat troops beginning no
later than 120 days following passage of legislation to be completed by
September 1, 2008 in the House version and suggests March 31, 2008 only
as a goal in the Senate proposal. It also calls for George Bush to
certify Iraq's "government" is progressing toward established
"benchmarks" July 1 and October 1 leaving that judgment to a president
always claiming progress in the face of clear evidence on the ground
proving otherwise.
Left out of the proposal is what Democrats like John Murtha (no dove)
and other so-called "moderates" in the party wanted in it to prevent
further escalation of war:
-- A call for a political, not military solution to the conflict.
-- Changing the military's mission to training, logistical support and "target(ing) anti-terrorism operations."
-- Requiring the Pentagon to abide by combat readiness and training
standards to include proper equipment and enough time for recuperation.
-- Language prohibiting no further war funding after September 1, 2008.
-- Mandating deployment extensions not exceed 365 days for the Army and
210 days for Marine units. Unmentioned is why should there be any let
alone what right have we to be there in the first place.
-- On March 12 the Democrat leadership backed off further announcing
their proposal will exclude any limitation on Bush's unilateral right
to attack Iran, including with nuclear weapons, bowing to the demands
of the Israeli Lobby and Republican hawks.
When it emerges in final form, legislation from both Houses will be
another lesson in Politics 101 - same old, same old meaning both
parties in both Houses support imperialism on the march, and Congress
will do nothing to stop it, rhetoric aside intended only to soothe,
comfort and again deceive the electorate.
This proposal gives George Bush unrestricted power to continue waging
war masquerading beneath rhetoric to curtail him. It provides
near-unlimited continued funding giving him cover in the name of
national security to act as he pleases, placing no restraint on his
deploying as many additional combat brigades and support troops as he
wants, with no restrictions on how long they'll remain. It also allows
an undetermined number of US forces to stay in Iraq in perpetuity the
way they still are in Germany, Japan and South Korea proving when
America shows up anywhere we're not leaving - ever.
Congressional Democrats have also larded their bills with funding for
Afghanistan, relocation of US troops from bases in Europe and Asia,
homeland security, veterans' health care (far too little), farm
disaster aid, Gulf Coast recovery and flu pandemic preparation in the
usual kind of hodge-podge legislation always coming from Congress
likely to add still more provisions costing more billions in its final
form. In hopes of getting enough votes for passage, this and other
small print pork ad-ons lard the bills the usual way things are done on
Capitol Hill. No need to guess who picks up the tab.
Congressional Authority to Wage or End Wars
Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution authorizes only Congress to
declare war even though since 1941 it deferred that authority
unconstitutionally to the president. Congress also has power to end
wars. What it lacks is backbone stiff enough to do it by cutting off
funding because it alone controls the federal purse strings. Article I,
Section 7, Clause I says: "All bills for raising Revenue shall
originate in the House of Representatives; but the Senate may propose
or concur with amendments as on other Bills." Either House may
originate an appropriations bill although the House claims sole
authority to do it. Either House may amend bills of any kind including
revenue and appropriations ones. Congress may have trouble rescinding
funding already approved, but there's no disputing its power to
withhold future amounts without which wars end and troops are withdrawn.
Congressional appropriation power is the key. In the House it resides
in the Appropriations Committee and in the Senate with the Committee on
Appropriations both charged with the power given it by Article 1,
Section 9, Clause 7 of the Constitution saying: "No money shall be
drawn from the treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by
law; and a regular statement and account of receipts and expenditures
of all public money shall be published from time to time."
This language means only Congress has constitutional power of the purse
it alone can authorize by laws both Houses must pass. That includes the
federal budget in which spending for wars and all other discretionary
and mandatory categories are included (like servicing the federal
debt). Only Congress can fund them, and no funding means no spending
meaning Congress alone can end the Iraq war if it wishes. Cut off the
funds, war and occupation end, and troops come home with or without
presidential approval - or at least that's how it's supposed to work
and has in the past.
How Congress Ended the Vietnam War
Cutting off funds finally ended the Vietnam war after Congress was
mostly deferential to presidential authority throughout the 1960s and
early 1970s. In 1964, it granted Lyndon Johnson broad authority to use
force and provided funding for it. Still, unlike today, some bold
legislators then publicly challenged the administration applying some
but inadequate budgetary pressure. An early critic was Senator Frank
Church who said early on sending troops to Vietnam would be a "hopeless
entanglement, the end of which is difficult to see." Others in Congress
agreed but voiced it privately. They included noted senators like
William Fulbright, Albert Gore Sr. (the former vice-president's
father), Stuart Symington and Majority Leader Mike Mansfield.
Even Lyndon Johnson was conflicted about the war early on, had doubts
on what he was getting into, and privately expressed them in May, 1964
to his best Senate friend Richard Russell in taped Oval Office
conversations. He wanted advice about the "Vietnam thing," Russell
called the "damn worse mess I ever saw" warning we weren't ready to
send troops to fight a jungle war. He told Johnson if the option was
sending over Americans or get out "I'd get out" and the territory
wasn't a "damn bit" important.
That was three months before the fateful Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
empowered the president to wage war without congressional approval
which he did while believing and saying the war was unwinnable. It
ruined his presidency, shortened his life, and ended it a disgraced,
defeated man who once was bigger-than-life as Senate majority leader
and then President.
While still in office, the war deteriorated and influential
congressional Democrats used their investigatory power to force
contentious but ineffective public debate. It began as early as 1966 in
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chaired by William Fullbright
who no longer could conceal his private opposition to a war he opposed.
Hearings went on forcing the administration to face up to budgetary
consequences of war and peacetime social program priorities at a time
Johnson's Great Society meant something and included his War on Poverty
that would be an unimaginable priority under George Bush.
In 1968, Johnson accepted a $6 billion budget cut in exchange for a tax
surcharge to curb growing inflation that wasn't enough to keep it from
getting out of hand later on. He went along with powerful Democrats
concerned enough about a "guns and butter" economy to reduce some of
the former for their more important domestic agenda. That's impossible
today under George Bush and a bipartisan Congress committed to
shredding the nation's social safety net for reckless "global war on
terrorism (GWOT)" spending meaning wars without end and big profits for
their corporate paymaster allies.
Johnson's Great Society had different ideas that continued under
Richard Nixon under whom most people forget capital punishment was
halted, abortion was legalized, EPA and OSHA were established,
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) was created, and the first
large-scale integration of public schools in the South began along with
normalizing relations with China. Nixon was bad, but not all bad.
But he was baddest of all on Vietnam (not Watergate) as war continued
under the Nixon Doctrine. It included the secret war on Cambodia
killing hundreds of thousands leading to the rise of the Khmer Rouge
Gerald Ford supported as an anti-Soviet ally ignoring their scorched
earth policies against their own people. It also continued massive
bombing and Vietnamization to let South Vietnamese troops do our
killing for us so US forces could withdraw just like today's plan is to
let Iraqis do our fighting and dying while we train them inside secured
permanent super-bases we won't give up no matter what, or so we say as
we did in Vietnam till we did.
Nonetheless, under Johnson and Nixon, Congress reasserted its power of
the purse incrementally. It was mostly political posturing in the
1960s, but by June 30, 1970 the Church-Cooper amendment (attached to a
supplemental aid bill) passed stipulating no further spending for
soldiers, combat assistance, advisors, or bombing operations in
Cambodia. It was the first congressional budgetary act limiting funding
for the war. Nixon ignored it but others followed leading to the key
Church-Clifford Case 1972 Senate amendment attached to foreign aid
legislation to end all funding for US military operations in Southeast
Asia except for withdrawal subject to the release of prisoners of war.
It was the first time either House passed legislation to end all war
funding. It was defeated in the House but showed anti-war forces
strengthening that in time would prevail.
They finally did in June, 1973 when Congress passed the Church-Case
amendment ending all funding after August 15. Congress then overrode a
presidential veto passing the War Powers Act (still the law) that year
limiting presidential power by requiring the chief executive henceforth
to consult Congress before authorizing troop deployments for extended
periods. Unlike today, Congress began taking its check and balancing
role seriously enough to act, if slowly, to curtail presidential
authority and assert its own with the most important power it has - of
the purse that forced Richard Nixon to end the Vietnam war. It can do
it again today as then but so far shows little inclination or courage
with few and rare exceptions, one being a modest effort by Senator Russ
Feingold who detailed his position on the Senate floor even though now
he's gone wishy on it.
Senator Feingold's Position on Ending the Iraq War
First the good news. Everyone in Congress knows the law, but Feingold
had it in mind in remarks delivered February 16, 2007 on the Senate
floor saying people want the war ended, and Congress should stop
funding it. On January 31, he introduced the Iraq Redeployment Act of
2007 to force the president to redeploy US forces there by cutting off
war funding. He said "We must end our involvement in this tragic and
misguided war. The President will not do so. Therefore, Congress must
act." The same senator was one of 23 in the upper chamber voting
against H.J. Resolution 114 on October 11, 2002 authorizing George Bush
to use US Armed Forces against Iraq. On August 17, 2005, he was the
first senator calling for withdrawing US forces from the country and a
timetable to do it suggesting a completion date of December 31, 2006.
He further stated April 27, 2006 he would move to amend emergency
appropriations funding of $106.5 billion requiring troop withdrawal
instead. He also introduced a March 13, 2006 Senate resolution to
censure George Bush for illegal wiretapping in violation of the 1978
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requiring court approval
the president never sought.
Feingold got nowhere, but at least he tried even though his record
isn't lilly pure. His end of February comments showed it saying
congressional Democrats are beginning to move in the right direction on
Iraq. He knew then and now that's false and saying it tarnished his
otherwise good intentions. He also praised the flawed March 8 Democrat
leadership proposal to continue funding wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
with legislative provisions for troop withdrawals by 2008 that's
wishful thinking at best.
Nonetheless, Feingold stood tall earlier as the only senator voting
against passage of the USA Patriot Act in October, 2001. He also fought
its renewal and is now part of a bipartisan congressional minority
demanding lawmakers defend our constitutional rights because those on
Capitol Hill swore an oath to do it. Further, he opposes the
president's right to "surge" new troops to Iraq, believes the notion is
flawed and unconvincing, and feels congressional action must go beyond
nonbinding resolutions. It must include Congress using "its power of
the purse (not about) cutting off funds for troops (but) cutting off
funds for war." He rightly believes Congress has constitutional power
to do it and wants a strategy for getting them out to be redeployed
"within the context of the global fight against al-Quaida....and other
international terrorist organizations."
Indeed Feingold isn't true blue, but at least he's got it half right
even if he sadly misstates the terrorist threat that's a home-based
state-sponsored one inciting people around the world we attack to
strike back. Ending the threat is simple as the senator knows. Stop
attacking them, and they won't hit back, but keep it up as we do
relentlessly, and it guarantees eventual harsh blowback at home and
abroad certain to get worse and may become catastrophic in US cities if
the administration pursues a plan to attack Iran, with or without
nuclear weapons.
Is There An Edward Boland in the House....or the Senate?
Readers may forget his name but should recall his amendment during the
1980s Contra wars when the Reagan administration secretly escalated
them. It led to the Iran-Contra scandal in 1986 involving illegal
administration arms sales to Iran, then illegally diverting funds from
them to US-armed Contra forces adding to what CIA supplied them with
through illegal drugs trafficking.
In 1982, the House passed the Boland Amendment as a rider to the
Defense Appropriations Act of 1983. It cut off CIA and other
intelligence agency Contras funding used against Daniel Ortega's
Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) that led the popular 1979
revolution ousting the hated US-backed Somoza dictatorship. The bill
became law because politicians from both parties were outraged by
Ronald Reagan's secret Central American wars undertaken without
notifying congressional oversight committees as required. The president
went around the restriction, got in trouble doing it, and only escaped
criminal responsibility when the Tower (investigating) Commission
absolved him other than to blame him for not better supervising his
subordinates.
What Congress did in 1982 and during the Vietnam war, it can do now
with full constitutional authority backing it. With an administration
possibly heading for nuclear war with Iran, Congress must head it off,
defund the Iraq war and end our ill-fated adventurism in the Middle
East. Some in high places want it, but it remains to be seen what's
next and whether a majority in Congress will ever put their legislative
powers where their rhetoric is, act before it's too late, and be able
to override a certain presidential veto from an administration bent on
wars without end for goals impossible to achieve.
Is There An International Lawyer in the House or Senate?
None are needed as lawmakers are duty bound to be law-readers to know
and understand the Constitution they swore to uphold "so help them God"
who may not sympathize with those using the Almighty's name in vain.
That includes knowing Article Six stipulating "This Constitution and
the Laws of the United States....and all Treaties made (to which the
country is a signatory) shall be the supreme Law of the Land (and) The
Senators and Representatives (and) Members of....State Legislatures,
and all executive and judicial Officers....are bound by Oath....to
support this Constitution (and everything in it so help them or be
criminally liable)."
That includes the aforementioned treaties of which the UN Charter is
one to which this country is a signatory and bound by its provisions
including its Chapter VII. It allows the Security Council to "determine
the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act
of aggression" and if necessary take military or other action to
"restore international peace and stability." It permits a nation to use
force only under two conditions: when authorized to do it by the
Security Council or under Article 51 allowing the "right of individual
or collective self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a
Member....until the Security Council has taken measures to maintain
international peace and security."
No nation attacked this one on 9/11, and no Security Council resolution
authorized the US to go to war against Afghanistan or Iraq. In both
instances, US military actions were willful and malicious acts of
illegal aggression the Nuremberg Charter called the "supreme
international crime" above all others making every member of Congress
supporting them criminally liable along with George Bush, but who'll
hold them to account. It's why no one in Congress ever mentions what
should be central to any "debate" on the war and why no mainstream
journalists worthy of their profession have courage to remind them.
There's no reminder either that Article One, Section 8, Clause 11 of
the Constitution gives Congress alone power to declare war so
presidents never have sole authority to do it. It's how the Founders
wanted it as James Madison wrote in 1793 that the "fundamental doctrine
of the Constitution....to declare war is fully and exclusively vested
in the legislature." And George Mason stated during the constitutional
convention the president "is not safely to be trusted with" the power
to declare war. Sadly it hasn't worked out that way. The president and
Congress only observed the supreme law of the land five times in the
nation's history, the last being in December, 1941 following Japan's
attack on Pearl Harbor.
Following WW II, Harry Truman criminally broke the law setting a
post-war precedent his successors followed, and no Congress intervened
to stop them. It made every post-war president criminally liable but
none more so than George Bush and all in Congress conspiring with him.
Following 9/11, the president rightfully called the attacks acts of
terrorism (whoever was responsible) as they are under US law even
though international law provides no generally accepted definition of
this crime. They weren't acts of war, and calling them that crossed the
line breaking the law as only nations can attack one another, not
individuals. No evidence existed then or now Afghanistan was behind
them nor did Saddam pose an imminent threat justifying our aggression.
George Bush tried and failed getting legal Security Council cover for
both wars. He then tried getting it from Congress, couldn't get his
preferred formal declarations and had to settle for joint-War Powers
resolution authorizations to protect the country against international
terrorism he chose to do by waging illegal wars against two countries.
The result today is a nation embroiled in two unwinnable wars some high
officials and observers feel are the greatest strategic blunders in the
nation's history. Combined they may also end up our greatest crime
surpassing in lives lost the mass carnage we inflicted on Southeast
Asians. That's the legacy of George Bush about to get a renewed lease
on life to continue his reign of terror on the greater Middle East for
another two years in spite of mass public opposition to it worldwide.
The people have spoken, but imperialism marches on aiming next at
target Iran with nuclear weapons cleared for use if an attack is
launched. If they are in any future conflict, every member of Congress
will be criminally liable to indictment by the International Criminal
Court (ICC) in the Hague according to University of Chicago professor
Jorge Hirsch even if they're authorized without congressional approval.
Hirsch states why:
-- the act will be one of "most serious crimes of international concern."
-- Congress funded the weapons' creation paying the military to use them.
-- Congress knew having these weapons means they may be criminally used.
-- Congress can act preventively now to prevent these weapons being used. Failure to do so is a crime.
-- If they are, at least some in Congress "actively aided, abetted and assisted in the commission of the crimes."
Hirsch explained further that Congress has "constitutional power to
legislate" conditions, limits and restrictions over if, how and when
the president can authorize military use of nuclear weapons as
commander in chief. Even more damning, he points out, is the Bush
Doctrine policy illegally proclaiming the right in various national
security documents to wage preemptive wars using all weapons in our
arsenal including nuclear ones against any country or force the
administration feels threatens the national security even if it isn't
true.
If Iran or any other country is so-designated and attacked with nuclear
weapons, Hirsch points out every Western European signatory country to
the ICC will be obliged to arrest any congressional member on their
soil surrendering them to Court authority in the Hague to stand trial
since none of these nations has bilateral "Article 98 agreements" with
the US granting immunity to US citizens.
This needn't happen if Congress acts responsibly and legislatively
prevents George Bush from waging war with Iran, nuclear or otherwise.
Warning the president against acting without congressional approval
won't stop him any more than wishing will. George Bush does what he
wants, and statements from leading Democrat presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton and Speaker Pelosi that he must get congressional
authority first are plain wrong, misguided, stupid, and now irrelevant
as Democrat leaders changed their mind and will say nothing. Only an
act of Congress has a chance, and unless the 110th body passes one in
clear strong language it's practically telling the president do as you
please and ignore what we say which he may do anyway with a stroke of a
"signing statement" erasing whatever Congress legislates.
If that happens and the US attacks Iran, all bets are off on what's
next with impossible to predict consequences that won't be good for the
West and especially Washington. It will expand the Iraq conflict to a
regional one, inflame the entire Muslim world and unleash an
unpredictable backlash fallout from a desperate strategy doomed to
fail. Further, it would be more proof of joint
administration-congressional complicity demonstrating again the
criminal class in Washington is bipartisan, but who already doesn't
know that.
It's also no secret corporate interests thrive on wars and fund the
parties to wage them. It's thus unlikely Congress will bite the
generous hands feeding it unless the price to pay starts exceeding the
benefits received. Getting reelected is top concern, but fearing a
shakled trip to the Hague might focus some minds as well. Members of
Congress agreeing to nuclear war against Iran will henceforth be unable
to travel freely in Western Europe knowing their final destination
might not be what they had in mind or their quarters the kind they're
used to for a stay longer than planned for a fate usually imposed on
others.
With this in mind, we learned from Secretary Rice on February 27, the
US agreed to participate in an international conference with Iran and
Syria on Iraq with the agenda limited to Iraqi security sure to include
Washington's accusations about support for anti-US resistance. It would
be foolhardy imagining Washington's offer of engagement is
well-intentioned as this administration has an unblemished record of
speaking with forked tongue, so nothing it's up to should be taken at
face value.
What is known is that first round talks were held March 10 in Baghdad
at a sub-ministerial level with no announcement at their conclusion
other than agreeing to the formation of several low-level regional
working parties with a further thus far unscheduled conference to be
held at the foreign ministerial level at a location to be decided. They
won't be bilateral unless Tehran agrees to abandon its
uranium-enrichment program and Iran and Syria satisfy Washington's
claim they've stopped supporting anti-US resistance in Iraq and
Lebanon. Attending participants in this exercise are members of the
Arab League, Organization of Islamic Unity, G 8 members, and the five
permanent Security Council members who all together will likely achieve
nothing.
The talks represent no softening of Washington's stance that may be
hardened as they proceed with US repeating unproved claims Iranian
elements support anti-American forces in Iraq meaning ultimatums will
follow, no compromise is possible, and tensions in the region will end
up further heightened. That's where things now stand following the
Baghdad session at which senior State Department official David
Satterfield accused Iran of supplying weapons to Shia militias claiming
Washington has evidence to prove it without showing any. At the same
time, back home US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
Nicholas Burns was pressing ahead with efforts to get the Security
Council to impose harsher sanctions on Iran because it's pursuing its
legal right to develop commercial nuclear power.
How this is perceived and portrayed at home has a lot to do with what's
going on. The administration may use the talks to mollify critics
giving Congress more leverage to pass Bush's requested $93 billion Iraq
supplemental funding request Democrats upped to $120 billion + with
unenforceable add-on provisions to be debated in both Houses. Without a
touch of irony, it's business as usual in Washington with the Pentagon
readying a "shock and awe" attack against a country administration
officials are engaging in phony diplomacy no one on either side is
fooled by......and the beat goes on.
So much for good intentions from an administration having none and a
Congress matching it misstep by misstep. It's clear from the Democrat
leadership with most others in the party acquiescing, their public
posturing notwithstanding. The congressional Dems and their
presidential aspirants have tacitly or explicitly kept the "military
option" against Iran open meaning they'll not oppose administration
plans to launch an all out attack if it's ordered. That's despite
Senate Majority Leader Reid's March 2 claim he would support
legislation barring an attack on Iran without congressional authority
he's now backed off on.
The only issue Democrats pathetically raised is whether the
administration or Congress can authorize it, but now we know a matter
that serious won't be part of the Democrats' final legislative
proposal. Also ignored is the fundamental issue that launching an
attack will be a further act of illegal aggression against a country
posing no threat to us or its neighbors and therefore must not be
allowed to happen. Democrat presidential aspirants feel otherwise and
have so stated it as Senator Clinton did at the late January AIPAC
annual convention saying: "In dealing with this (Iran) threat....no
option can be taken off the table." Senator Obama agreed saying on
CBS's 60 Minutes: "I think we should keep all options on the table."
And former senator John Edwards showed his resolve at Israel's Herzliya
Conference in January saying: "To ensure that Iran never gets nuclear
weapons, we need to keep all options on the table." Sounds like they
all have the same script writer, and they surely deliver their party's
message that Democrats are as eager to attack Iran as are Republicans
and won't stand against it if George Bush so orders.
What's Next from Congress
Rhetoric and wishy proposals with no chance of passage are once thing,
real bipartisan action with teeth another, and so far there's none from
either House with key senators and congressmen voicing the usual
boilerplate about not wanting to cut off funding the troops because we
have to support them. Their kind of support means letting them die or
get maimed and be disabled for life for imperialism on the march. Some
support.
A less than credible crumb of it came from Speaker Pelosi's backhanded
pronouncement she'll link new funding requests to strict standards of
resting, training and equipping the troops now off the table. Earlier,
she and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid wrote the president that
"thousands of the new troops (sent over) will apparently not have the
armor and equipment they need to perform the mission and reduce the
likelihood of casualties (and that problem needs correcting)." Now the
tactics have changed with the 2008 withdrawal proposal to damn the
torpedoes, full speed ahead and on with war till we win it.
Some proposals with echos of Richard Nixon's "peace with honor," his
being elected in 1968 as a "peace" candidate, and his hope history
would call him a "peacemaker" at the same time he was determined never
to be "the first president of the United States to lose a war." So his
policies ended up killing almost as many US forces as his predecessor
along with one to two million Southeast Asians during his watch alone
who never got to see the "peace" he promised except the one he sent
them to rest in. All the while Congress debated, and war continued
another 6 and a half years with serious funding cuts stalled until
1972. Even then, Richard Nixon continued waging war until the January
23, 1973 treaty was signed in Paris ending it and the last US troops
came out in March. War went on in the name of peace in the same spirit
coming from the White House and Congress today couched in terms of
supporting the troops and "spreading democracy."
George Bush says it and so do key Democrats like Speaker Pelosi and
Senate Majority Leader Reid as well Senate Armed Services Committee
Chairman, Carl Levin and Senate Foreign Relations Committe Chairman,
Joe Biden. Funding war will continue showing the one way to end it
won't be taken, and the best out of Congress is non-binding posturing
and the latest proposal to withdraw combat forces between March 31 and
September 1, 2008. The administration's response - it can barely
contain its contempt and continues doing as it pleases.
Democrats spoke but who's listening and acting. Levin and Biden
mentioned other congressional action, with no chance of passage,
including changing the Joint Resolution to Authorize the Use of United
States Armed Forces Against Iraq of October, 2002 whereby Congress
surrendered its authority to the Executive on the most important of all
constitutional powers presidents never should have. It followed the
even more outlandish joint House-Senate resolution passage of the
Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) of September, 18, 2001
authorizing "the use of United States Armed Forces against those
responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States."
It effectively gave George Bush carte blanche authority to attack any
nation he claims threatens national security on his say alone allowing
him to declare a state of permanent war that won't end in our lifetime
unless Congress stops it. So far it hasn't and shows no signs it will.
Whatever it does, it faces a Bush veto meaning any chance for
legislative relief needs a two-thirds majority that's practically
impossible on any issue opposing the president, especially as beneath
the rhetoric Democrats support Bush wars as much as Bush does.
All this will be part of the interesting "debate" on the Democrats'
March 8 proposal including their proposed $120 billion and rising
supplemental funding to keep the war machine oiled and running plus all
the added pork. The president already wants and should eaily get a
nearly half trillion dollar defense budget with $142 billion more in
emergency 2008 supplemental funding for Iraq and Afghanistan and
anti-terrorism efforts that don't include additional funding for Bush's
planned troop "surge" to cost billions more. Combined, the funding from
2001 through 2008 raises the amount of war spending to over $690
billion eclipsing in current dollars Vietnam's war cost making Bush's
war second only in amount to what was spent on WW II.
But there's more, lots more. The total doesn't include the following:
-- An estimated $100 billion direct cost of the 9/11 attacks.
-- $66 billion to replace destroyed or unusable military equipment.
-- $125 billion in backlogged veterans' claims.
-- Unknown billions for CIA torture-prisons.
-- Multi-billions for homeland security (now budgeted at over $45
billion and rising) to keep a growing restive population in line with
hardball tactics like illegal spying, mass roundups and incarcerations,
and construction of secret US concentration camps for tens of thousands
of aliens and US citizens Bush may label "unlawful enemy combatants"
meaning lock-em-up and throw away the key.
-- And there's another major suppressed future expense: the hugely
underestimated cost to provide care alone for chronically sick, wounded
and disabled Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans Nobel laureate economist
Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard economist Linda Bilmes believe will be a
minimum $536 billion and may end up much higher. They arrived at the
number from their calculation of the number of wounded soldiers to each
one killed coming up with the astonishing ratio of 16 to 1 the result
of improved medical care and life-saving armor. They used data from the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) indicating 50,000 surviving
casualties from the wars and 200,000 veterans so far treated at VA
centers, 40% of whom incurred serious brain or spinal injuries,
amputations of one or more limbs, blindness, deafness, severe burns, or
other severe chronic injuries.
They also cited data from the brief Gulf war in which less than 150
Americans were killed noting 48.4% of its veterans sought medical care
and 44% filed disability claims, 88% of which were granted. That
amounts to an astonishing total of 611,729 Gulf war vets now getting
disability benefits, a large percentage suffering psychiatric illnesses
including post-traumatic stress disorder and depression - for a
campaign lasting six weeks with no occupation.
So far, it's known over one-third of returning Iraq and Afghanistan war
vets have already been diagnosed with similar conditions, and those
numbers are guaranteed eventually to skyrocket. Unlike the brief Gulf
war after which US forces withdrew, the total combat and support force
since 2001 is hugely larger - on the order of 1.5 million or more and
growing serving multiple deployments lasting a year or longer with
frequent extended tours of duty in all creating a looming epic human
calamity already unfolding that will explode in the out years.
Even the VA's Deputy Undersecretary for Health Frances Murphy is
concerned admitting there's now a 400,000 claims backlog resulting in
waiting lists of months in some cases "render(ing)....care virtually
inaccessible." The VA expects claims to reach 874,000 this year and
930,000 in 2008 which helps explain why care provided at Walter Reed
and other medical facilities deteriorated so badly and are now
appallingly inadequate and shameful.
It all adds up to what Stliglitz and Bilmes now estimate will be a cost
of $2.5 trillion or more for George Bush's wars having raised their
earlier estimate of around $2 trillion. It's a shocking indictment of
imperial recklessness and failure to achieve anything but build bottom
lines of corporate war-profiteers by looting the Treasury courtesy of
US taxpayers supplying the loot. Stiglitz believes the economic damage
to the country is severe enough to cause a global economic depression
within two years unless major changes are made in how the economy is
managed going forward.
It's starts with defunding wars and addressing huge unrepayable
deficits from them. It also means Congress finally confronting a
president crazed with power and on a doomed imperial mission for more
of it that will destroy the nation unless he's stopped. Congress
finally confronted Richard Nixon ending his misadventure he never would
have on his own. But before they did, debate and posturing went on, and
real action only came incrementally while the war went on for 11 bloody
years following the August,1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution that
escalated it. It continued even though it was repealed six years later
in May, 1970 and replaced by the 1973 War Powers Act limiting the
president's power to wage war without congressional approval. The law
is still in force, requires presidents consult Congress before and
after engaging in hostilities, and amounts to much ado about nothing
for all the good it does stopping George Bush from doing what he wants
as long as Congress only talks and won't act.
It's time Congress took its sworn oath seriously and began undoing its
lack of resolve since 9/11 that changed everything. But even if it
does, it remains to be seen if a president thinking the Constitution is
"just a goddamned piece of paper" will take it seriously or just go
around it the way he's ignored adverse Supreme Court rulings and gotten
away with it. The times keep getting more interesting with dangers
becoming so great we'd better hope what Congress lacks in courage it
makes up for in fear before letting war in the Middle East get to the
next perilous stage meaning out-of-control and too late to matter.
In the meantime, the same forces are combining today that helped end
the Vietnam conflict and in time may have the same result in the Middle
East - a redoubtable Iraqi resistance to occupation, mass anti-war
sentiment at home reaching the halls of Congress, and a deteriorating
American fighting force with growing signs of internal rebellion
against war with no end and for no purpose. What administration and
congressional hawks won't do and Democrats are too ineffective or timid
doing, the people of Iraq, America and our fighting men and women may
do for them leaving them no other choice. The lessons of history are
clear. No greater force exists than the will of millions of angry
determined people set on achieving what governments won't do for them.
We may now be heading for that moment of truth that may be the way to
end Bush's wars and anyone after him with the same intentions. Stay
tuned and never lose hope.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and tune in each
Saturday to the Steve Lendman News and Information Hour on The Micro
Effect.com at noon US central time.

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