Democratic Hawks
The Avian Flu of the Antiwar Movement
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
They
won’t pull out troops from Iraq and they won’t vote for any strategy
that calls for immediate removal of United States occupation forces.
Of course it took a Republican to put forth an "out-now"
resolution, which was supposedly intended to split the Democrats.
But the vote in the House late Friday didn’t slice a wedge in the
Democrat Party on the contrary, it united them behind a bloody
and illegal occupation in Iraq. Of course this could well have been
the Republican strategy all along.
Only
three Democrats voted in support of the Republicans’ Iraq withdraw
proposal: Representatives Wexler, Serrano and McKinney. And their
point was well made. They want the troops home now and they don’t
care who wrote up the legislation or the reasons why they did it.
It was the right move to make. If US troops were pulled out tomorrow,
Iraq would be a safer place for all of us.
A
handful of House Democrats did take the podium to express their
seething disgust over the Republicans’ political feat. Talk is cheap,
however. Votes are what count. If there ever was a subject that
should gash the thin-skinned Democratic Party, it’d be the Iraq
war. But as the House vote verified, the Democrats don’t want US
troops home now, let alone in six months as Rep. John Murtha proposed
last Thursday.
Murtha,
a veteran war hawk who championed the Iraq invasion from its inception,
announced at a teary eyed press conference that he wished to withdraw
the nearly 160,000 US troops in Iraq "at the earliest predictable
date." Recent polls indicate that the majority of Americans agree
with Murtha’s call to pull out US forces, which wasn’t even close
to an "out-now" proposition. Regardless, the Democrats
took cover as Rep. Murtha began making headlines with his remarks.
"I
don't support immediate withdrawal," Senate Minority Leader Harry
Reid released in a statement following Murtha’s call to exit troops.
"Mr.
Murtha speaks for himself," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi
gasped as reporters asked for her take on the matter.
The
Democratic leadership in Washington was making it crystal clear
that they won’t be cut and running from Iraq but from Murtha and
the movement that prompted his change of heart.
The
Democrats, however, are proving to be the Avian Flu of the antiwar
movement. They are willing to divvy out just enough fodder in hopes
of luring in the antiwar crowd, and then they strike.
First
it was the Senate lock out, which ended up being nothing more than
a charade masked as opposition. After all, debating pre-war intel
is a non-issue what we need to be worried about is how to bring
our troops home now. But as we well know, the Democrats have
neither a plan nor the desire to bring them home anytime soon.
Senator
John Kerry and even Donald Rumsfeld are calling for a reduction
of US troops after December. But the troops they both want to bring
home are the ones they sent over to monitor Iraq elections in the
first place. Pulling them out afterward was the plan all along.
The Democrats, like the Republicans, still believe there is a mission
to be accomplished here. What this mission is, nobody knows.
US
presence in Iraq is only enflaming more anti-American sentiment
in the Middle East and worldwide. It’s only increasing potential
threats against the United States. Surely it can’t be democracy
the Democrats and Republicans want. If that were the case they’d
have yanked out troops months ago as Iraqis have overwhelmingly
declared that’s what they desire. No, this ongoing mission is only
about one thing: smug American pride. President Bush and his Democratic
enablers can’t admit that this war was waged for no reason whatsoever.
They can’t admit that all the lives lost have been for nothing.
November
21, 2005
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is the author of Left
Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, just published
by Common Courage Press. To learn more visit www.BrickBurner.org.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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