The Trouble With Murtha
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
It has been
sad to see how hastily the antiwar movement gets excited about the
utterly unexcitable Democrats. From John Kerry to John Murtha, we’ve
been jobbed by the best of ‘em this past year and a half.
Many who oppose
this war have latched onto Rep. Murtha’s call to change the course
in Iraq. It sounds nice to be sure. Changing the course is absolutely
desired by the antiwar movement. Bush and the rest of the hawks
in Washington have done nothing but chant a nauseous "stay
the course" mantra, so not surprisingly Murtha’s sudden entrance
into the debate has been greeted with open arms and wet smooches.
Rep. Murtha
may be calling for something a bit different than the neo-con’s
Iraq plan, but that doesn’t mean it’s all that.
Murtha, a respected
war veteran who championed the Iraq invasion from its inception,
is calling for an exit of troops from Iraq. But don’t be fooled,
he won’t be bringing them home any time soon. Rather, what
Rep. Murtha is really calling for is a "redeployment"
of US armed forces.
Murtha’s stance
is not withdrawal as it should be. What he is calling for is not
immediate, either. To put it bluntly: Murtha’s proposal is not in
the least bit worthy of the "antiwar" movements’ hearty embrace.
If you’ve had
the misfortune of tuning into Murtha’s latest press conferences
or TV showcases these past few weeks, you would not have heard him
utter the word "withdrawal" not a once did the word
turn off his seasoned political tongue. Instead what you would have
heard was "redeployment" over and again.
As the antiwar
movement calls for the troops to come home now, Murtha has quite
a different suggestion of what to do with them, and redeployment
is just a cover word for a greater war agenda.
According to
a policy report titled "Strategic Redeployment: A Progressive Plan
for Iraq and the Struggle Against Violent Extremists," put out by
the Center for American Progress, which Rep. Murtha supports, redeployment
isn’t all that better than staying the course:
"As redeployments
begin, the remaining forces in Iraq would focus on our core missions:
completing the training of Iraqi forces; improving border security;
providing logistical and air support to Iraqi security forces engaged
in battles against terrorists and insurgents; serving as advisors
to Iraqi units; and tracking down terrorists and insurgent leaders
with smaller, more nimble Special Forces units operating jointly
with Iraqi units...
"By the
end of 2007, the only US military forces in Iraq would be a small
Marine contingent to protect the US embassy, a small group of military
advisors to the Iraqi Government, and counterterrorist units that
works closely with Iraqi security forces. This presence, along with
the forces in Kuwait and at sea in the Persian Gulf area will be
sufficient to conduct strikes coordinated with Iraqi forces against
any terrorist camps and enclaves that may emerge and deal with any
major external threats to Iraq ... 14,000 troops would be positioned
nearby in Kuwait and as part of a Marine expeditionary force located
offshore in the Persian Gulf to strike at any terrorist camps and
enclaves and guard against any major acts that risk further destabilizing
the region."
It
is just more of the same and the antiwar movement should in no way
get excited about Murtha’s offering. He still wants US bases in
Iraq and still believes the US or rather Halliburton should
lead the way of reconstruction efforts in the battered land. And
nope, the troops won’t come home; they’ll just be transferred from
one imperialist venture to the next.
Rep.
Murtha may be a war veteran, but that doesn’t mean he ought to be
the antiwar movement’s knight in shining armor.
December
6, 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. You can order a copy at a discounted
through Josh’s blog.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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