Hillary
for President?
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
There really
is no way of getting around it. Senator Hillary Clinton may well
be future presidential material. From Manhattan to Hollywood, Hillary
Clinton is pocketing enormous amounts of cash for her reelection
campaign. Yet, Hillary is facing what seems to be fierce opposition
from within her own party, as well as from third parties here in
New York. The main reason candidates have signed up to challenge
Hillary is her position, er, non-position on the disgraceful
"war on terror."
Hillary, in
a letter to constituents last November, expressed her belief that
the war in Iraq shouldn't be "open-ended" but was clear that she
would never "pull out of Iraq immediately." She wrote that she wouldn't
accept any timetable for withdrawal and won't even embrace a "redeployment"
of U.S. troops along the lines of Rep. John Murtha.
"I take responsibility
for my vote, and I, along with a majority of Americans, expect the
president and his administration to take responsibility for the
false assurances, faulty evidence and mismanagement of the war,"
Clinton wrote in her lengthy letter that amounted to nothing short
of denial for her own culpability in the mess.
Sen. Clinton
soon after reiterated her position to a group of Democrats in Kentucky.
"The time has
come for the administration to stop serving up platitudes and present
a plan for finishing this war with success and honor," she said.
"I reject a rigid timetable that the terrorists can exploit, and
I reject an open timetable that has no ending attached to it."
Translation:
Clinton is all for an extended American stay in Iraq. She "takes
responsibility" for her vote on the war, but won't admit that it
was wrong. And of course, Clinton is still for "winning" this war.
Whatever that means.
In the same
letter, Clinton hoped contingents of U.S. soldiers would remain
in the region with "quick-strike capabilities. … This will help
us stabilize that new Iraqi government," she attested. "It will
send a message to Iran that they do not have a free hand in Iraq
despite their considerable influence and personal and religious
connections there."
Messages, I
guess, carry more weight when they are delivered at gunpoint. "Watch
out Tehran," Hillary seems to be declaring, "I'll strike quick."
Such neoconish attitudes have upset antiwar activists, and now many
are rallying 'round any alternative they can find to challenge Hillary
in her bid for reelection this year.
Jonathan Tasini,
who is running against Clinton in the New York Democratic primary,
is gaining the most visible support. His position on the Iraq war
is solid, as he wants all U.S. troops home now. Tasini also believes
that democracy in Iraq is a long way from developing and argues
that there will be no such thing in Iraq's future as long as the
U.S. stays the course. "[The] invasion of Iraq has created a theocracy,"
says Tasini. "The people of Iraq have the right to decide what law
they choose to follow."
The Green Party
is also tossing its antiwar weight into the ring with veteran antiwar
Green Howie Hawkins winning his party’s nomination. Hawkins still
has to gather enough signatures to get his party’s line on the ballot.
The Libertarian Party of New York recently nominated Jeff Russell,
who says he'd bring soldiers home as soon as possible, and the Socialist
Equity Party is running Bill Van Auken, who wants to bring U.S.
troops home now.
None of the
antiwar third-party candidates at this point in the campaign season
have any real name recognition or financial backing. Even so, Tasini
the Democrat does. Antiwar flyers plaster campuses throughout New
York City touting his challenge to Hillary, and his campaign is
being discussed on numerous antiwar blogs and e-mail discussion
lists. Tasini's drive may soon spark some real tension among antiwar
activists in New York, however, as many believe supporting Tasini
will fail the movement against the war and set up Clinton for a
2008 run for president.
For starters,
they contend that Tasini is still a Democrat, which means that if
he doesn't beat Hillary in September's primary election, he will
most likely endorse her campaign and hand over his antiwar funds
to the pro-war Democratic Party, something he denies. Another problem
is Tasini may not even appear on the Democrat’s ballot in September,
he still has to turn in 15,000 Democratic signatures before that
happens. And Hillary, despite her primary challenge, has already
accepted her party’s nomination in typical establishment style:
ignore any challenges and stay on message, no matter how misguided
it may be.
The Working
Families Party, the alleged labor party here in New York, endorsed
Hillary on June 3 over Tasini, even though the WFP was one of the
first third parties to oppose the Iraq invasion four years ago.
No wonder the Democrats take us for granted.
If the antiwar
movement is to truly take on Hillary this election season, we need
to challenge her all the way up to November and Tasini won’t cut
it. The majority of New Yorkers who oppose the Iraq war aren't even
Democrats and can't vote for Tasini in New York's closed primary
elections.
Supporting
another antiwar candidate or voting "none of the above" may be the
only way to hold Hillary Clinton accountable for her depraved Iraq
war stance on Election Day 2006.
Fortunately,
antiwar activists can all agree on one thing: Hillary Clinton doesn't
deserve our votes. And there are plenty of reasons why, including
her atrocious position on Israel and Palestine.
Sen. Clinton,
along with her husband Bill, paid a visit to Israel last fall. The
former President was a featured speaker at a mass rally that marked
the 10th anniversary of the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin. It was Hillary's second visit to Israel since she was elected
to office in 2000.
The senator
did manage to take time out of her voyage to meet with the then
semi-conscious Ariel Sharon to discuss "security matters." Hillary
also made her way to the great apartheid wall, which separates Palestine
from Israel. As of now, the barrier is nearing completion, and when
all is said and done the monstrosity will stretch to well over 400
miles in length.
Palestinians
rightly criticize the obtrusive wall on the grounds that it cuts
them off from occupied land in the West Bank. Thousands have also
been cut off from their jobs, schools, and essential farmland.
Hillary and
her Israeli allies don't get it. When you put powerless Palestinians
behind a jail-like wall where life in any real economic sense is
unattainable, you wreak pain and anguish, which in turn leads to
more anger and resentment toward Israel's brutal policies. Indeed,
the wall will not prove to be a deterrent to resistance, but an
incitement to defiance.
"This is not
against the Palestinian people," Clinton said as she gazed over
the massive wall. "This is against the terrorists. The Palestinian
people have to help to prevent terrorism. They have to change the
attitudes about terrorism."
The senator's
comments seem as if they were taken word-for-word from an AIPAC
position paper. They may well have been. Last May, 2005, Sen. Clinton
spoke at an AIPAC conference where she praised the bonds between
Israel and the United States:
"[O]ur future
here in this country is intertwined with the future of Israel and
the Middle East. Now there is a lot that we could talk about, and
obviously much has been discussed. But in the short period that
I have been given the honor of addressing you, I want to start by
focusing on our deep and lasting bonds between the United States
and Israel."
Clinton went
on to wail about the importance of disarming Iran and Syria as well
as keeping troops in Iraq for as long as "it" takes. It
was textbook warmongering and surprise, surprise, Hillary got a
standing ovation for her repertoire.
It
is no matter that Iraq will never see true democracy. The U.S. won't
allow that. The imperial powers would never let an Iraq government
form that embodied even the slightest hatred toward Israel or the
U.S. Democracy in Iraq, like democracy in Israel, has clear limitations.
Sen. Clinton's
trip down to Israel was just one of many more to come. Like her
husband and the current Republican president, Hillary will never
alter the U.S.' Middle East policy that so blatantly favors Israeli
interests.
Sadly,
Clinton, if elected president in 2008, will praise and embolden
the occupations – both in Iraq and Palestine. She won't pull out
U.S. troops and she won't cut U.S. funding to Israel.
Like I said,
Hillary Clinton may well be presidential material after all.
July
4, 2006
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 discount through
Josh’s blog.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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