First,
some credit is due to Wikileaks. Few in the mainstream dare to thank
them, but Wikileaks has obviously played a critical role in triggering
the official resignation of DNC chair Representative Debbie
Wasserman-Schultz. These maverick conspirators, who have brought down
many at the upper levels of power, and are disavowed by both Bernie
Sanders and Hillary Clinton, were able to make public the vilest
secrets of power. In a more democratic society there would be less
justification for Wikileaks, but there's no sign the surveillance state
is diminishing. There may be questions in the days ahead about the role
of Edward Snowden, the whistleblower being harbored by Russia, as
implicated in the disclosures, but that could upset further by
revelations against Paul Manafort about his relationships with the
former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who was backed by the
Kremlin. This in turn carries toxic implications about Trump's
"friends" in Moscow and if they are responsible for the not only the
hacks, but also the leaks.
Second,
Wasserman-Schultz took far more hawkish policy positions than the
liberal Democratic mainstream and her absence will allow the party
center to shift left. She belongs to the Cuba Lobby, which for years
prevented any alteration between the US and Cuban relations. She
was pressured to vote for the Iran nuclear agreement by the Obama
administration and several of her close Democratic allies. The good
news is that our new Cuba policy is stabilizing, with hundreds of
thousands of Americans traveling there. On the other hand, The Iran
deal is unstable, partly because the US and others are reneging on some
key obligations and neo-cons are waiting to strike back.
Third,
Senator Elizabeth Warren would not have been the best
vice-presidential choice. Nor would Senator Cory Booker or Secretary of
Labor Tom Perez. In the last few weeks alone, national security and
safety have become far greater, even primal, worries for the American
public. Sen. Warren would not have been a good "fit" for these
issues. She nonetheless will be a powerful progressive voice of
conscience on Wall Street, consumer and many other progressive issues.
Booker is uncertain on foreign policy and his involvement with
Silicon Valley backing of charter schools is divisive in education
policies. Perez is perhaps the more progressive of the three, but too
little known to the public. Additionally, Warren and Booker both come
from states with Republican Governors, and thus would have put two
Democratic Senate seats in the hands of Republicans.
Next,
going forward, there will more of the same about trade and the
Rust Belt vote. Fortunately, Kaine will adhere to Clinton's
opposition to the TPP, and organized labor will play a key role in
cementing her promise. It's a disappointment from the democratic left's
point of view, but all we can say is that Bernie's revolution will
continue in Congressional and statewide economic issues.
The greatest dividend this week will be a carefully orchestrated united front against Trump.
On
foreign and defense policy, Senator Tim Kaine stands out for his strong
and thoughtful defense of the 1973 War Powers Act, the chief policy
victory of the Vietnam era. He will insist on the president's agreement
on obtaining Congressional consent. Kaine, with Rep. Barbara Lee, he is
expected to take the lead on a new Authorization for the Use of Force,
including limits on American ground troops, full disclosure on
casualties and taxpayer costs, timetables for troop withdrawals, and
diplomatic negotiations. Hawkish as the Democrats turn out to be, they
will never succumb to Paul Ryan's bloody scythe aimed at the civilian
budget. Trump will restore an Imperial Presidency with a glowing green
light to more torture, unrestrained bombings, austerity budgets, and
the decay of social programs.
One
priority for progressives could be to divert attention from the Trump's
current and Sanders' former rhetoric about Hillary's blame for the Iraq
War. Together the two must have condemned Clinton over a hundred times
for, "the worst diplomatic catastrophe in American history."
Clinton
has long admitted that her vote on Iraq was a mistake. But the hammers
keep falling on her. The important fact politically, is that Trump has
managed to turn his attacks on Iraq into a perpetual mantra with a
bipartisan nodding of approval. Trump is now slithering rapidly towards
conning the peace movement from now until November. Any citizen
concerned with Trump's evasiveness (or brainwashing) should question
empty rhetoric on Iraq. The facts show that Trump supported the
invasion of Iraq before he opposed it. Actually, he never opposed the
war, never called for the troops to come home, never joined Business
Executives for Peace, never supported a peace candidate, or made any of
the gestures that normal people define as provable. Yet on the 2016
campaign trail, Trump claimed that he fought, "Very, very hard against
us going into Iraq”, was visited by people from the White House
"seeking his support”, and could provide 25 different stories as
evidence.
There is no record of proof behind any of these claims. On March 21, 2003, in an interview with Fox News’ Neil Cavuto,
Trump was quoted as saying the war, "Looks like a tremendous success
from a military standpoint," and predicted that the market would "Go up
like a rocket," as a result of the war. And further: "The main thing is
to get the war over with and just make it a tremendously successful
campaign and it will be very interesting to see what kind of weapons
they find."
There
the record ends, but a powerful lie has been generated that Trump was
in the opposition to the war. His revealing criticism of Senator John
McCain, a Vietnam POW, shows what kind of victory standard Trump has
used. McCain didn't deserve respect because to Trump he was a loser.
That claim should be questioned everywhere by the peace movement,
including Vietnam veterans.
Trump's
most problematic foreign policy position is far worse that his fanciful
commentary about Iraq. It's his strange affection for Russia's Putin
and Paul Manafort 's lobbying relationship with a Ukrainian oligarch.
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