Senator Obama published
a sketch of a plan for Iraq in the New York Times today, and it’s about the same as
his plan has always been, clearly superior to Bush or McCain
and yet horribly muddled, vague, and militaristic, until he
gets to the highly encouraging last few lines. Obama begins
by fudging Maliki’s call to withdraw troops into his own longstanding
call to withdraw “combat troops”, but not to actually withdraw
them, rather to move them elsewhere in the region. He joins
in this op-ed, as usual, in hyping false threats from Afghanistan,
Al Qaeda, and Iran.
He
proposes increased war in Afghanistan
and possibly Pakistan,
as part of what he embraces as “the war on terrorism”. And,
yet, while he always says “redeploy” rather than “withdraw,”
the number of troops he proposes sending to Afghanistan
is much smaller than the number he proposes taking out of Iraq. This would suggest that he wants to bring
a lot of troops home and is just too scared and politically
tone-deaf to say so. (Although he does not explain why the U.S. military would still be constrained to shift
troops around the empire if he pursues his plan to drastically
enlarge the largest military the globe has known. Nor, of course,
does he explain why that’s needed.)
Obama would end the “war,”
but what about the occupation? Obama also parrots rightwing
rhetoric about “encouraging the Iraqis to step up,” as if the
vast majority of Iraqis haven’t wanted the United States to
leave for years now, as if the Iraqis share with the United
States the mission of occupying their country with a foreign
force and just haven’t been willing to pick up their share of
the work. Obama
proposes to leave behind a “residual force” of Americans in
Iraq
following his withdrawal of “combat troops,” to be completed
two years from now. He does not say how large that force will
be, explain what a “non-combat troop” would consist of, or explicitly
indicate that the “residual force” will ever leave or come home.
He also hedges even on his commitment to reach his unspecified
goal two years from now. And, of course, he does not explain
how the “war” will end as he withdraws the troops, any more
than McCain explains how he will withdraw the troops after the
violence ends. (A credible announcement of a withdrawal would
certainly reduce the violence, but it would do so to the extent
that the announcement was credible and the announced withdrawal
was to be swift and complete. A 16-month partial withdrawal
announcement might not create complete peace.)
But then come some encouraging
lines: “I would not hold our military, our resources and our
foreign policy hostage to a misguided desire to maintain permanent
bases in Iraq...
I would make it absolutely clear that we seek no presence in
Iraq similar to our permanent bases in South Korea.”
That conclusion to Obama’s
plan is encouraging, but will he put a date on it? When will
he close the non-permanent bases, or - better - restore to Congress
its Constitutional right to do so? And why, following his Fourth
Amendment flip-flop should we believe his date if he ever does
provide it? Sadly,
if Congress continues to wriggle spineless on the floor during
the coming months, our judgment of Obama’s willingness to end
aggressive wars will have to be based primarily on how loudly
or quietly he cheers for the bombs falling on Iran, and whether
he finally supports the impeachment of a dictatorial president
or the elimination of the Congress.
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator, David Swanson, is co-founder of the
AfterDowningStreet.org coalition and a board member of Progressive Democrats of America.
His website is www.davidswanson.org. Click here
to contact Mr. Swanson.