Hawks for
Withdrawal
by Tom Hayden
The Nation
Democrats are slowly but surely uniting around a plan for military
withdrawal designed by the Center for American Progress, a think tank
linked to Clinton-era Democrats and headed by former White House Chief
of Staff John Podesta.
Not all the party leaders agree. Senator Hillary Clinton continues
to posture as a military hawk. Senator Joe Biden wants to dilute and
divide Iraq into three sectarian enclaves. Neither Senator Charles Schumer
nor Representative Rahm Emanuel, who are charged with winning November's
elections, have a coherent message on Iraq, preferring themes like "corruption"
and "incompetence" to a straightforward alternative.
Despite the timidity and paralysis, however, Democrats on the campaign
trail increasingly know they must address the war. Polls show that Iraq
is dragging down ratings for the President and the Republican Party.
Democrats prefer to simply criticize the Administration's handling of
Iraq without discussing an exit plan of their own. This Democratic approach
worked brilliantly on Social Security, where Bush could find no Democratic
divisions to exploit. John Kerry's presidential campaign tried the same
approach on Iraq but discovered that Kerry was losing both centrist
and progressive voters. Today, the most common concern voters have about
the Democratic Party is whether it stands for anything.
Late last September, Lawrence Korb and Brian Katulis first floated
their plan for "strategic redeployment." The two authors have
credible--that is, conservative--credentials; Korb was assistant defense
secretary under Ronald Reagan, and Katulis is associated with the "soft
power" approach of promoting security through civic-society initiatives
abroad.
Their proposal is framed in hawkish rhetoric. By occupying Iraq, they
argue, the United States is increasing the global terrorist threat.
"Strategic redeployment" redefines military withdrawal not
as a retreat but as shifting US forces to new battlefields in Afghanistan,
Africa and Asia, while basing expeditionary forces in the Persian Gulf
and Kuwait in case postwithdrawal Iraq goes the way of South Vietnam.
The purpose of an Iraq peace, in their view, is to better prepare for
other wars on the frontiers of empire and, further, to "prevent
an outbreak of isolationism in the United States."
Leaving the framing rhetoric aside for the moment, the core propositions
of the CAP paper point to a nearly complete US withdrawal in the next
eighteen months. They are to:
§ Immediately reduce our troop presence at a rate of 9,000 per
month to a total of 60,000 by the end of 2006, and to "virtually
zero" by the end of 2007.
§ Bring home all National Guard units this year.
§ Double the number of US troops in Afghanistan, place an Army
division in Kuwait, an expeditionary force in the Persian Gulf and an
additional 1,000 special forces in Africa and Asia.
§ Shift the central paradigm of Iraq policy "from nation-building
to conflict resolution."
§ Appoint a presidential peace envoy to organize a Geneva conference
under United Nations auspices to "broker a deal" on security,
militias and the division of power and oil resources.
§ Obtain international funds for Iraqi reconstruction with a greater
emphasis placed on Iraqi jobs. Use the assistance to leverage power-sharing
agreements on provincial levels.
§ Make key policy shifts, declaring that the United States seeks
no permanent bases in Iraq and "intensifying its efforts to resolve
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."
Little is said in the document about Iran, except that until the United
States withdraws from Iraq, "it will not have the moral, political,
and military power to deal effectively with Iran's attempts to develop
nuclear weapons." Under cover of a multilateral Gulf Security Initiative,
Iran would be drawn into discussions with its neighbors about its nuclear
and security policies.
The paper reinforces the positions already taken by several leading
Democrats, including Representative John Murtha, the seventy-member
Out of Iraq Caucus and Senators Kerry and Russ Feingold. Senator Dianne
Feinstein was the latest to endorse its content. The document is being
circulated by Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean as well.
Seeking the hypothetical center ground requires Korb and Katulis to
distance themselves from the peace movement, the only citizen force
actually working toward the goal of withdrawal. To do so, the authors
construct a phantom extreme of "immediate withdrawal," which
they claim will permanently destabilize Iraq and the Middle East (as
if current US policies have not already done so). As is common with
Clinton-style politics, a solid centrist reputation is built by lampooning
the progressive position.
All disrespect aside, there is a significant acceptance of the peace
movement's message buried in this centrist proposal. It is not a proposal
to keep US troops fighting until victory. There is a definite withdrawal
timeline proposed and defended--eighteen months, starting immediately.
Last year, peace groups collected tens of thousands of petitions for
an exit strategy including a US declaration that no permanent bases
are intended, a proposed paradigm shift to conflict resolution, selection
of a peace envoy and power-sharing talks with Iraqi nationalist supporters
of the insurgency. Kolb and Katulis examined the proposal carefully,
and these concepts seem to have been incorporated into the document.
The proposal has weaknesses. First and foremost, it assumes that the
new Iraqi government and armed forces will be sustainable if the United
States begins to withdraw. There is no proposal for an interim peacekeeping
force from neutral countries, as many Iraqi insurgent groups propose.
There is no pledge to assure Iraqi sovereignty over Iraqi oil. There
is an assumption that military withdrawal will be accompanied by a transition
from "a highly centralized command to a market-based economy."
In short, the proposal envisions a kind of devastated but safe post-Saddam
Iraq integrated into the World Trade Organization, one requiring no
more combat deaths.
The current Iraqi Parliament is by no means a solid pillar of the US
occupation. Evidence is mounting that supporters of the Iraqi resistance
have established a stronghold for their views even within the US-dominated
"puppet" structure. Just this week, the Sunni vice president
of Iraq, Tarik al-Hashimy, approved talks between the insurgents and
American officials, but only on the condition that the guerrillas not
stop the fight without a "final deal." President Jalal Talabani
recently said he was negotiating secretly with seven insurgent groups.
A report from reliable Iraqi sources indicates that a majority of the
Parliament's 275 members will support a one-year withdrawal deadline
if the question is put before them. Faced with this quagmire and election-year
pressures, the option of peace, or the appearance of peace, seems to
have been forced on the Bush Administration.
Iraqi army claims that it can "stand up" as the Americans
leave are beyond credibility. If the US armed forces cannot end the
insurgency, why would Iraqi security forces with sectarian loyalties
and inferior weapons be any more effective? Could Shiite forces defeat
the Mahdi Army of Muqtada al-Sadr? Impossible. Would the modest Sunni
security forces suppress the Sunni insurgents? No. Could the Kurdish
peshmerga hold off the whole Iraqi resistance? No. As in Vietnam, "Iraqization"
could become a fig leaf covering the US redeployment, but then only
an agreement with the multiple resistance groups could prevent their
demise.
Many in the peace movement are entitled to be affronted over the hawkish
language of the Korb-Katulis strategy paper. But profound strategic
questions are emerging for the peace movement as a whole, as a result
of the movement's relative success. A planned US withdrawal is the majority
sentiment in America, Britain and Iraq. Politicians are adjusting their
positions accordingly, if only for the sake of survival. Political efforts
to isolate and smear the movement, as well as counterintelligence operations,
have failed. In perspective, the peace movement has contributed to constructing
these formidable obstacles to continued war:
§ An antiwar constituency that affects close Congressional races
this year and presidential calculations for 2008.
§ The inability of military recruiters to achieve their quotas.
§ Domestic discontent over presidential lies, secrecy and wiretapping.
§ A budgetary crisis aggravated by the rising costs of the Iraq
occupation, including oil costs.
§ A moral stain on the US reputation around the world.
§ The steady erosion of the "coalition of the willing."
The peace movement should take some credit for this. And the peace
movement should keep the pressure on the pillars of the war policy,
lest public opinion backslide into divisions or despair. The peace movement
should also be planning now to make it virtually impossible for presidential
candidates to campaign successfully in 2008 without committing to a
speedy withdrawal from Iraq.
But there are understandable limits to what the peace movement can
accomplish in the short run, aside from forcefully expressing the majority's
desire that the United States withdraw. What are those limits? The peace
movement cannot force the US government to "withdraw now,"
unless of course the insurgents suddenly overrun the Green Zone. The
peace movement cannot force the United States out of the Middle East,
though it can help pressure our government to reverse the Israeli occupation,
which our tax dollars subsidize. But with the public climate soured
over Iraq, the peace movement can mobilize opinion against military
intervention in places like Venezuela.
Movements generally have power against the system when they apply pressure
to the focal point of its weakness, in this case the dramatic waste
of lives and taxes spent on an unwinnable war conducted undemocratically.
The strong popular demand to set a withdrawal timetable is becoming
impossible for the elites to avoid. When and if withdrawal is announced,
the peace movement may face serious shrinkage and internal confusion.
The phase of negotiation tends to wear movements down. The Paris peace
talks of the Vietnam era took some seven years. The Israeli-Palestinian
negotiating process appears eternal. An exception worth examining has
been the peace process in Northern Ireland.
Besides remaining a formidable factor for politicians facing close
elections and military recruiters chasing down high school students,
the peace movement has a historic role to play every day in shaping
the public understanding of the lessons of Iraq. The lessons of this
war will "prepare the battlefield," to borrow a Pentagon term,
for future wars and political campaigns. It will determine whether the
current peace movement will be limited to a single important issue or
be an embryo of a broader progressive movement.
This is the sharpest potential difference between the peace movement
and the centrists. Both can and should collaborate on military withdrawal.
But the peace movement wants to prevent future wars, reverse the nuclear
weapons momentum, end domestic spying, divert resources to domestic
priorities and, just for starters, put an end to the pattern of "armed
privatization."
These are issues the centrists and most politicians will not touch
unless they are confronted with a future climate of opinion in which
real answers are demanded. Moderates wish the war to end so that the
"real" war against terrorism can be prosecuted more effectively.
Progressives should be making the case that the Iraq War is far from
a misguided adventure but rather the result of pursuing an anti-terrorism
approach that divides the world into camps of good and evil, just as
Vietnam was the logical outcome of cold war assumptions about a monolithic
Communist conspiracy.
The national security establishment already fears this legacy of Iraq.
A December 2005 Foreign Affairs article fretted about an emergent "Iraq
Syndrome" that parallels the "Vietnam Syndrome" of previous
decades. Based apparently on a disease-control model, the "Iraq
Syndrome" will make Americans skeptical that having the largest
defense budget is "broadly beneficial." Other Vietnam-era
themes critical of empire have re-entered through the window of the
Bush era; among them, opposition to an imperial presidency or any notion
of policing the world.
If the Vietnam era left any "syndrome" behind, it was a healthy
irreverence toward power, which shows up today in antiwar marches and
parents' opposition to military recruiting. The first President Bush
prematurely believed that the "Vietnam Syndrome" was defeated
in the Persian Gulf War, but it only remained dormant until the 2003
invasion of Iraq.
Whether a Republican or Democrat finally withdraws American troops
from Iraq, it is crucial that public opinion remain angry and critical
of the deceptions that resulted in so many needless deaths. That is
the final victory, which only the peace movement can achieve by drawing
more Americans into questioning the nature of what Robert Lifton calls
"the superpower syndrome."
Former California State Senator Tom Hayden, the Nation Institute's
Carey McWilliams Fellow and member of the Nation editorial board, has
played an active role in American politics and history for over three
decades. Described as "the conscience of the Senate", he is
author of more than 175 Congressional measures and eleven books, including
"Irish Hunger" and his autobiography, "Reunion."
He is the editor of "The Zapatista Reader" (Nation Books).
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