by Phyllis Bennis
Institute for Policy Studies
17 September 2008
Dear friends,
Just a note on where we are, before I get into the
analysis here. As all of us recognize,
as we wake shaking in the night, fearing tomorrow, this is an incredibly dangerous
moment. It doesn't just seem to, it really
does get worse each election - the stakes grow higher, the dangers spread
further. People's lives - not only, not
even mainly, our own - are at grave risk.
This election is probably the most important most of us have ever
faced. And its outcome is at least
partly in our hands.
My friend Holly Near, the great songwriter and
singer-agitator, recently sent me some of her ideas of how to think about this
election:
"I feel frustration during an election year. I can't stand flag waving and phrases that
suggest this country was built on the principles of democracy and equality when
in truth our "for-folks" had slaves, lynched people, and terrorized
indentured servants including little northern European girls who looked like me
working in sweat shops. Millions of indigenous people were killed - so the
whole show un-nerves me. That said, I'm not stupid. I think critically and
strategically. I like Obama, and McCain scares me to death. ...I am a long time
activist - always left of the democrats - but I like to choose with whom I am
going to struggle. ... It is time to get
very clear about the nature of our job. We are not just voting for people in
the United States. Because of the role the US plays in the world, our vote has
global ramifications.
"Our job is to choose the leader that we think will
be the most reasonable in the face of contradictions, the most tolerant in the
face of diversity, the wisest in the face of danger, the calmest in the face of
crisis and the one who is most likely to listen before making a decision. To me
there is absolutely no question that Obama is the safer and more responsible
choice, by far. ...Hey, he is not a socialist, never has been, and has run his
campaign to reach out to a large circle.
Why is anyone surprised? He is running for president of the empire.
...He will inherit a disastrous economy, a murderous war. As far as I can tell, he won't be able to get
much done without a powerful social change movement in place to counteract the
right wing pressure that is mobilizing full force right now."
We have a lot of work to do.
The conventions showed us something very important. They demonstrated, to any who still doubt it,
why we need a powerful, independent peace and justice movement. Not because the
two parties, or the four candidates, are all the same. They're not. There are huge differences among
them. None represent our views, but some are far more reckless and dangerous to
our rights and to the lives of people around the world. And precisely to respond to those enormous
differences, we need a peace and justice movement strong enough to maintain its
independence and flexible enough to answer the very diverse challenges each of
them poses.
We need to continue our focus on educating and deepening
not only the activist anti-war movement, but our hard-won anti-war majority,
all in the context of urging on-going electoral activism. We have to work now even as we prepare for
the post-election and post-inauguration periods - because we know, whoever
wins, four more years of protest, mobilization, and political pressure will be
required.
** Global power
shifts are underway: the U.S. economy is weakening while Russia's is rising;
the danger of a new Cold War looms dangerously as the U.S. turns to military
force and military sales to compensate for its dwindling economic clout.
** The Iraq War,
despite claims of looming U.S. victory through the "surge," continues
to rage; neither the U.S. "hand-over" of Anbar province nor the
so-far failed U.S.-Iraq negotiations over continued occupation, nor the shaky
reduction in violence reflect actual progress towards ending the U.S. war and
occupation.
** The U.S./NATO
occupation of Afghanistan is causing enormous civilian
casualties, increasing public support for the Taliban, heightened international
isolation of the U.S., and raising the prospect of a
greatly expanded war after the elections, whoever wins.
** On-going
threats of U.S. military attack and/or escalation
in Iran and Pakistan, including from inside Israel, continue to destabilize the broad
Middle East/Central Asia region.
*****
This past weekend's latest economic crisis, in which
powerful investment banks and some of the wealthiest stock brokerages faced
bankruptcy or dissolution by buy-out, has again made clear the rapidly
declining power of the U.S. economy - though it remains, for the moment, the
largest (and one of the most unequal) in the world. But declining economic power does not mean
collapse of the empire. It means, in this case, a dangerous turn towards even
greater unilateral militarism - since Washington's military power remains
strategically unchallengeable, even while its economic base declines, and its
military remains incapable of defeating the actual challengers Washington has chosen to fight.
As the U.S. flounders, Russia is rising. Its newly sky-high oil
wealth, driven by the exorbitant price of crude, has fueled a level of political,
economic and at least partly military assertiveness quite new for post-Soviet Russia.
Moscow is reclaiming its role in the world - as Ronald Steel
described it in the New York Times, "A Superpower is Reborn." In Georgia, the U.S.-supported Georgian
president appeared to believe he could act as the Israel of the Caucuses, and that the U.S. would back his every move,
however provocative. So far, he appears to have been wrong. Instead, the crisis
showed both the capacity and the willingness of Moscow to stand up to U.S.
efforts (backed only tepidly by most of Europe) to encircle Russia with new
NATO members, block Russian oil and gas sales, and challenge the growing
Russia-Iran oil alliance. New U.S. pressures on Latin American
countries - especially Bolivia and Venezuela - trying to challenge U.S. models of economic development
are pushing those countries towards closer ties with Iran, and potentially Russia, further setting the stage for
global bi-polarity. Whether the Georgia crisis itself segues into a
renewed long-term cold war-style conflict between Russia and the U.S. is unclear, but certainly
possible. For example, diplomatic
sources at the UN indicate that what happens between the U.S. and Russia in the
next three months will likely determine how Russia voted on extending the UN mandate
for the occupation of Iraq, if that should come to the Security Council. If that vote were held today, they say, there
is no question Russia would cast its veto.
This is an issue on which there is a potentially wide gap
between the two candidates' positions. While Obama has taken a generally pro-Georgian,
anti-Russian position, he has called for negotiations, and specifically for a
major role for the UN rather than unilateral U.S. decision-making. McCain, on the
other hand, relies on his top foreign policy adviser Randy Schueneman, a
long-time neo-con and former lobbyist (to the tune of $800,000) for the
Georgian president. Schueneman, one of the drafters of the Project for a New
American Century paper in the 1990s, remains one of the leading voices for
uncritical and unlimited support – including military support and backing of
NATO membership for Georgia. McCain's harsh anti-Russian
rhetoric seems to mean an end to his earlier calls for new negotiations with Russia on nuclear disarmament issues.
In the meantime, the Bush administration is escalating its
own end-of-term arm-the-world campaign.
The Pentagon this year will give or sell $32 billion in U.S.weapons and other military goods
this year - up from the already staggering $12 billion of 2005. And the weapons
now are not only basic conventional arms and equipment, but rather some of the most
sophisticated new parts of the Pentagon's arsenal -things like remotely-piloted
drone aircraft, high-tech missiles, warships, and more. A top Air Force
official said the weapons surge is "not about being gun-runners. This is
about building a more secure world."
For the Pentagon, maybe. For Iraqis the world is far from
secure. Their country remains violent, unstable, impoverished, divided and
occupied. The reduction in violence is more and more shaky. The Pentagon's
"surge" troops in some areas are being redeployed out of major city
centers, but not pulled out entirely - like in Anbar province, where a
high-profile U.S. "hand-over" of the city to Iraqi forces gave the
appearance of a troop withdrawal, despite the reality that the 28,000 U.S.
troops are remaining in the province. The difference will be fewer U.S. casualties, but not fewer Iraqi
dead. The "Awakening" movement, largely Sunni militants disenchanted
with extremist violence against Iraqi civilians and bought off by $300/month
from the U.S.U.S. troops as well. One U.S. officer admitted the Anbar
"hand-over" does not mean the situation is any more secure. The
decline in violence is not permanent.
The U.S.-Iraqi negotiations over legalizing the occupation
remain stalled. Neither Bush nor Maliki want to end the unpopular U.S. occupation but both face coming
elections and political opposition. So both sides agree on seeking a "time
horizon" to withdraw troops. Their dodge
is rooted in the very definition of a "horizon" - it may be very beautiful,
but you can never get there. The more
serious disagreement is over immunity for U.S. troops and mercenaries; Washington may give in on the contractors,
but is demanding full and complete immunity for U.S. soldiers regardless of what they
do to Iraqi civilians. So far, Baghdad has rebuffed the demand; we'll
see if that lasts.
In Afghanistan more and more civilians are being
killed, mostly by U.S. air strikes. With insufficient troops for the huge
counter-insurgency challenge, air strikes are becoming more and more central to
U.S. strategy.
NATO forces are fewer than ever, and many are restricted by their
governments and not allowed to fight except immediate self-defense. As a result, the 35,000 or so U.S. troops are stretched thinner than
ever, and have no better hope of "defeating" this classic Afghan
insurgency than the British almost a century ago, or the Soviets a quarter
century back.
The escalating war in Afghanistan will almost certainly vie with Iraq as the major challenge facing the
anti-war movement after the election. Both candidates call for sending more
troops to Afghanistan. While McCain cheered Bush's
announced plan to send 4,500 more troops to Afghanistan in coming months, Obama
criticized the troop increase as insufficient.
McCain appears to be planning to escalate all troop levels in all U.S. military arenas - not clear where
he thinks the troops will come from. Obama, perhaps recognizing the likely
failure of his Berlin call for Germany and the rest of Europe to send more
troops, has staked out the position of withdrawing U.S. "combat
troops" from Iraq, only to send some, most or all of them to a newly
expanded war in Afghanistan. There is a
particular danger with this escalation because of the still-widespread view
among Americans, including many progressive and anti-war people and
opinion-makers, that Afghanistan remains the "good" war,
the war that should have remained central but was undermined by the
"bad" war in Iraq.
In fact Afghanistan was never a "good" war
- it was not a war of self-defense, or a war for justice - it was a war for
retribution and retaliation. It never
had a chance of "winning hearts and minds" away from the Taliban, and
it should surprise no one that support for the Taliban is already growing, in
parallel with the Pentagon's civilian casualties. The recent horrific U.S. airstrike, in which UN investigators confirm 90 civilians were killed,
perhaps 60 of them children, is not an anomaly. And there will be more.
As to other potential hot spots, Iran has been slightly out of the crosshairs
in recent weeks, but the pressure continues. A group of five former secretaries
of state (Kissinger, Baker, Christopher, Albright, and Powell) recently agreed
on the need to talk to Iran - with Christopher noting that
"the military options are very poor, and we have to tell the Israelis
that." But the danger of a U.S. attack remains serious. One of
the biggest anti-war triumphs this year has been the reduction of congressional
support for House Resolution 362, which would require essentially a U.S. naval blockade against Iran to carry out "inspections"
of ships, planes, trains, heading to or from IranU.S. or Security Council sanctions. House
leaders may try to keep it from a vote. That victory should be celebrated - but
the resolution is still pending.
U.S. government and media voices
continue to claim that Iran is responsible for the deaths of
American soldiers in Iraq, and have recently broadened
their propaganda to claim that Iran is providing weapons to the
Taliban in Afghanistan -ignoring the long and bitter animosity
between Iran and the Taliban. There are key
differences here between the candidates; McCain's "bomb bomb bomb, bomb
bomb Iran" lyrics were chillingly
clear; Obama's call for direct negotiations is a relative relief, but Obama too says the "military option"
should remain on the table.
Israel also continues to threaten an
attack on Iran, although there are indications
the U.S. is not guaranteeing Tel Aviv a
green light. One sign may be the U.S. offer to provide a defensive
missile shield to Israel, ostensibly to protect it from a
possible Iranian attack. One consequence would be the anti-missile complex, to
be run largely by private contractors but including two uniformed U.S. soldiers as well as a U.S.U.S. military base on Israeli territory. It would mean
that any attack on Israel would almost certainly amount to
a physical attack directly on the U.S.
(It would also limit somewhat Israel's freedom of military action,
which may lead to an Israeli political rejection of the U.S. offer.) UPDATE: The Sept. 29 New
York Times reports the missile shield system has been delivered to Israel, installed, and will be run by
120 Americans.
And in Pakistan, the second front of the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. is continuing to escalate its
direct attacks - now including ground invasions as well as air assaults -
despite opposition from the Pakistani government. Despite claiming to support
the new more or less pro-U.S. government in Islamabad, Bush has authorized ground
invasions regardless of Pakistani government approval. So far, the new U.S.U.S. strikes, but the military, which
remains a key institution in Pakistani society, has been far stronger in
condemning the U.S. attacks. Again both candidates have supported
unilateral U.S.Pakistan's government. government has only hesitantly
stated its opposition to the strikes into Pakistani territory,
regardless of the views of
*****
We have a lot of work to do. In Holly's words again, "In these coming
weeks, the ones I'm concerned about are those who are deeply tied to a single
issue, are clinging to some old notion of political purity or are sunk in
cynicism. How do we reach them and say,
'You don't have to vote naively, but I beg you to vote strategically.' I'm guessing people in Chile would have preferred a centralist
to Pinochet!" (you can read more of Holly's piece at www.hollynear.com )
*****
For those of you who have found my Primer on Understanding
the Palestinian-Israeli Crisis useful, you may want to take a look at a couple
of new ones I just finished in that same series. Understanding the US-Iran Crisis: A Primer is
just out, and Ending the Iraq War: A Primer will be published the first week of
October. Both are available from Interlink Publishing, $10 each at
www.interlinkbooks.com or call (413) 582-7054 for bulk orders.
________________________ Phyllis Bennis is a Fellow of the Institute for
Policy Studies in Washington and the Transnational Institute in Amsterdam. You can
see more of her work at www.ips-dc.org
and www.tni.org |