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Senate O.K.'s $91 Billion in War Funds

by: Maya Schenwar, t r u t h o u t | Report

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British soldiers march through a poppy field in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The supplemental spending request passed last night in the Senate will fund the expansion of the US presence in Afghanistan. (Photo: AP)

    The Senate approved $91 billion in funding for the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan yesterday, with all senators but three voting for the bill. This, along with a House vote last week in favor of $97 billion, seals the deal for the Obama administration's first supplemental war spending request. The no-strings-attached legislation comes as a deep disappointment to progressive members of Congress, as well as to antiwar voters, many of whom hoped the Obama administration would mark a significant break with Bush-style war funding.

    "If this were another Bush supplemental, progressives would definitely call it a blank check," Travis Sharp, military policy analyst for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told Truthout. "There are no benchmarks for progress in either the House or Senate bills. I found the House Appropriations Committee's justification for not including benchmarks to be comical: 'so-called benchmarks ... if they are too tough will bind the President's hands.' That's precisely the same language Republicans used to use to argue against Democratic attempts to place restrictions on Bush-era supplementals."

    With yesterday's vote, Congress has approved more than $900 billion in funding for military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq since the wars began.

    Though President Obama has provided a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq, his plan could leave 50,000 troops in Iraq indefinitely, according to a statement by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin), one of the three dissenting votes.

    The hefty supplemental also indicates that the US occupation of Afghanistan will drag on for quite some time, according to Jeff Leys, co-coordinator for Voices for Creative Nonviolence. Leys notes the allocation of funds for mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles specific to the terrain of Afghanistan, and a boost in spending for the Afghanistan Security forces and Afghanistan base construction.

    "All of these point to a long-term expansion of US military operations in Afghanistan," Leys told Truthout.

    The House last week rejected an amendment sponsored by Rep. Jim McGovern, which would have mandated "an exit strategy" for the war in Afghanistan. An amendment proposed by Rep. Barbara Lee, which would have required full withdrawal from Iraq in 12 months, was killed in committee.

    In addition to war spending, the supplemental bill funds the production of four F-22 Raptors, the air force's most expensive fighter planes, which are not used in Iraq or Afghanistan and were designed to fight the Soviet Union. The House version also allocates more than $2 billion to procure C-17 transport aircraft, although Defense Secretary Robert Gates said late last month that the Pentagon has no additional need for the planes. President Obama did not seek funding for the C-17s.

    The House and Senate versions of the bill now go to conference to be reconciled. Several differences must be resolved, including a House provision that requires the president to present an evaluation of the US's progress in Afghanistan in one year.

    While the blow of another giant war supplemental hits hard at a time when the climate for big change seems right, the legislation isn't all bad news, according to Leys. The bill shows a large decrease in the funds allotted to the procurement of new weapons.

    "This likely is due to a return to a more 'normative' manner of somewhat limiting the request to the 'incremental costs' of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, rather than the very expansive definition used in 2007 and 2008 that allowed the military to seek additional 'emergency' funds for the broader so-called 'global war on terror,'" Leys said.

    Some of the procurement cuts may not be due to scaled-back military operations. There may be substantial funding left over from previous years' supplementals, according to Leys. And a Congressional Research Service report shows that the reductions can in part be attributed to a decline in the purchasing of mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles, which were bought in large numbers last year.

    Still, the Obama war request is not simply an echo of Bush policy, according to Sharp, who says that the president's commitment to withdrawal from Iraq shows a change in mindset.

    "President Obama has demonstrated through his Iraq policies that he is not mindlessly committed to perpetual war in the same way that President Bush was," Sharp said. "Obama has shown a willingness to cut bait, albeit cautiously, which is something you could never say about Bush."

    Hope for a de-escalation of militarism isn't dead in Congress, either. While most of Congress acquiesced to the funding request, a number of antiwar members stood their ground.

    In the House, 51 Democrats said no to the funding, including several who switched over at the last minute. Grassroots movements made an impact on this front, according to Carolyn Eisenberg, chair of the legislative working group of United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ). One hundred peace organization hand-delivered letters to each member of the progressive caucus, drawing their attention to the escalation of the war in Afghanistan.

    "We have asked for reports from people around the country, and it is evident that in many instances the pressure led Reps to change their minds," Eisenberg said. "Example in Brooklyn: on the previous day, Cong Towns's legislative director told Brooklyn for Peace that he was going to sign on to McGovern and vote in favor of the supplemental. On Thursday he voted against the supplemental. The message we received from his legislative director read, 'At the last minute you all convinced him to vote no. Congrats.'"

    Congress members who voted against the supplemental cited an overemphasis on military operations and a deprioritization of diplomacy and humanitarian aid. According to a UFPJ release, only 8 percent of the funding goes to nonmilitary projects.

    Rep. Barbara Lee, who voted against the bill, noted that according to a recent report by the Carnegie Endowment, "the presence of foreign troops is the most important element driving the resurgence of the Taliban."

    "The best way to help the Afghan people develop a stable and functioning state is to decrease our military presence and increase our use of diplomatic, development and reconstruction activities," Lee said in a statement.

  

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Maya Schenwar is Executive Director of Truthout.

Comments

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Our addiction to violence

Our addiction to violence continues. Where are all the progressive Senators? When are we going to stop trying to win the war (which is not winnable in the conventional sense of destroying another army) and start trying to end it?

To keep "hope" about Obama,

To keep "hope" about Obama, while he leaps into bigger, escalated war, is silly. If we want peace, we have to make it happen. Congress is looking more wretched all the time, without any Bush Admin. to blame it on. Obama (who I voted for, but never again) has embraced war and public relations. The same PR/advertising he used to get elected. It has its limits. Paul Street has a good article on Zcommunications/Znet:on the possibilities of disenchantment with Obama's administration, that the young may move for progressive change. To me, it is essential folks not just "give up" and drop out. We can get peace, but it's not easy. We can get domestic policies, but it's not easy. We can get habeas corpus, but it's not easy. We can have a rule of law, but it's not easy. Never was, but it's possible. See article by Howard Zinn on The Progressive, or speech on YouTube given on May 3, 2009 on the 100th anniversary of Progressive Magazine.

A 'bought and paid for

A 'bought and paid for congress' stays bought and paid for: nothing new here.

How can democracy work when

How can democracy work when even "progressive" reporters don't report the votes??? Who besides Feingold voted NO? This is the most basic factoid. Sanders, Feingold, and Coburn (R-OK) Link: http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?congress=111&session=1&vote=00202

Wow, that's enough to

Wow, that's enough to alleviate worldwide hunger for 30 years. Or to give each person in the world $150,000. Or each person in the US $3,000,000. Or will it cost each person in the US $3,000,000 for this war. Plus the TARP money. Plus the stimulus money. This just doesn't add up does it? Who is going to pay this? Are we writing ourselves off as slaves? Or will we simply cause a worldwide depression to "write off' all these bills, of which millions WILL die, a pruning of the herd? Or will we cause a worldwide, free-for-all war--a survival of the fittest? This just is NOT kosher.

The same Senate that refused

The same Senate that refused funds to close Guantanamo, now approves $91 billion --- a tidy sum by any measure --- in favor of war. This is really change we can believe in!

Big Banks profit from War.

Big Banks profit from War. Until we unhinge the Federal Reserve Bank - aka the Fourth Branch of Government that controls the other three - we will have perpetual war. Audit the Fed - call your congressman to support HR 1207. The Constitution states that Congress shall control the issue of credit and currency - yet the FRB is doing it instead and without oversight - audit them now, it is time.

No taxation without

No taxation without representation. In conducting these never ending wars the government is clearly ignoring us. This is not the change we voted for. Let's refuse to pay our taxes. That will make them sit up and take notice.

$91 B, imagine that. I

$91 B, imagine that. I just opened my water and power bill and for the water and power I'm charged $71. The taxes and fees attached bring it to a total of $203. $91 B. imagine that.

NO TAXATION WITHOUT

NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION! What "democratic" agenda is this money supposed to support? I expect that virtually no one who voted for President Obama approves of this.

S.604 is the Senate Federal

S.604 is the Senate Federal Reserve Sunshine Act, sponsored by Bernie Sanders. When I checked today, he was a lone brave guy in the Senate, while 179 have signed on to the House version. It's time to start ragging senators. I started with that program today. Banks like war, mountaintop removal, and corporations like Monsanto. We need to expose the collusion. Opening up the Fed is the way to get started, the sooner the better. It's going to be a long haul when we find some honest legume-counters to start slogging through the morass. The longer we wait, the colder the trail gets, and the more can get siphoned off-shore, say, to Dubai, new headquarters of Hades.

I voted for Obama. When cuts

I voted for Obama. When cuts have to be made in health, education, and social services, it just doesn't make sense to spend this kind of money on war. Obama promised change. People believed him. More money for more fighting in the Middle East is not the change that we thought he meant.

The US chooses to live by

The US chooses to live by the sword. There's plenty of precedent for that. And for the way it ends. Pete Edler, Stockholm

Where is this promise to use

Where is this promise to use force as a last resort, and talking - negotiation as a first resort? It was drummed into us all during Obama's campaign. Wake me when the talking and negotiation begin and the shooting stops. Usually going to war strengthens a president's appeal and support. This may be the first time it brings one down. Aahh, he trials and tribulations of "Pipeline Diplomacy".

Unless President Obama uses

Unless President Obama uses the $91 billion to end this war, he loses my vote and that of hundreds of thousands of others who believed we would finally have a leader with the integrity and courage to do what is right. How disappointing that he thinks he must swagger and play the tough guy, instead of being the peace maker he pretended he wanted to be. Maybe the President should now tax every man woman and child the $100,000 it will cost to pay the $91 billion price tag. That would at least be honest. To think we believed him! How sad!!!

Shame on you Obama - who

Shame on you Obama - who profits from this intractable and immoral war? The banks, KBR, Blackwater or whatever they call themselves now, or tomorrow, the defense industries. Who loses? us Obama supporters, the unfortunate military service detainees- those American service personnel who must return over and over for duty, and their families. America also loses its highly expected regaining of the moral ground. Shame again, Obama, for not having the guts to stand up to the war mongers, for your ideals and your soaring pre-election rhetoric. You have capitulated. You have disappointed millions and let down those whose believed in you.

What keeps Americans so

What keeps Americans so ignorant of the fact that this $91 billion, going to war profiteers to be used for killing citizens of Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan, has no legitimate benefit whatsoever to those of us who are not profiteering? That it undermines the legitimate needs and entitlements or our citizenry more fully than the economic crisis, along with the billions going to keep rich bankers and industrialists afloat, is a fact that is seldom acknowledged by the media that is owned by the same profiteers. Truthout needs to pick up more of the radical press that reveal this travesty.

"Where are all the

"Where are all the progressive Senators?" Lets see, we have Russ Feingold (D-Wisconsin), but that's about it. The truth is - we don't have many progressive people in the Senate! One positive development: Even more House Congresspersons would have voted YES had there been less activism. This is a call to arms for more progressives for more activism on this. Recession or not, the war marches on and with it, suffering. As humans, I think that we need to be ethical and well, if you're reading this, you know what the right thing to do is.