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Why Vote "Yes" for the War and the IMF?

by: John Nichols  |  The Nation

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Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. (Photo: Getty Images)

    The Obama administration and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are aggressively whipping House Democrats to support the 2009 war supplemental bill that seeks to steer another $10o billion in US tax dollars into the quagmires of Iraq and Afghanistan while at the same time squandering at least $5 billion on the failed economic schemes of the International Monetary Fund.

    But the more than 51 Democrats who opposed an earlier version of the supplemental are giving her a hard time and that's making the project a hard sell for Pelosi.

    And rightly so. This is a very bad bill.

    Californian Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey and Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich, leading critics of the Iraq War, pointed out in a letter to their colleagues that "the primary intent of this legislation is to continue funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." That, they point out, is not what President Obama or Democrats in Congress were elected to do. "Continued funding of war operations in Iraq ensures a continued occupation thereby undermining the stated U.S. goal for withdrawal by the end of 2010," argue Woolsey and Kucinich. "Funds for Iraq should be dedicated to bringing all of our troops and contractors home immediately."

    Masschusetts Congressman Jim McGovern, another anti-war Democrat, expressing concerns about the administration's push to increase the troop presence in Afghanistan, says, "As much as I love President Obama, I believe that this administration needs to come up with some benchmarks and an exit strategy."

    Ohio Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur told Congressional Quarterly about personal lobbying of members by Pelosi:

Earlier this week, the Speaker approached Rep. Marcy Kaptur, an Ohio progressive who sits on the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, and asked Kaptur to reconsider her "no" vote.

Rather than making a case based on the policy, Kaptur said, the Speaker asserted that Obama and congressional Democrats needed to clear the decks of "the last old business" left over from the Bush administration.

Kaptur was unmoved.

"I don't agree with her analysis that we're cleaning up for Bush," said Kaptur, who worries that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are too costly and that the administration lacks a plan for success in Afghanistan. "This is Obama's first chance. This is his first wave."

    The questioning of the war is appropriate and necessary.

    But it is also right to question the money for the IMF, which Kucinich and California Congressman Bob Filner, another Democrat, worry could be part of a broader scheme to "bail out private European banks with U.S. taxpayer money."

    Even if the money goes straight into IMF coffers for its loan programs, that's a problem, as the IMF continues to pressure countries around the world to cut social services and undermine infrastructure as part of wrongheaded "structural adjustment" initiatives.

    As of now, the word is that the conference report on the war supplemental will reach the floor early next week.

    That means that lobbying of members this weekend could be crucial.

    As Kucinich says, "From what I can see, [members who so far have refused to bow to pressure from the administration and Pelosi] are concerned about going home and having to explain why they voted for the war when their constituents are opposed to it..."

    Opponents of the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, and of unsound economic strategies, should feed those concerns by telling their representatives to vote "No" to war and the IMF.

  

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Another Obama promise

Another Obama promise broken. He said that the military budget would be larger this year because they were not going to hide the cost of the wars through supplemental appropriation bills. Of course Obama quickly changed his mind and asked for $85 billion more. Now it's $95 billion. If you're paying attention, this is the way to raise the already too large military budget without attracting any attention: you say that you are including everything upfront and then you ask for more later after the peons have forgotten. Wake up people. There is only one party in Washington and you are not invited.

What a disappointment we

What a disappointment we have in Obama!!! I am disappointed beyond belief, and that is all I can say!!! If I could only take back my contributions to his campaign I would be so happy, but since I cannot do that, I will shout from the rooftops that Obama is the worst liar and the biggest FRAUD EVER in my lifetime, and I would NEVER VOTE FOR HIM AGAIN!!!!!!

The IMF has been a tool of

The IMF has been a tool of neo-liberal economic policies that eviscerates the interests of workers and citizens while supporting the greed driven policies of multi-national corporations who undermine democracy around the world. If the Republicans are voting against the supplemental due to some false principled stand, and I say false since neo-liberal economic policies are the heart of their ideals, the all the better. We need this supplemental to fail, and we need to pressure those wavering Dems who with enough pressure will also vote against the supplemental in order to end these wars and occupations. The Dems can no longer hide behind not having control of the house and the executive branch, even if they haven't enough votes to stop a filibuster. Waiting for them to take a principled stand has always been a lesson in futility, but we may just have a chance to stop this supplemental from going through. Though we need to be Out Now, McGovern's tack of trying to get benchmarks and an exit strategy with time lines is an approach that may fuel the beginning of the end for these illegal occupations and wars. The Dems railed against Bush for not having time lines, and nothing, absolutely nothing, is stopping them from imposing them now. Their war funding in Afghanistan is topsy-turvy. They have 80% going for war escalation and 20% for rebuilding the country. It should be the other way around, the 20% being used to demobilize and bring troops home. Making real improvement in terms of schools, roads, jobs, and infrastructure is key. We dumped on the Afghani people after the Russians left when we had an opportunity to help them and we didn't do it. We want allies there? Begin by helping them, not bombing their wedding parties and innocent civilians.

This Issue certainly

This Issue certainly deserves a position statement. While the consequences of pulling out of Iraq are an unknown, and therefore “scary,” Iraq has asked the United States to leave. They are (or were) a sovereign nation that was illegally invaded by the United States. We now need to honor Iraq’s request for our troop removal. That will allow Obama to fulfill his campaign promise—the Democratic Party promise—not necessarily Pelosi’s promise, but oh, well. Israel will continue to muddle any mid-east peace. Iran will continue to work on its uranium projects. The United States will support Israel when it attacks Iran. The invasion of Afghanistan will not end happily nor cheaply. MichaelPDA has the right idea—change the funding ratios to 80% reconstruction and 20% to war. Our continued presence in Afghanistan is not freeing any Afghani, it’s not improving their standard of living—well, they have supplied the heroin market very profitably (guess where that’s going!) , and the United States cannot even recognize the enemy, thus the heavy civilian casualties. Now for the IMF, “saviors of the world,” tool of Montsano, spreading famine with expensive seed stock seeds that do not reproduce, seeds that use more water than native plants, and especially notable, seeds that must be repurchased every year. The dear IMF is working to change cultures—to Westernize them. Oh no, they must not get a dime more. The above said, and knowing that Kucinich has been the only congressperson to ever speak out with some semblance of the truth, I conclude that this bill should be defeated. I have decided this on the basis of a peace vote regardless of fear; a financial basis because we do remember the historical lessons of the fall of the Roman Empire (for the exact same reasons as we are going down). I will definitely be supporting Kucinich and Filmer.

I wish Cindy Sheehan had

I wish Cindy Sheehan had replaced Nancy Pelosi.

The IMF & World Bank are

The IMF & World Bank are simply extensions of the Wall Street/bankster bunch that have brought the economies of the Western powers to the brink of the same ruin rained upon the hapless Second and Third World countries by their taking IMF/WB loans, and agreeing to Milton Friedman-esque "structural readjustments" designed to further impoverish those populations, and to establish beachheads for the multinationals to totally corrupt their social fabric under the guise of "free trade" agreements. It's all a concocted scam, designed by the same money interests that have just about bankrupted the US, and are intent on carrying on the wars in Iraq & Afghanistan for oil, and pipeline routes for oil and gas out of the Central Asian resouces. I don't think Obama has any more control over this mess than we, the people. The fascist embeds left from the Nixon administration, fortified by subsequent fascist and/or blind administrations, may have maintained control of the levers of power despite the most recent election and the wishes of the populace.

Obama has sold out!

Obama has sold out!