' The resolution would urge _ but not require _ the
administration to begin "a phased redeployment of U.S.
forces" in 2006 and, by year's end, give Congress its
plan for "continued redeployment" thereafter.
Additionally, the resolution calls for American troops,
which have been focused on combat operations in Iraq, to
more quickly switch to "a limited mission of training
and logistic support of Iraqi security forces,
protection of U.S. personnel and facilities, and
targeting counterterrorism activities." It also maps out
steps Senate Democrats say the fledgling Iraqi
government must take to lay the foundation for a
successful democracy and calls for an international
conference to help Iraq overcome problems it faces. '
My hero, Russ Feingold, and other heroes Barbara Boxer and
John Kerry, are pushing a more specific withdrawal plan with
a July 1, 2007 deadline for withdrawal of most US forces. AP
says:
' It would require the administration to withdraw all
combat troops from Iraq by July 1, 2007, leaving in
place only U.S. troops essential to training Iraqi
security forces, conducting counterterrorism operations
and protecting U.S. personnel and facilities. "A
deadline gives Iraqis the best chance for stability and
self-government, and most importantly, it allows us to
begin refocusing on the true threats that face our
country," Kerry and Feingold, two Democrats eying
potential presidential candidacies in 2008, said in a
joint statement. '
The old traitor Karl Rove, who revealed the identity of
covert CIA operative Valerie Plame to the Iranians (and
everyone else), castigated the Democrats' proposals as "cut
and run." Rove wants us to go on spending $5 billion a month
in Iraq, and to go on losing thousands of maimed young
people.
Here are some other examples of cutting and running:
The United States withdrew from the Philippines in 1946.
Britain withdrew from India in 1947.
France withdrew from Morocco and Tunisia in 1956.
France withdrew from Algeria in 1962.
Rove only has two choices. He either has to agree that these
withdrawals were a good thing, or he has to blame Britain
and France for cutting and running. Does this mean he thinks
the US should try to re-colonize the Philippines? Does he
want France to take back over Algeria? By the way, neither
India nor Algeria was stable when the colonial power
withdrew.
Either, Mr. Rove, the US is a Republic among independent
nations, or it is a Colonial Power intent on subjecting
other peoples. If it is a Republic, it should be leaving
Iraq to the Iraqis. If it is a Colonial Power, then it is
doomed. Because no instance of successful foreign
colonialism on the nineteenth-century model has been
implemented in the past 50 years, for the simple reason that
the peoples of the global south are socially and politically
mobilized-- literate, urban, industrial, skilled,
networked-- in a way they never were before in history. And
no mobilized people can be successfully occupied.
The US military presence in Iraq is retarding a political
settlement. It makes the Shiites and Kurds cocky and
unwilling to compromise with the Sunni Arabs. It keeps the
Iraqi army weak and ineffective, lacking proper armor or an
air force. And US military tactics of search and destroy are
turning progressively more Iraqis against us over time. The
longer the US stays in Iraq, the more likely it is that one
day one of our cities will be attacked by Iraqi terrorists
bearing a grudge for Fallujah or Tal Afar or whatever other
Iraqi cities we plan to destroy.
And, about that $5 billion a month. I live in the Detroit
area. This is what my city looks like:
Could we please
have just one of those $5 billion dollar installments
you are squandering in Iraq, Mr. Rove, to -- you know-- fix
up Detroit a little bit. I'd say those windows need
replacing. And since you painted all those schools over
there, maybe you wouldn't mind painting some of the
buildings in my area. We don't have any oil, but we have a
helluva port and enormous industrial capacity. It is just
that, you know, the Federal government has been busy
rebuilding a foreign country (which somehow still seems to
be in flames and run down, despite having its own
petroleum). And somehow my city just isn't a priority. In
fact, you can correct me if I'm wrong, Mr. Rove, but my
recollection is that neglect of Detroit has driven its
population below 1 million, and that as a result, the
Federal government actually cut back on the aid it gives the
city. Is that really good urban policy? Wouldn't it make
more sense to bring Detroit back to life and reinvigorate
the American Midwest?
Is it cut and run? Or is it 'withdraw and spend American
money on Americans'?
And what is the Republican plan? Is it "Stay and stay, and
Spend and Spend?"
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