Dick Cheney's Fondest Pipe
Dream, Revisited
By Paul Rogat Loeb
12/17/07 "ICH"
--- -- Ever since Hillary Clinton
supported the reckless Kyl-Lieberman Iran bill, her
Democratic competitors have been blasting her for her stand,
and rightly so. By defining Iran's Revolutionary Guards
Corps, a core branch of the Iranian military, as a
foreign terrorist organization,
the bill put the U.S. Senate on record as vindicating the
Bush-Cheney line that Iranian proxies are part of a global
conspiracy, linking Al Qaeda, Iraqi insurgents, Hamas,
Hezbollah, and any other enemy the administration wants to
conjure up. It made a US attack on Iran just that much more
possible. And Clinton's support for the bill confirmed that
she has learned little from her earlier Iraq war vote.
But what none of the
candidates challenging her have done, as far as I can tell,
is use the most succinct and damning description of the
vote's implications that's been expressed, when Senator
James Webb called it
"Dick Cheney's fondest pipe dream." "It could be
read as tantamount to a declaration of war,"
Webb also concluded, and his
descriptions go to the heart of the issue, with an eloquence
likely to stick in the minds of the voters. But the other
candidates have to publicly quote them, and so far they
haven't.
Now Jim Webb's not
always right, but he knows war, and has thought and written
about what leads to it. He's not one to use words casually,
so his judgment carries weight. When competing candidates
say Hillary's made it easier for Bush and Cheney to even
consider the insanity of an attack (or to encourage Israel
to do so in their place), it's true and damning. But her
supporters can still dismiss this as self-serving
exaggeration. Quoting Webb makes her vote harder to dismiss.
It goes to the key issue--that once again Hillary empowered
a recklessly belligerent administration in their efforts to
go to war. Now a US attack is probably less likely since
the
National Intelligence Estimate found that Iran had
halted its nuclear weapons programs in 2003. But Clinton had
no way of knowing this when she voted for Kyl-Lieberman, and
Bush continues to talk confrontationally in the wake of the
report. The fact that Hillary later supported a resolution
saying Bush needed Congressional permission to attack is
fine and good, but it only partially closes the opportunity
for potential catastrophe that she'd just finished helping
open.
Reports out of
Clinton's campaign suggest that her support for the
resolution may actually reflect less a heart-felt political
judgment, than a politics of triangulation, an approach
where she's driven more by policies she thinks will help her
win than those necessarily the best choice for America and
the world. As the New York Times
reported, "Part of the reason for Mrs. Clinton's vote
some of her backers say privately, is that she has already
shifted from primary mode, when she needs to guard against
critics from the left, to general election mode, when she
must guard against critics from the right…. Mrs. Clinton is
also solidifying crucial support from the pro-Israel lobby."
As Clinton's once
seemingly unassailable lead seriously crumbles, her Iran
vote has played a major role in the process. But those
raising it as an issue have been withholding the most
powerful way of telling it. They need to, in their talks,
their ads, and in the arguments they ask their supporters to
use. If Democrats really reflect on what it means to
potentially enable "Dick Cheney's Fondest Pipe Dream," I
believe they'll select a different candidate.
Paul Rogat
Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little
While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named
the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the
American Book Association. His previous books include Soul
of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See
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