FPIF Column |
Congress Plays Politics over Iraq War
Zia Mian | May 10, 2007
Editor: John Feffer
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In the face of furious opposition from the White House, the U.S. Congress recently voted to end the U.S. war in Iraq. The bill required U.S. troops to begin leaving Iraq before October 1 and an end to combat operations by March 2008. The White House dubbed it “defeatist legislation” that set a “date for surrender.” President Bush vetoed the bill, and Democrats do not have the two-thirds majority in both the House and the Senate to overturn the veto.
While it failed to end the Iraq war, the congressional vote was significant for other reasons. The vote on withdrawal was almost entirely along party lines and reflected the small Democratic majorities in both houses. The House of Representatives voted 218 to 208 to pass the bill (216 Democrats and 2 Republicans supported the bill, while 195 Republicans and 13 Democrats opposed it). In the Senate, 49 Democrats and 2 Republicans voted for a withdrawal date and 45 Republicans and 1 Democrat were against.
These votes are a far cry from the overwhelming support that President Bush received from Congress in going to war against Iraq. In late 2002, the House of Representatives approved an attack on Iraq by 296 to 133 and the Senate by 77 to 23. In both chambers, the Democrats were deeply divided. In the House, 81 Democrats voted for war (in support of 215 Republicans) while 126 Democrats (and 6 Republicans) voted against. The split was even clearer in the Senate, where 29 Democrats voted for war and 21 against.
The Republicans, in other words, have continued to support President Bush and the Iraq war as a cohesive party, but the Democratic Party has seen a major shift in position. This change is in part a testament to the determined efforts of the American peace movement to oppose the war and to educate public opinion. The fact that the war has been going very badly for the United States has certainly been important in making public opinion more receptive to critical voices. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) now argues that for Democrats “the solution in Iraq is a political solution,” not a military one. This solution, Hoyer explained, “has to be a politically forged solution by the Iraqis themselves.” The Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) says more bluntly, “this war is lost.”
In Iraq, the failure of the American occupation grows ever clearer. The UN reports that 34,452 civilians were killed and more than 36,000 wounded in 2006. The increase in U.S. troops, dubbed the ”surge,” and intended to overwhelm the resistance, has had little effect. According to the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq report for January to March 2007, “While government officials claimed an initial drop in the number of killings in the latter half of February following the launch of the Baghdad security plan, the number of reported casualties rose again in March.” The report did not give Iraqi casualties for this period. For the first time, neither the US nor the Iraqi government would release the figures. Over 3,300 American soldiers have also died in Iraq.
The congressional vote reflected public opinion about the war. Before the election, the Iraq war was a top priority for 61% of Democrats and 52% of Independents, compared to 38% of Republicans. Democratic Party leaders in both the House and the Senate have explained their effort to pass legislation to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq as keeping faith with the voters in the November 2006 congressional elections, which brought Democrats to power. As Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) put it, “Last fall, the American people voted for a new direction in Iraq.”
Public opinion has become even more opposed to the war since the November elections. A recent New York Times-CBS News poll found 64% of Americans supported a timeline for withdrawal in 2008. A CNN poll shows that 54% of American opposed the Bush veto of the deadline for withdrawal bill. In February 2007, the Vermont state legislature became the first in the union to support resolutions calling for immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. Other states may follow as they see the congressional initiative stall.
But there is another logic at work also. The vote by both House and Senate on withdrawal from Iraq was preceded by a series of others on issues related to Iraq. There have been more than half a dozen Iraq-related votes in the Senate alone in the past three months and two Iraq-related votes in House.
These efforts do not mean that the Democrats who control Congress are doing everything they can to end the Iraq war. The Democratic Party leadership has made it clear that they will not use the one power they have that would certainly end the war. They will not stop funding the war. The legislation requiring withdrawal from Iraq was part of a bill that approved $124 billion in military spending, $95 billion of this is for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is in fact more money than the military and the White House had asked for.
What is at play is party politics. The November 2006 elections gave the Democrats a majority in both houses for the first time since the “Republican Revolution” in 1994. Before that, the Democrats had controlled the House since 1954 and the Senate since 1986. The Democrats are seeking to use the votes against the Iraq war to identify Republicans with a deeply unpopular president and a deeply unpopular war. The Democrats present themselves as opposed to both.
The Democratic Party’s goal is to strengthen its position for the 2008 Congressional elections. The key concern is the Senate, where Democrats currently have a majority of only one. In the 2008 elections, 33 of the 100 seats in the Senate will be contested. Of these 33 seats, Republicans currently hold 21 and Democrats hold only 12. “We're going to pick up Senate seats as a result of this war,” argues Senator Reid.
There will be a price for congressional party politics taking priority over ending the war. It will be paid by the people of Iraq.
Zia Mian is a physicist with the Program on Science and Global Security at the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and a frequent contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (online at www.fpif.org). This report is a slightly revised version of an article published in Economic and Political Weekly.
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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.
Recommended citation:
Zia Mian, "Congress Plays Politics over Iraq War" (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, May 10, 2007).
Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/4219
Production Information:
Author(s): Zia Mian
Editor(s): John Feffer
Production: John Feffer |
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| Name: |
johnrigazio |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| It is no longer a question of who voted for the war, that has only been a republican ploy to avoid the real issue of why are we there. No one can justify this bad war, being stubborn because it's your party that got us into it, pouring good money after bad. |
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| Name: |
Joe in CA |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| Exactly who is playing politics here? Congress with war funding, or Bush with our troops? The bias of this article is unbelieveable. |
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| Name: |
Drew |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| So what happens to the Carter Doctrine if we withdrawl? Is the Persian Gulf a vital interest of the US which will be protected by military force? |
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| Name: |
Paul Ajzenman |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| You end this article with "There will be a price for congressional party politics taking priority over ending the war. It will be paid by the people of Iraq." Where is the analysis of the cost of those Iraqis and Americans who have died? Where is the analysis on the attempt to force democracy by gunpoint onto people who are not united and who have other priorities. Where is the long term perspective? By the way, the "mandate" of 2002 was built on lies-where is that analysis? Remember that Presidents before "W" also had similar concerns and information on Iraq and they chose other paths to address Saddam Hussein.
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| Name: |
Robert Kren |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
Dear Sir,
Your article seems fairly accurate as far as it goes, but there seems to be no memory here as to what is really driving this conflictthat pitts the Uniited Statethe fact that there is a war going on just beneath the surface that pitts the USA against the entire Islamic world and In my opinion this first stated with the beginning of modern day terrorism which was launched against the western world in 1972 during the olypics. This was followed by some twenty two more attacks against America or her allies with little or no repudiation fron Islam. This silence was in reality a form of assent. While the west stood by and viewed this as criminal action (as per President Clinton and did little or nothing the terrorist movement grew and grew into a major threat. What we now have is a cowering bunch of cowards pretending that there is no threat while believing and offering appeasements will work. I believe thtat History will be kinder to George Bush than the American Press which has no understanding of despots and tyrants will take this world. Hitler is perhaps the best modern day example. Israel shoud beware and so should we. Robert Kren |
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| Name: |
A.J. Griffith |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| Well ... it is heartening to at least know that I'm smarter than some people at Princeton. Congress never voted to go to war against Iraq, as Zia Mian writes in his article -- they voted to authorize President Bush to use force against Iraq if he chose to do so. That is an important distinction, but one apparently too subtle for Mr. Mian and many others (usually right wingers) to comprehend. |
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| Name: |
Matthew Murphy |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| Why is there no mention in your story of how many civilians are being killed by Iraqis themselves? Consciously using the passive tense below ("were killed") fails to acknowledge the role of the terrorists in killing their very own people. How convenient ... they are slaughtering their countrymen and allowing the US to be blame for an "occupation" that is failing and you are jumping right on board. They launch an unprovoked attack on U.S. innocents, killing almost 3,000, then when counterattacked, killed their own people (again, women and children) and the U.S. is blame for a failing occupation. Well-done Zia. And you are quoting the UN on body counts, the same UN that was led by Kofi Annan, who served as chieftain of the $12 bil oil-for-food scandal? Huh? "The UN reports that 34,452 civilians were killed and more than 36,000 wounded in 2006." |
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| Name: |
Bob S. |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| I think Mr. Main needs to proofread his articles a bit better. He use the term "occupation" which is a very poor choice of words. Do we not remember it was to rid Iraq of an evil dicator, and it would be a "cake walk"? Or do we not remember that Iraq oil would help pay for this? But it does go to prove one thing that has been repeatedly proven over and over again. America is not good at being and occupying force on foreign soils not matter how much good we think it will do. |
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| Name: |
Michael Thiel |
Date: May 10, 2007 |
| When the President or an "expert" accuses the Democrats of "politicizing" an issue as ethically controversial as the invasion and continued occupation of Iraq such individuals are minimizing the deep moral concern and outrage of many Americans. Lies took us into Iraq and lies are keeping us there. There is little discussion of what the Iraqis desire, despite the fact that poll after poll indicate that they want us out of their country. Two million refugees and 1/2 million Iraqi casualties (according to the St. Hopkins study) later, we still have "pundits" who are disregarding the voices of conscience and who seem to want us in Iraq perpetually. |
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| Name: |
Ian McGarrett |
Date: May 13, 2007 |
| At the time, I thought the AUMF was intended by Congress to give the president the diplomatic clout to force Iraq's compliance with the inspections regime, and as such was successful. The UN inspectors were allowed back and given unfettered access to sites and scientific personnel. The AUMF (in Iraq) also provided a congressional fig-leaf for the executive office in its ongoing and escalating military operations in Iraq and represented faith in the White House's intentions. Alas, a faith betrayed by the administration. |
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| Name: |
Aaron |
Date: May 15, 2007 |
| To Matthew Murphy:
The current state of civil war getting worse every day appeared since the US invaded Iraq with lies and disinformation in 2003, when there was no violence of that magnitude before the war. Where were you for the last sixteen years ???
The allegation that Iraq was directly behind 9-11 has already been disproven time and again by the 9/11 Commission and numerous subsequent US intelligence reports on Iraq, and even by your president himself. What's your point ???
Check the facts regarding the UN Oil-for-Food scandal when Kofi Anan was not directly involved in it because the Volcker report already cleared him from that charge. And by the way, what happened to the $9 billion that was supposed to be used for the reconstruction of Iraq, but instead disappeared without a trace on Viceroy Bremer's watch ???
Again I must ask: Are you Bush supporters always that clueless to the reality that the US OCCUPATION is what actually drives this entire disaster ? or do you always lie like the Bush administration has done to justify this war - like it's lying now - and like it will always continue to lie in order to cover up its utter failures in Iraq and the entire region ? Which is it ??? |
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| Name: |
Garrock |
Date: May 23, 2007 |
| Quite simple in my opinion... but first one must do research. The point or question in this regard is what is the root cause for the hatred felt by many of the muslim nations, and are we actually doing any good over there?
Thomas Jefferson once said "Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none"
Continually our government meddles in the affairs of other nations, imposing our will... often times subvertly. Our support of Iraq during the Iran/Iraq affair, created the regime we are now trying to recover from. This fostered a hatred for US, from the Iran nation... you do realize, that despite generations of hatred between the 2 nations Iran is offering aid to the Iraq resistance. The support from Pakistan was "purchased" by the allies, this in no way fosters good-will in my opinion. Saudi allowed us to base ourselves in their territory to intervene in the Iraq/Kuwait affair... we never left. Support for Israel can only foster hatred from the oppressed Palestinians...
Our government constantly spews alot of words, and text, making it extremely difficult to get to the root of its meaning. This "war" has a very very deep root, and it goes back at least 40 years. All the while we continue meddling in foreign nations' affairs, and this can do nothing but foster resentment and hatred. |
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