Feingold Offers Best Democratic Rebuttal to Bush on Iraq

Feingold Offers Best Democratic Rebuttal to Bush on Iraq

Feingold Offers Best Democratic Rebuttal to Bush on Iraq

George Bush offered a predictable defense of his war in Iraq today, as the world marked the fifth anniversary of this quagmire.

Barack Obama, who had the wherewithal to oppose it from outside the Senate but has been a cautious critic since his arrival in the chamber in 2005, offered a more skeptical take than the president. So too did Hillary Clinton, who lacked the wherewithal to oppose it from within the Senate but who has come to recognize that she was wrong to trust Bush.

But the best response to the president and his war comes from the senator who opposed Bush in 2002 and has continued to do so with far more passion, focus and determination than either of the contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination.

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George Bush offered a predictable defense of his war in Iraq today, as the world marked the fifth anniversary of this quagmire.

Barack Obama, who had the wherewithal to oppose it from outside the Senate but has been a cautious critic since his arrival in the chamber in 2005, offered a more skeptical take than the president. So too did Hillary Clinton, who lacked the wherewithal to oppose it from within the Senate but who has come to recognize that she was wrong to trust Bush.

But the best response to the president and his war comes from the senator who opposed Bush in 2002 and has continued to do so with far more passion, focus and determination than either of the contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold, the man who chose to focus on his Senate Foreign Relations Committee duties rather than run an uphill campaign for the Democratic nomination, remains the savviest voice of opposition to Bush’s misguided foreign policies.

Here’s what Feingold says:

“Today marks the five year anniversary of the war in Iraq. Although Saddam Hussein’s brutal authoritarian regime no longer exists, the war has been nothing less than a disaster for that country, for others in the region, and unquestionably for our own, as well.

“Four million Iraqis are displaced from their homes and Iraq’s profoundly weak central government cannot provide its citizens with sufficient basic services like food, water, and electricity or protect them from savage violence, disappearances, or kidnappings. Tensions continue to rise throughout the Middle East and, as the war triggers internal unrest in many countries, it has caused our own credibility to decrease significantly.

“The war continues to undermine our top national security priority – the fight against al Qaeda, which has strengthened itself in Pakistan and reached out to new affiliates around the world. According to the Congressional Research Service, the war costs us over $10 billion a month in direct costs. The war saps our military, which is stretched too thin to keep us safe here at home. In short, the war is making us weaker, not stronger, and that trend is not likely to change.

“America continues to be mired in a conflict that has no end in sight. As of the beginning of this week a total of 3,978 American soldiers had been killed and 29,395 wounded. While the administration touts a recent decline in violence as an indication that the surge is ‘working,’ there is little political progress that might indicate the decrease in violence will result in genuine national reconciliation. As the region remains particularly fragile and our international credibility profoundly damaged, Americans ask each other just how many more billions of dollars will be spent and how many more of our brave troops will die or be injured while we wait for national reconciliation in Iraq–which is the only way to end the violence.

“Recently, many of my Republican colleagues stood on the Senate floor to sing their praises of the surge, but now we may be witnessing a reemergence of the brutal violence that was said to have dissipated. Earlier this month, two car bombs exploded, killing 24 people and wounding 56, while later in the week two bombs exploded in downtown Baghdad, killing nearly 70 people and wounding over 120. On March 10th a suicide bomber approached five American soldiers in Baghdad and detonated a bomb killing all five soldiers and injuring three more. This attack was labeled the worst attack on U.S. forces in months and it comes only days after a female suicide bomber blew herself up in the home of a Sunni leader who was reported to have been working in collaboration with U.S. forces.

“Similarly, another political impasse in Parliament may result in little tangible results from recently passed and supposedly key legislation. Yes, a de-baathification law has passed but it may usher in renewed sectarian tensions as former officials from Hussein’s regime try to reclaim their old jobs. A provincial powers election law was sent back to the Parliament by the President’s Council–requiring another round of drafting before it is able to move forward. As we well know, working on a law and even passing it is one thing–seeing it successfully implemented is another.

“National reconciliation still looks far off. The passage of what the administration is calling “benchmark” laws does not ensure society-wide sectarian reconciliation; in fact, there are significant concerns about how the local efforts we have supported to bring about this decline in violence will be integrated into the national framework. The Sunni Awakening has taken tens of thousands of former-insurgent Sunni militia fighters and it is unclear to what extent we can rely on their loyalties. It is not hard to see, however, that this policy risks increasing distrust between the local Sunnis and national government, which is led predominately by Shi’ites.

“Without a legitimate political settlement at the national level, any decline in violence in Iraq is likely to be tenuous. Recent news from Iraq seems to indicate that any gains in security are already slipping and without a strategy for safe redeployment, it is inevitably our brave men and women who will pay the price.

“The war in Iraq drags on while al-Qaida has reconstituted and strengthened itself. The Director of National Intelligence, DNI, recently testified before Congress that al-Qaida’s central leadership based in the border area of Pakistan is its most dangerous component. And just a few months ago, the DNI again repeated the Intelligence Community’s assessment that, over the last two years, ‘al Qaeda’s central leadership has been able to regenerate the core operational capabilities needed to conduct attacks in the Homeland.’

“It was from Afghanistan, not Iraq, that the 9/11 attacks were planned and it was under the Taliban regime, which is once again gaining ground, that al-Qaida was able to flourish so freely. With a recent report warning that we are not winning in Afghanistan, we need to rethink our current Iraq-based strategy so we can counter the threat posed by al Qaida around the world.

“On the 5th anniversary of the US-led invasion in Iraq, it is clear that continuing the current open-ended military policy doesn’t make sense. The American people certainly know that this war doesn’t make sense and they expect us to do everything in our power to end it. We in Congress cannot in good conscience put Iraq on the backburner, and we cannot turn a blind eye or feign helplessness as the administration keeps pursuing its misguided policies.

“This Congress has no greater priority than making right the mistake it made over five years ago when it authorized the war in Iraq. I do not want the American people to lose faith in their elected leaders for pursuing a war that they rightly oppose. I do not want to watch a failed strategy perpetuate regional turmoil any longer and I do not want any more American troops to die or get injured for a war that is not in our national security interest.”

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Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

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