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AFL-CIO Opposes Wars in Afghanistan, Iraq as "Costly Mistake"

Posted: 08/11/11 05:39 PM ET

"There is no way to fund what we must do as a nation without bringing our troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The militarization of our foreign policy has proven to be a costly mistake. It is time to invest at home" - AFL-CIO Executive Council, Aug. 3, 2011

In a major victory for the progressive movement, the AFL-CIO has condemned the Iraq and Afghanistan wars as a "militarization of our foreign policy" and a "costly mistake." The statement, adopted August 3, is the most forthright in the history of a labor movement marked by pro-war allegiances for many decades. It reflects a deep sentiment among working families, estimated at 80 percent opposition by one longtime labor official in Washington D.C. Much credit goes to the patient bottom-up organizing by U.S. Labor Against the War and others, who solicited endorsements from hundreds of locals and mobilized labor contingents at countless rallies across the country.

The AFL-CIO officially opposed the Iraq war at its 2005 convention. But the organization was supportive of Afghanistan, or at least reluctant to oppose the administration's policy until recently. For example, at a closed meeting last year, the labor federation refused to participate in a large Washington march if the demands included withdrawal from Afghanistan. Peace advocates were disappointed, but speakers like Harry Belafonte proceeded to attack the war policy in any event, to cheers from thousands of marchers.

The San Francisco labor federation, led by Tim Paulson, has long advocated that the national federation oppose the interventionist wars on the basis of their economic cost. That position prevailed in a discussion of 30-some local labor leaders in the week before the Aug. 3 executive council meeting. According to Paulson, who was there, the inclusion of the anti-war statement was "first and foremost a product of the disastrous budget debate that led to the debt ceiling deal." The Afghanistan war cost is over one trillion taxpayer dollars, not including long-term costs for veterans' health care.

In the advisory committee meeting, Paulson said, "we really struggled over ways to take back the jobs debate and needless to say, the subject of how the largest part of our massive debt comes from our foreign policy made its way prominently back on the table. Our advice to the executive officers included exiting the wars."

It is known that Rep. Barbara Lee, a leader of the Democratic peace forces in Congress, also called AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka in February with a plea to support the majority of House Democrats demanding a rapid withdrawal from Afghanistan. In the same month, the Democratic National Committee, which includes a heavy labor representation, unanimously passed a resolution calling for a more rapid withdrawal from Afghanistan with a transfer of dollars to job creation.

The AFL-CIO is expected to decide this week on messaging and resources to implement its statement.

If the Obama administration withdraws all 47,000 troops from Iraq this year, and just half (or 50,000) its troops from Afghanistan by 2012, the taxpayer savings would be $200 billion to invest in America during the next two years. The Senate Democratic deficit proposal included $1.2 trillion in tax savings from "winding down" the two wars in the next several years.

According to Judith LeBlanc of Peace Action, "this development opens the door to more intense activity at all levels of the labor movement to partner with community, social service, religious, student and other organizations for racial and economic justice in an effort to turn back the deficit mania sweeping the country and establish new priorities in public policy that create jobs and provide the social services people need."

 
 
 

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"There is no way to fund what we must do as a nation without bringing our troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The militarization of our foreign policy has proven to be a costly mistake. It is time ...
"There is no way to fund what we must do as a nation without bringing our troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The militarization of our foreign policy has proven to be a costly mistake. It is time ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Guitarsandmore
devoted father, community activist, musician, reti
11:10 PM on 08/14/2011
World War II lasted 4 years against a highly efficient war machine with advanced technology. You can't tell me that the tiny population of Afghanistan poses a bigger military problem than Germany did. I'm not buying it. This war should have lasted a couple years at most; rounding up a small population like that should not take very long. The U.S. military is sand bagging, milking the cow, dairy farming, and bleeding our country dry of funds. Bin Laden is dead and gone, bring the troops home.
Pauline Jaing
Artist, worker, mother
07:11 AM on 08/16/2011
World War II actually started in 1938 in Spain, so it lasted about 8 years. Your view it lasted only 4 years is myopic from the USA.

The US has lost every war it started since 1945 -- Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc. That is because these wars are NOT like World War II, major powers are not directly involved EXCEPT the STUPID USA, who is the Invader, occupier, oppressor.

Asymmetrical war cannot be one by either side; only a devastating stalemate can be achieved. Regular warfare is useless in agricultural, tribal or feudal (sharecropping) societies).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Guitarsandmore
devoted father, community activist, musician, reti
08:12 AM on 08/19/2011
You failed to mention that we lost the the war on poverty, the war on drugs, the war against teen pregnancy, the war on illiteracy.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
librldem
Snarking for Merika n jebus! Glory!
12:40 PM on 08/12/2011
Gee Tom... The US has not won a war of any kind or substance since 1945! What was the first clue that our occupations in Vietraqistan were doomed? lol
09:51 AM on 08/12/2011
I'm glad to see this development These wars were never winnable. The neocons and AIPAC pushed the US into these wars and it was stategically and morally wrong. I've said all along that the US could only lose or lose worse.

I'm not saying we should not have gone after Osama...we were right to do so. We just should have used small teams and intelligence to begin with...not hugh armies on the ground.

We've lost both wars...worse.

The costs are just too high.
Dayne
People are people
06:03 PM on 08/12/2011
So you are just passing over the fact that both wars have had a lot of Dem. support, even when they controlled the Congress. This is partisanship at its worst, but I'm used to that from posters on this site.
08:05 AM on 08/12/2011
Obama and his administration are as bad as Bush on the wars and the overseas empire and we should not be afraid to say so and in fact we should be sounding the alarm on the possibility that they are planning another adventure against Iran or Syria in order to please the Israeli lobby before the next election.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drew Sargent
Born-again human here
12:39 AM on 08/12/2011
Right again Tom, but the same forces are against you once again. We are cursed to repeat our dishonorable war in Vietnam, and it won't stop with Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Until the US military establishment achieve unilateral world dominance, there will be no peace.

Why should the corporate state spend money on the Populace at home, when foreign wars are so much more profitable, so intoxicating. The ruling class has already made it very clear that "we the people" ARE ON OUR OWN.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Katherine Schock
Over the hill,liberal,organic gardener
11:07 PM on 08/11/2011
Thanks for this post, Mr. Hayden. It's been obvious for quite some time now, that the treasure spent on the wars and the MIC has over ridden the domestic agenda in any meaningful way. Now that our economic disparity has been brought out in the open, (poor getting poorer, rich getting richer) perhaps we can get our priorities straight and see if we can put humans first in line instead of at the end, If the AFL-CIO helps us to do that, I will be among the many who will be happy to help!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patriot23
09:02 PM on 08/11/2011
The AFL-CIO would rather have that money for themselves. They don't care about the security of our country or anything else for that matter. They just want to be able to forcefully steal the hard earned money of the people they enslave...err I mean represent.

www.americaspoliticalforum.com
11:05 PM on 08/11/2011
If card-check ever passes you can add internal coercion and terrorism to the description. "Democracy" certainly would not be part of the description.
12:22 AM on 08/12/2011
How the he** would they steal money? you don't make sense..
Dayne
People are people
06:04 PM on 08/12/2011
It's called Union dues, every hear of them.
05:00 PM on 08/11/2011
You think ?