Obama still leads in the race for the nomination but has been damaged on core issues of character and message. Clinton still can win but only by alienating many voters the Democrats need. The peace and justice movement should be cheered by the attention to Iraq and NAFTA, and keep on pressing the candidates.
Obama must get tougher without contradicting the high standards he is setting for himself. There are two lines he can pursue:
His campaign can demand immediate disclosure of the Clinton tax returns, White House and Library documents that will show where Hillary Clinton's $5 million donation came from, and whether Bill Clinton has used his influence in cases like the uranium contract with Kazakhstan for a Clinton donor who gave at least $31 million to the ex-president's charitable foundation [NYT, Jan. 31, 2008]. It is imperative for Obama to parry the Clintons on these issues while the ugly Chicago trial of Obama supporter Tony Rezko is unfolding in Chicago.
Second, those same White House records will reveal whether Clinton has lied about having lobbied internally against NAFTA as First Lady. Only biographer Carl Bernstein claims she did, but he may be referring to her concerns about the timing of the NAFTA initiative, not NAFTA itself. Obama needs to parry on this issue to offset the story out of Canada that his representative gave secret assurances to Ottawa about Obama's NAFTA proposal.
Finally, in terms of policy, it is becoming increasingly questionable whether Obama can succeed at his lofty visionary level without sharpening a principled policy difference with Clinton that really matters to voters. It is too late to dream up a new issue. The only policy difference favoring Obama that goes straight to the issue of "experience" is Iraq. It no longer is enough that Obama opposed the war five years ago, especially if it appears that there are no differences between the candidates now. For whatever reason, Obama has allowed Clinton to appear to take an identical stand on the war. Is that true? Or is it time for Obama to issue a further clarification of his position separating him from both Clinton and McCain? The peace movement and media can play a role here.
The key questions are these:
Are these questions too complicated for the media and the candidates to ask themselves? Or is it true once again that the issues which are hidden in campaigns turn out to be the most important in the end?
The peace movement can help force the issue, especially in Pennsylvania, if it is galvanized. Iraq, it is said, is the pivotal issue in the Philadelphia suburbs. The message from the peace movement delivered on blogs, leaflets and in rallies could be something like this:
We oppose Sen. McCain because he wants to continue President Bush's war in Iraq for years ahead at a cost of X lives and X dollars to the people of Pennsylvania and this country. But we have an urgent question for the Democratic candidates: which of you really will end the Iraq war, on what deadline, and not leave behind tens of thousands of US counter-terrorism units and advisers in a bloody counterinsurgency quagmire like Afghanistan today or Central America in the 1970s?
Assuming Obama says nothing new, which is likely at this point, the way is open for Clinton, believe it or not, to become the preferred anti-war candidate. All she needs to do is listen to John Podesta, the former White House chief of staff for her husband, who strongly favors the withdrawal of all American troops in one year. Podesta argues that leaving thousands of troops behind would sink them further in a quagmire. Or she could listen to her husband's former CIA director, John Deutch, who publicly says the US should broker a deal with Iran and get out of Iraq. She could seize on Obama's apparent policy of planning to continue contracts with Blackwater security forces.
Or Obama could stop relying on his five-year old speech and say the time has come to clarify who really wants to leave Iraq. In this scenario, he would say that Clinton has avoided saying whether she would set an actual deadline to withdraw all combat troops, whether troops will be gone by 2013, or whether she would leave tens of thousands of American troops still in Iraq after two terms of her presidency. The evidence is clear that she plans to keep behind trainers, advisers, counter-terrorism units and sufficient forces to "deter Iran."
The math is simple, starting with the Baker-Hamilton assumption of 10-20,000 American troops left behind after combat units withdraw. For 15,000 adviser/trainers there would be a back-up force three times that number, for a total of 60,000. If 50,000 private contractors also remained, the total would run to 110,000 while the current combat brigades were being withdrawn. This could be the greatest false promise since Richard Nixon's secret plan for peace in 1972, which was followed by his carpet bombing of Hanoi with B-52s.
For further on this false promise, see "Many Troops Would Stay in Iraq If a Democrat Wins", Wall Street Journal, Feb. 29, 2008, and "Peace, Or Counterinsurgency Without End", Tom Hayden, SF Chronicle, Jan. 24, 2008.
So what is a sensible alternative to this nightmare scenario? Any serious alternative would begin with the assertion that counterinsurgency in Iraq can't turn around a war that 160,000 combat troops have failed to win. The US units will be caught in a sectarian crossfire. Only a political/diplomatic settlement can contain the damage caused by the Bush policies, and a diplomatic offensive will have to include a pledge that American troops will withdraw before the neighboring countries will become engaged in the issues of refugees, reconciliation and reconstruction.
Beyond Iraq, it is crucial that the US not fall into the Bush-McCain-Neo-conservative scenario, stated by Bush in 2005, of a new Cold War against "Islamo-fascism." Not that American military power shouldn't be available for deterrent purposes against anyone who has attacked this country. But military approaches in the absence of a primary emphasis on diplomacy and political/economic/energy solutions will only sink the next generation in permanent, bloody, costly, and destabilizing quagmires without an exit strategy in sight. It will be like burning down haystacks in search of needles. It is exactly the US policy that Osama Bin Ladin hopes for. [see Marching Toward Hell, by Michael Scheuer, the man who tracked Bin Ladin and carried out renditions for the CIA]
This scenario, if pursued by any of the candidates, will also bury the possibilities of funding universal health care or alternatives to our oil dependency for the next generation, just as Lyndon Johnson's delusional promise of "guns and butter" destabilized the American economy and made us vulnerable to oil boycotts in the wake of Vietnam.
It would create a worsening national security crisis by further inflaming the Muslim world, isolating the US from its allies, and creating the pretexts for multiplying insurgencies, including the possibility of another 9/11-style attack.
Anyone with the brain of a plant can see the US heading right into these traps and quagmires. Read Barbara Tuchman's March to Folly and it will become clear that only a stunning jolt might force a reversal of course. That "jolt", hopefully, will come from a popular and unavoidable demand for peace rather than another military fiasco.
Obama, if he truly aspires to audacity, now is the time to point out that this is the disastrous and predictable future that will result from the policies proposed by those who claim to have superior "experience" and "expertise" in foreign policy. For precedent, he could stand in Springfield, Illinois, and remind the nation that it was another political novice from Illinois, young Abraham Lincoln, who opposed the Mexican-American war and went on to become quite a commander-in-chief. #
TOM HAYDEN is the author of Ending the War in Iraq [2007] and Writing for a Democratic Society, The Tom Hayden Reader [2008].
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A sly, "well it appears my opponent Senator Clinton has gone on record and is now supporting the Republican nominee for President' might be in order.
What does it say about Sen. Clinton's judgement that she jumped on the leaked memo from the Canadian government and used it to accuse Sen. Obama of approaching the Candians with a "wink and nod" disclaimer about renegotiating NAFTA, something that we now learn he did not do but she might have done if the Canadians are to be believed? Is she a thoroughly dishonest and unethical person whose dirty tricks just before primaries are her best method of winning? Or was she duped and manipulated by the Canadians to take the bait on the now discredited memo? Is this the sort of judgment she wants us to depend upon when that red phone rings at 3AM while the kids are sleeping?
Clinton had a plan A B and C and so on, ready to be rolled out in a timely manner if the acting and speech lessons didn't entirely do it. She had these Eve of the Preliminaries planned out as cunning surprises. You know she and Bill do know people in high places. It was all set go, piece by piece, as needed.
The horror is that it all worked. While the press was doing a mea culpa and viewers were feeling sorry for her obvious flubs and tears and embarrassed for her attempts at Whose Afraid of Virginia Woolf sarcasm, Madame LaFarge had it a going on. She's nobody's dupe. We must never "misunderestimate" her again.
The fact about that memo still remains that Obama initially lied and said no one from his campaign ever met with the Candian govt when they did. the actual content of that meeting was just part two.
When the memo came out, how was Hillary supposed to know whether the initial data coming from Canada was true or not?
But, in the end Obama did lie about whether the meeting did or did not take place.
Tom: Thanks for the excellent post. After reading much coverage today of Ohio, Pennsylvania and the Americans who will still not vote for an AfroAmerican I wonder if given this 'proof' of Obama's liability in the fall, will democrats stand up behind him or abandon him for Senator Clinton who will be, ostensibly, less of a risk?
Obama is not a liability. What you are seeing is the states that are having the hardest economic times voting for Hillary and the states that are not vote for Obama. Also Rush LImbaugh told the Republicans to cross over and vote for Hillary because they would rather run against Hillary because she has a long history of so called dirt they can use against her, Obama not so much. If you go back and look at the numbers you can see this is what happend. In Rhode Island 165,000 Democrats voted but only 25,000 Republicans. Do you believe it? In Texas over Two Million Democrats voted but less than a Million Republicans. Do you believe that? No, they crossed over.
Putting Obama on top of the ticket and Hillary on the bottom of the ticket will probably fix that. But swift boats are always ready and Republicans will say anything to get their slime back in office.
Here's a simple statement - Let's see if any of them will sign it:
War, as a political tool, is not an option for the United States of America in the 21st Century.
Tom, the Crisis in Democracy paper, written for the Trilateral Commission � 1975, New York University Press Michel Crozier, Samuel P. Huntington and Joji Watanuki, lays out in very nice detail exactly how they felt that our freedoms needed to be curtailed. They blamed much of the revolution of the 60's (weren't you there for part of that?) especially the resistance to the Viet Nam war, on too much education, income and security--like home ownership. Well, they've taken all that away now, haven't they?
What will you do if Hillary take these "wins" in the pink state of Texas and the Diebold state of Ohio and parlays them into an arm twisting, DLC, Mayor Daley style assault on the Michigan and Florida delegates and then the super delegates as well? Will you march? Will you protest? Will you lead?
The blueprint was drawn over thirty years ago as a response to you and the other radicals of the day! To think that any one person--Obama, Hillary, Thomas Jefferson himself--could overturn this unholy corporate cabal is naivete bordering on lunacy. This program of destruction of our Country, Constitution, and people is a direct reaction to the fear that you once instilled in the Elites. Lead again. Be relevant again.
Good article - I hope that Obama is seeing that it's time to attack and HARD. Clinton is starting to control all the spin on this and it's just disgusting. It's like watching the republicans swiftboat kerry on 2004. I really hope he can pull it through. I'm done with the democratic party if he doesn't. Sign me, disgusted by the Clinton war machine.
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