Clinton
Moves To The Right On War
By Thomas Riggins
17 March, 2007
Countercurrents.org
(New York City, 3-15-2007)
According to today’s New York Times Hillary Clinton has
decided to keep American troops in Iraq should she become the next president
She is quoted in an article by Michael Gordon and Patrick Healy [Clinton
Says Some G.I,’s in Iraq Would Stay if She Took Office].
The whole tone of the article
indicates that Clinton has moved to the right of center, has tacitly
accepted the Bush strategy of establishing greater U.S. imperialist
control of the middle east and of taking control of Iraq’s oil.
In other words, she has moved into the neocon camp with respect to Iraq.
She says we will have a “remaining
military as well as political mission in Iraq” after Bush departs
and she is in control. This view flies in the face of the views of most
Americans who want a total withdrawal from Iraq.
Clinton said troops would
have to stay because of our “remaining vital national security
interests in Iraq.” She means the troops will be needed to guarantee
that we will get control of the Iraqi oil reserves. Iraq, she said,
“is right in the heart of the oil region. It is directly in opposition
to our interests [she means if a non-pro-U.S. government emerged], to
the interests of the regimes [?], to Israel’s interests.[i.e.,
to keep Arab land and not go back to its 1967 borders]--tr]” By
all means lets put Israel’s interests, and those of “the
regimes” and the oil
companies, before those of the American people.
The more you read the article
the more contradictory and confused Clinton’s statements become.
“So it will be up to me,” she said, “to try to figure
out how to protect those national security interests and continue to
take our troops out of this urban warfare, which I think is a loser.”
The article reveals that she doesn’t want to take the troops out
of Iraq, just out of the urban areas which she doesn’t think they
can hold.
Another reason to keep troops
in theatre is that Iraq “serves as a petri dish for insurgents
and Al-Qaeda,” she is quoted as saying. This ignores the facts
that the insurgency is fueled by the presence of U.S. troops and Al-Qaeda's
raison d’etre in Iraq would vanish with our withdrawal. Most knowledgeable
commentators think the insurgency would turn on Al-Qaeda which makes
up a tiny part of the opposition to the occupation.
Clinton thinks she will inherit
an unstable situation in Iraq. She will have to protect the Iraqi government,
the Kurds (from the Turks) and prevent Iran from “having too much
influence.”
Clinton will try to be Bush lite.
She wants to remove our troops
from active combat and settle them outside the urban areas where they
will allow the Sunnis and Shia to slug it out. They might as well just
come home (except for all that oil). Where will they be stationed? Probably
to the north of Baghdad and in the west of Anbar province.
How many? A former Pentagon
official [under Rumsfeld] estimates that 75,000 troops should do it.
It is simply ridiculous for Clinton to even contemplate keeping 75,000,
or even 50,000, troops in Iraq during her term in office. This is simply
a watered down version of Bush’s imperial folly. If Clinton wants
to be the next president she had better get more in tune with the American
people than with the military-industrial complex.
Thomas Riggins
is book review editor of PA his email is [email protected]