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US Elections: The Iraq Factor
by Ramzy Baroud As the race for the United States presidential nominations progresses, the stances of and attitudes towards both Republican and Democratic candidates continue to bring up causes for concern, in terms of their past behaviour, current appeal and general trustworthiness.
Republican Mitt Romney's exit has practically assured Senator John McCain's victory in his party. While we might expect McCain's narrow-mindedness and pro-war rhetoric to make him an uncontested darling of conservatives, the doubts that remain about his credibility -- and the seemingly absurd accusations by some that he is more liberal than Democratic liberals -- highlight two disturbing trends.
The first is the extent of the moral corruption among many
Republicans that would enable viewing McCain as a liberal. Then again
it might be a fair assessment in the context of Armageddon enthusiast,
Mike Huckabee, surpassing expectations on Super Tuesday. The rise of
the former Arkansas governor -- highlighting the growing power of
fundamentalist evangelical Christians -- should have been picked up as
an alarming trend by Americans, but the media was largely unmoved.
The
second is that making such comparisons between McCain and Democratic
nominees doesn't necessarily point to a lack of judgement in
characters. Clinton's hawkish foreign policy views would indeed qualify
her as a faithful follower of the warmongering policies of Bush himself.
On
the Democratic side, Super Tuesday only served to confirm Barack
Obama's recent gains. After the vote count, Clinton, who was previously
seen as the uncontested frontrunner was now conceivably the underdog.
True, the numbers of delegates' votes garnered by both nominees is too
close to place either on top, but Obama's speed in squashing Clinton's
lead in national polls and his fundraising ability should be a cause
for great concern in the Clinton camp.
Naturally, as both
nominees will vie for as many votes as possible in the next round,
charm and charisma alone can no longer suffice. The sizeable dilemma is
that Obama and Clinton elections programmes are in many ways only
superficially different.
Both nominees claim to be
establishment nominees. Clinton appeals to an older generation by
virtue of her "experience". Obama appeals to the impressionable young,
who have been taught political correctness early in life, and who are
eager for new language and a new approach.
Obama's record is
certainly more honourable than Clinton's. His genuine involvement in
community activism at a young age and his anti-war stance during his
Senate years point at a certain degree of moral clarity, a rare quality
in Washington indeed.
But both nominees walk a very fine line.
Aside from the Iraq issue -- Obama voted against the war while Clinton
voted for it -- the remaining differences are not significant enough to
be exploited by either to guarantee the decisive victory needed before
the August Democratic Convention. If neither have enough votes to
become the uncontested nominee, the party's more influential delegates
-- the super-delegates -- will have the final say, a worst-case
scenario that could compromise the very democratic nature of the entire
process.
There is a good chance that both candidates will
avoid an all-out war over issues that are significant concerns for most
Americans. While race and gender are supposedly defining issues for
most voters, the fact that Clinton is a woman, and Obama is
African-American does not mean they represent the interests of their
respective group. Moreover, neither Obama wishes to be defined solely
by his colour nor Clinton by her gender.
The Iraq war will
most likely define President Bush's legacy. Moreover, once the
presidential candidates for both parties are determined, the war will
probably position itself as the lead point of contention. Senator
McCain is already gearing up for the anticipated fight over war with
the democrats. In Norfolk, Virginia, he attacked Obama and Clinton for
wanting to set dates for withdrawal from Iraq. "I believe that would
have catastrophic consequences. I believe that Al-Qaeda would trumpet
to the world that they had defeated the United States of America, and I
believe that therefore they would try to follow us home."
McCain
-- presumably a "war hero" -- realises that the disastrous Iraq war is
most likely to be his campaign's weak point, and the faltering economy
will not divert attention from it. In fact, in the minds of many
Americans, both issues are linked. According to an Associated
Press-Ipsos poll after Super Tuesday, the majority of Americans believe
that the best way to escape recession is to pull out of Iraq.
If
the Iraq debate has indeed emerged as the most significant in coming
months, the chances are Obama will have the upper hand. But Obama's
anti-war stance has become a source of concern to Israel, whose
"pro-Israel" camp in the US remains too significant to overlook. Justin
Elliot, writing for Mother Jones, discussed Obama's challenges in
putting that group at ease. After all the man is black, his middle name
is "Hussein" and has a few "slips" of a tongue on his record --
notwithstanding his statement last March that "no one has suffered more
than the Palestinian people," which he grossly reinterpreted later.
MJ
Rosenberg of the Israel Policy Forum, a dovish advocacy group, told
Elliot, "the more right-wing segments of the Jewish community are the
least likely to be comfortable with an African-American president."
To
prove them wrong, Obama sent a letter to the US ambassador at the
Security Council demanding that the council "should clearly and
unequivocally condemn the rocket attacks against Israel... If it
cannot... I urge you to ensure that it does not speak at all." He also
claimed to understand why Israel was "forced" to impose a siege on
Gaza, a siege that human rights organisations have held responsible for
causing mass starvation and unparalleled catastrophe.
What's
important about Obama's dramatic shift is that he has proven to be just
as self-serving and easily manipulated as the rest. If he can so
readily support the starvation of 1.5 million people, who is to
guarantee that he will not renounce his moral stances on issues
pertaining to Iraq, Iran, and indeed America itself?
Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers
and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
Saying, "Armageddon enthusiast, Mike Huckabee" good sign of ignorance written by Arlen Williams,
February 16, 2008
That is not just a cheap shot. It bears all the marks of a thuggish ignorance and dishonest propaganda technique that is not uncommon among religious bigots. (See Germany, 1930's)