Democrats
Are Now the Aggressive War Party
For nearly a half century – since late in the
Vietnam War – the Democrats have been the less
warlike of the two parties, but that has flipped
with the choice of war hawk Hillary Clinton.
By Robert Parry
June 09, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- The Democratic Party has moved from being what you
might call a reluctant war party to an aggressive
war party with its selection of Hillary Clinton as
its presumptive presidential nominee. With minimal
debate, this historic change brings full circle the
arc of the party’s anti-war attitudes that began in
1968 and have now ended in 2016.
Since the
Vietnam War, the Democrats have been viewed as the
more peaceful of the two major parties, with the
Republicans often attacking Democratic candidates as
“soft” regarding use of military force.
But former
Secretary of State Clinton has made it clear that
she is eager to use military force to achieve
“regime change” in countries that get in the way of
U.S. desires. She abides by neoconservative
strategies of violent interventions especially in
the Middle East and she strikes a belligerent
posture as well toward nuclear-armed Russia and, to
a lesser extent, China.
Amid the
celebrations about picking the first woman as a
major party’s presumptive nominee, Democrats appear
to have given little thought to the fact that they
have abandoned a near half-century standing as the
party more skeptical about the use of military
force. Clinton is an unabashed war hawk who has
shown no inclination to rethink her pro-war
attitudes.
As a U.S.
senator from New York, Clinton voted for and avidly
supported the Iraq War, only cooling her enthusiasm
in 2006 when it became clear that the Democratic
base had turned decisively against the war and her
hawkish position endangered her chances for the 2008
presidential nomination, which she lost to Barack
Obama, an Iraq War opponent.
However, to
ease tensions with the Clinton wing of the party,
Obama selected Clinton to be his Secretary of State,
one of the first and most fateful decisions of his
presidency. He also kept on George W. Bush’s Defense
Secretary Robert Gates and neocon members of the
military high command, such as Gen. David Petraeus.
This “Team
of Rivals” – named after Abraham Lincoln’s initial
Civil War cabinet – ensured a powerful bloc of
pro-war sentiment, which pushed Obama toward more
militaristic solutions than he otherwise favored,
notably the wasteful counterinsurgency “surge” in
Afghanistan in 2009 which did little beyond get
another 1,000 U.S. soldiers killed and many more
Afghans.
Clinton was
a strong supporter of that “surge” – and Gates
reported in his memoir that she
acknowledged only opposing the Iraq War “surge” in
2007 for political reasons. Inside Obama’s foreign
policy councils, Clinton routinely took the most
neoconservative positions, such as defending a 2009
coup in Honduras that ousted a progressive
president.
Clinton
also sabotaged early efforts to work out an
agreement in which Iran surrendered much of its
low-enriched uranium, including an initiative in
2010 organized at Obama’s request by the leaders of
Brazil and Turkey. Clinton
sank that deal and escalated tensions with Iran
along the lines favored by Israel’s right-wing Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a Clinton favorite.
Pumping for War in Libya
In 2011,
Clinton successfully lobbied Obama to go to war
against Libya to achieve another “regime change,”
albeit cloaked in the more modest goal of
establishing only a “no-fly zone” to “protect
civilians.”
Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi had claimed he was battling
jihadists and terrorists who were building
strongholds around Benghazi, but Clinton and her
State Department underlings accused him of
slaughtering civilians and (in one of the more
colorful lies used to justify the war) distributing
Viagra to his troops so they could rape more women.
Despite
resistance from Russia and China, the United Nations
Security Council fell for the deception about
protecting civilians. Russia and China agreed to
abstain from the vote, giving Clinton her “no-fly
zone.” Once that was secured, however, the Obama
administration and several European allies unveiled
their real plan, to destroy the Libyan army and pave
the way for the violent overthrow of Gaddafi.
Privately,
Clinton’s senior aides viewed the Libyan “regime
change” as a chance to establish what
they called the “Clinton Doctrine” on using
“smart power” with plans for Clinton to rush to the
fore and claim credit once Gaddafi was ousted. But
that scheme failed when President Obama grabbed the
limelight after Gaddafi’s government collapsed.
But Clinton
would not be denied her second opportunity to claim
the glory when jihadist rebels captured Gaddafi on
Oct. 20, 2011, sodomized him with a knife and then
murdered him. Hearing of Gaddafi’s demise, Clinton
went into a network interview and
declared, “we came, we saw, he died” and
clapped her hands in glee.
Clinton’s
glee was short-lived, however. Libya soon descended
into chaos with Islamic extremists gaining control
of large swaths of the country. On Sept. 11, 2012,
jihadists attacked the U.S. consulate in Benghazi
killing Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three
other American personnel. It turned out Gaddafi had
been right about the nature of his enemies.
Undaunted
by the mess in Libya, Clinton made similar plans for
Syria where again she marched in lock-step with the
neocons and their “liberal interventionist”
sidekicks in support of another violent “regime
change,” ousting the Assad dynasty,
a top neocon/Israeli goal since the 1990s.
Clinton
pressed Obama to escalate weapons shipments and
training for anti-government rebels who were deemed
“moderate” but in reality
collaborated closely with radical Islamic forces,
including Al Nusra Front (Al Qaeda’s Syrian
franchise) and some even more extreme jihadists (who
coalesced into the Islamic State).
Again,
Clinton’s war plans were cloaked in humanitarian
language, such as the need to create a “safe zone”
inside Syria to save civilians. But her plans would
have required a major U.S. invasion of a sovereign
country, the destruction of its air force and much
of its military, and the creation of conditions for
another “regime change.”
In the case
of Syria, however, Obama resisted the pressure from
Clinton and other hawks inside his own
administration. The President did approve some
covert assistance to the rebels and allowed Saudi
Arabia, Turkey and the Gulf states to do much more,
but he did not agree to an outright U.S.-led
invasion to Clinton’s disappointment.
Parting Ways
Clinton
finally left the Obama administration at the start
of his second term in 2013, some say voluntarily and
others say in line with Obama’s desire to finally
move ahead with serious negotiations with Iran over
its nuclear program and to apply more pressure on
Israel to reach a long-delayed peace settlement with
the Palestinians. Secretary of State John Kerry was
willing to do some of the politically risky work
that Clinton was not.
Many on the
Left deride Obama as “Obomber” and mock his
hypocritical acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize in
2009. And there is no doubt that Obama has waged war
his entire presidency, bombing at least seven
countries by his own count. But the truth is that he
has generally been among the most dovish members of
his administration, advocating a “realistic” (or
restrained) application of American power. By
contrast, Clinton was among the most hawkish senior
officials.
A major
testing moment for Obama came in August 2013 after a
sarin gas attack outside Damascus, Syria, that
killed hundreds of Syrians and that the State
Department and the mainstream U.S. media immediately
blamed on the forces of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad.
There was
almost universal pressure inside Official Washington
to militarily enforce Obama’s “red line” against
Assad using chemical weapons. Amid this intense
momentum toward war, it was widely assumed that
Obama would order a harsh retaliatory strike against
the Syrian military. But U.S. intelligence and key
figures in the U.S. military smelled a rat, a
provocation carried out by Islamic extremists to
draw the United States into the Syrian war on their
side.
At the last
minute and at great political cost to himself, Obama
listened to the doubts of his intelligence advisers
and called off the attack, referring the issue to
the U.S. Congress and then accepting a
Russian-brokered deal in which Assad surrendered all
his chemical weapons though continuing to deny a
role in the sarin attack.
Eventually,
the sarin
case against Assad would collapse. Only
one rocket was found to have carried sarin and it
had a very limited range placing its firing position
likely within rebel-controlled territory. But
Official Washington’s conventional wisdom never
budged. To this day, politicians and pundits
denounce Obama for not enforcing his “red line.”
There’s
little doubt, however, what Hillary Clinton would
have done. She has been eager for a much more
aggressive U.S. military role in Syria since the
civil war began in 2011. Much as she used propaganda
and deception to achieve “regime change” in Libya,
she surely would have done the same in Syria,
embracing the pretext of the sarin attack – “killing
innocent children” – to destroy the Syrian military
even if the rebels were the guilty parties.
Still Lusting for War
Indeed,
during the 2016 campaign – in those few moments that
have touched on foreign policy – Clinton declared
that as President she would order the U.S. military
to invade Syria. “Yes, I do still support a no-fly
zone,” she said during the April 14 debate. She also
wants a “safe zone” that would require seizing
territory inside Syria.
But no one
should be gullible enough to believe that Clinton’s
invasion of Syria would stop at a “safe zone.” As
with Libya, once the camel’s nose was into the tent,
pretty soon the animal would be filling up the whole
tent.
Perhaps
even scarier is what a President Clinton would do
regarding Iran and Ukraine, two countries where
belligerent U.S. behavior could start much bigger
wars.
For
instance, would President Hillary Clinton push the
Iranians so hard – in line with what Netanyahu
favors – that they would renounce the nuclear deal
and give Clinton an excuse to bomb-bomb-bomb Iran?
In Ukraine,
would Clinton escalate U.S. military support for the
post-coup anti-Russian Ukrainian government,
encouraging its forces to annihilate the ethnic
Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine and to “liberate”
the people of Crimea from “Russian aggression”
(though they voted by 96 percent to leave the failed
Ukrainian state and rejoin Russia)?
Would
President Clinton expect the Russians to stand down
and accept these massacres? Would she take matters
to the next level to demonstrate how tough she can
be against Russian President Vladimir Putin whom she
has compared to Hitler? Might she buy into the
latest neocon dream of achieving “regime change” in
Moscow? Would she be wise enough to recognize how
dangerous such instability could be?
Of course,
one would expect that all of Clinton’s actions would
be clothed in the crocodile tears of “humanitarian”
warfare, starting wars to “save the children” or to
stop the evil enemy from “raping defenseless girls.”
The truth of such emotional allegations would be
left for the post-war historians to try to sort out.
In the meantime, President Clinton would have her
wars.
Having
covered Washington for nearly four decades, I always
marvel at how selective concerns for human rights
can be. When “friendly” civilians are dying, we are
told that we have a “responsibility to protect,” but
when pro-U.S. forces are slaughtering civilians of
an adversary country or movement, reports of those
atrocities are dismissed as “enemy propaganda” or
ignored altogether. Clinton is among the most
cynical in this regard.
Trading Places
But the
larger picture for the Democrats is that they have
just adopted an extraordinary historical reversal
whether they understand it or not. They have
replaced the Republicans as the party of aggressive
war, though clearly many Republicans still dance to
the neocon drummer just as Clinton and “liberal
interventionists” do. Still, Donald Trump, for all
his faults, has adopted a relatively peaceful point
of view, especially in the Mideast and with Russia.
While today
many Democrats are congratulating themselves for
becoming the first major party to make a woman the
presumptive nominee, they may soon have to decide
whether that distinction justifies putting an
aggressive war hawk in the White House. In a way,
the issue is an old one for Democrats, whether
“identity politics” or anti-war policies are more
important.
At least
since 1968 and the chaotic Democratic convention in
Chicago, the party has advanced, sometimes
haltingly, those two agendas, pushing for broader
rights for all and seeking to restrain the nation’s
militaristic impulses.
In the
1970s, Democrats largely repudiated the Vietnam War
while the Republicans waved the flag and equated
anti-war positions with treason. By the 1980s and
early 1990s, Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush were
making war fun again – Grenada, Afghanistan, Panama
and the Persian Gulf, all relatively low-cost
conflicts with victorious conclusions.
By the
1990s, Bill Clinton (along with Hillary Clinton) saw
militarism as just another issue to be triangulated.
With the Soviet Union’s collapse, the Clinton-42
administration saw the opportunity for more low-cost
tough-guy/gal-ism – continuing a harsh embargo and
periodic air strikes against Iraq (causing the
deaths of a U.N.-estimated half million children);
blasting Serbia into submission over Kosovo; and
expanding NATO to the east toward Russia’s borders.
But Bill
Clinton did balk at the more extreme neocon ideas,
such as the one from the Project for the New
American Century for a militarily enforced “regime
change” in Iraq. That had to wait for George W. Bush
in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. As a New York
senator, Hillary Clinton made sure she was onboard
for war on Iraq just as she sided with Israel’s
pummeling of Lebanon and the Palestinians in Gaza.
Hillary
Clinton was taking triangulation to an even more
acute angle as she sided with virtually every
position of the Netanyahu government in Israel and
moved in tandem with the neocons as they cemented
their control of Washington’s foreign policy
establishment. Her only brief flirtation with an
anti-war position came in 2006 when her political
advisers informed her that her continued support for
Bush’s Iraq War would doom her in the Democratic
presidential race.
But she let
her hawkish plumage show again as Obama’s Secretary
of State from 2009 to 2013 – and once she felt she
had the 2016 Democratic race in hand (after her
success in the southern primaries) she pivoted back
to her hard-line positions in full support of Israel
and in a full-throated defense of her war on Libya,
which she still won’t view as a failure.
The smarter
neocons are already lining up to endorse Clinton,
especially given Donald Trump’s hostile takeover of
the Republican Party and his disdain for neocon
strategies that he views as simply spreading chaos
around the globe. As The New York Times has
reported, Clinton is “the vessel into
which many interventionists are pouring their
hopes.”
Robert
Kagan, a co-founder of the neocon Project for the
new American Century, has endorsed Clinton, saying
“I feel comfortable with her on foreign policy. If
she pursues a policy which we think she will pursue
it’s something that might have been called neocon,
but clearly her supporters are not going to call it
that; they are going to call it something else.”
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “Yes,
Hillary Clinton Is a Neocon.”]
So, by
selecting Clinton, the Democrats have made a full
360-degree swing back to the pre-1968 days of the
Vietnam War. After nearly a half century of favoring
a more peaceful foreign policy – and somewhat less
weapons spending – than the Republicans, the
Democrats are America’s new aggressive war party.
[For more
on this topic, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Would
a Clinton Win Mean More Wars?’]
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of
the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book,
America’s Stolen
Narrative,
either in print
here or as an e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com).
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