Rep. James McGovern’s Trojan Horse

McGovern’s Trojan Horse

by Charles Jenks

The pitch:

The Progressive Democrats of America (PDA) trumpets its continued support of Rep. James McGovern bill (HR 4232) as “a top legislative priority.” PDA urges all to sign its petition to support the bill, as PDA is “committed to cutting off all funding for the deployment of US troops in Iraq and for the removal of all funding for the occupation of Iraq.” https://www.pdamerica.org/articles/news/2006-09-12-13-20-02-news.php

PDA assures its members and website visitors that the bill would 1) “end all funding for the deployment of US troops in Iraq; 2) “in no way prohibit nor interrupt US non-defense funding” in support of “democratic institution building” and reconstruction; and 3) that the bill “provides for the safe, orderly, and honorable withdrawal of the United States from military operations in Iraq.

By continuing U.S. support for the economic and social reconstruction of Iraqi society and the financial and material needs of Iraqi security, it maintains our moral and political obligations to the Iraqi people, while concretely promoting, supporting, and providing for greater multilateral engagement in these serious tasks.” (emphasis supplied)

Code Pink and United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) also support this bill.

Warning flags should go up by just reading PDA’s pitch for the bill. The bill would not get in the way of the US meddling in governing Iraq – or as PDA puts it “democratic institution building.” And, the bill provides for continued financial and material support for the ‘security’ forces (secret police, military and uniformed police) that the US has established in Iraq.

So, a lot of dirty business is allowed by the bill, but how to do that without US troops? Well, there’s more to the story, a story not told by PDA in its pitch.

How would the US hope to continue shaping Iraq’s governing institutions and its internal ‘security’ forces without US troops? (A hint: take a look at how the US is trying to do it in Afghanistan.)

The bill has certain exceptions to the prohibition of funds to “deploy or continue to deploy the Armed Forces to the Republic of Iraq.” These exceptions show that the bill is a farce and that PDA has bought, or is trying to sell, the proverbial bill of goods.

The exceptions:

Section 2 (b) Exception- Subsection (a) shall not apply to the use of funds to–

(1) provide for the safe and orderly withdrawal of the Armed Forces from Iraq; or

(2) ensure the security of Iraq and the transition to democratic rule by-

(A) carrying out consultations with the Government of Iraq, other foreign governments, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the United Nations, and other international organizations; or

(B) providing financial assistance or equipment to Iraqi security forces and international forces in Iraq.
Under this bill’s exceptions, the US could continue its occupation of Iraq.

Under exception (1), “safe and orderly” withdrawal has no timeframe whatsoever. The military and Executive Branch would determine what is “safe and orderly.” Can one image such a withdrawal lasting indefinitely, if it’s left up to the people who are executing the war and occupation of Iraq? The lack of even an outside date is telling.

Under exception (2), the US could use funds to continue to “ensure the security of Iraq and transition to democratic rule.” Which international military force is mentioned first in these “consultations?” NATO, the same NATO (via its International Security Assistance Force) that is trying (and failing) to help the US occupy Afghanistan.

On top of using NATO, or UN proxies, the US could still pour unlimited funds into the hands of Iraqi-led internal security forces, the same forces that are now riddled with Shiite militias and that are aiding and abetting, if not operating, death squads aimed at the Sunni population.

Moreover, the US could use unlimited funds to pay for US-led private ‘security’ contractors, which are ubiquitous in Iraq as it is, or to pay for proxy forces provided by foreign governments.

Halliburton would have nothing to fear from this bill.
And, if US troops were assigned to NATO or the UN, and under NATO or UN command, would these troops then be considered part of “international forces in Iraq” that could be funded?

In a nutshell, the US could get its troops out – at a time of its choosing, after an unspecified time in the name of safety and order – but ensure that Iraq continues under foreign occupation indefinitely. And, during this continued occupation, the US would have no restraints on meddling the Iraq’s government or internal security forces.

And PDA calls this “honorable?” Perhaps so, if honorable means trying to win without (the US having to bear more casualties of) war.

Finally, the concept of an “honorable” withdrawal seems like a sick joke, considering that the US is responsible for the deaths and maiming of untold numbers of Iraqis, (well over 100,000 deaths, per the Lancet Medical Journal study as of September, 2004); the littering of Iraq with ‘depleted’ uranium’ – a cancer-causing radioactive neurotoxin – and unexploded cluster bombs; the wrecking of Iraq’s infrastructure and society, and the unleashing of a sectarian civil war.

This article was originally published by Socialist Worker

Hear audio of a discussion on September 16, 2006 about the McGovern bill featuring Charles Jenks, Gael Murphy (Code Pink and UFPJ) and Ann Wright (retired colonel and former State Department official).
https://www.traprockpeace.org/audio/mcgovern_bill_debate.mp3