What Kind Of America?
by Robert Borosage
Co-Director of the Campaign
For America's Future
The feckless vote on the Bush budget this
week displayed both the contempt the Bush White House holds for
the Congress, and the congressional servility that invites that
contempt. President Bush regally insisted that Congress vote
on his budget -- with its record deficits and large top-end tax
cuts -- without any estimate, much less any adjustment, for the
cost of a war that has already begun and that renders the budget
obsolete. The White House simply stonewalled its estimates until
Republican leaders forced a vote on its tax cuts. In meekly playing
their part in this farce, the craven Republican congressional
leadership -- Frist, Hastert and DeLay -- despoiled the institution
that they purport to lead.
This public indignity illustrates the
challenge Americans will face after Iraq's defeat. The administration's
attention is belatedly turning to what kind of Iraq the United
States will build after the war. But for Americans, the hard
question is what kind of America we will build after the war.
We can honor the sacrifice and courage
of the young men and women who put their lives at risk for this
country, and still recognize how preposterous the president's
description of Saddam Hussein as a "threat to the world"
was. Like little boys with flies, the most powerful military
in the history of mankind is swatting away what's left of an Iraqi
force crippled by dictatorship, demoralized by defeat and debilitated
by a decade of embargo, air occupation, inspection and weapons
dismantlement. The real "shock and awe" in Iraq is
the radical nature of the propositions the Bush administration
now trumpets.
1. The doctrine of unilateral pre-emptive
war.
By launching the war without U.N. approval,
the Bush administration made Iraq the test of its commitment to
use military force unilaterally -- unconstrained by law, international
approval or allied support -- against potential threats, in the
president's words, "before they emerge." This represents
a flagrant and conscious defiance for international law as defined
by the U.N. charter, and a stark departure from the post-World
War II bipartisan tradition of building strong alliances, supporting
international institutions and paying tribute to the rule of law,
even when we were trampling it. When the war ends, Americans
must decide if the United States is to police the world alone
or if, sobered by the real costs of this little war -- in resources,
global hostility, disruption of alliances and in the perils of
occupation amid civil strife -- we abandon the Bush doctrine and
invest once more in international cooperation.
2. A revived imperial presidency.
"Go not abroad in search of monsters
to destroy," John Quincy Adams presciently warned us over
150 years ago, or America might find herself "dictatress
of the world," but not longer "the ruler of her own
soul." The Bush administration accompanies its preemptive
war doctrine with a reassertion of the imperial presidency. The
White House disdainfully truncated the congressional debate on
this "war of choice." The president made it clear that
he did not believe that Congress had any choice to make; he alone
could and would decide the question of war or peace. Congress
was invited only to applaud -- and it supinely accepted that bit
part. The "Iraq crisis" was "rolled out"
for the election season last fall, with a popular post-9/11 president
and loyal Republican leadership demanding congressional endorsement
of a blank check for the use of force. The White House, most
notably in South Dakota, showed that it was willing to assail
the patriotism of any who got in the way. Too many legislators
in both parties were too cowed to require hearings and a considered
debate -- either before the election or after, thus depriving
the American people and the legislators of any serious opportunity
to probe the president's case. And now the president has blithely
launched the war without seeking congressional funding to support
it. The Congress will be given the bill only after the engagement
of the troops has insured it will pick up the tab.
3. The revival of the internal security
state.
Days after 9/11, the administration stampeded
Congress into giving it unprecedented license for political surveillance.
John Ashcroft's Justice Department now asserts the right to surveil
Americans without probable cause, to arrest and hold them without
charges, to detain them indefinitely, to deprive them of access
to counsel and to try them before military tribunals. The administration
then shields its practices behind an unprecedented screen of secrecy.
For this, it receives only sporadic criticism from a Congress
and people shaken by real terrorist threats that the administration's
wars are likely to proliferate. The chilling effect on speech
is reinforced by a right-wing media claque that sets upon the
mildest dissent with ravenous fury, and a remarkably quiescent
establishment media that has largely failed to expose the administration's
falsehoods, challenge its secrecy or criticize its excesses.
4. The triumph of military priorities.
To pursue this policy, the Bush administration
calls for a core annual military budget of $400 billion and growing,
a budget above that of the Cold War years when the United States
faced a global adversary. And, of course, actual use of the military
in the war on terrorism or Iraq costs extra. As befits a global
cop, the Pentagon is assuming an ever more pre-eminent role in
intelligence assessment, covert operations and assertive diplomacy.
In the wake of 9/11, the administration's energy policy features
not a concerted drive for energy independence, but the construction
of a formidable base structure throughout the Gulf region. We
devote most of our foreign aid, and most of our federal research
and development to weaponry. Nations do most what they do best,
and we do guns. The more we spend on the military, the more capacity
we have to go places and do things. The more we go places and
do things, the more the military needs. The price is paid, inevitably,
by America's most vulnerable as child care and housing and health
care are cut, promises on education investment are broken and
college loans and grants fail to keep up with college costs.
Faced with the worst fiscal crisis since the Great Depression,
states and localities raise taxes and slash budgets for police
and schools. Yet the administration's "emergency supplemental"
budget request seeks funds only for the wars on terrorism and
Iraq.
Will Americans accept that one man may
rush us into wars of his choosing against countries that pose
no imminent threat, contrary to the intent of the Founders, the
design of the Constitution and the charter of the United Nations?
Will we relinquish our liberties in order to secure them? Is
there a residue of institutional pride in the Congress that would
lead even some in the Republican majority to challenge a leadership
that casts them as court jesters?
These are the challenges that must now
inform the agenda of the remarkable citizen movement that spread
across the nation and the globe to oppose the president's course.
Now that movement faces the hard task of translating political
protest into a powerful political force that can educate Americans
about alternative policies and priorities that will better serve
their security. And then citizens of conscience must challenge
the imperial president and the craven congressional majority at
the voting booth. The Bush administration's radical posture is
clear. It will require a regime change in America to alter it.
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