| Barack Obama: The Peace Candidate? |
| Political Views | ||||||||||
| By Sheldon Richman | ||||||||||
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Barack Obama: The Peace Candidate? Why would anyone think that presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama is the peace candidate? True, before President Bush sent an invasion force to Iraq and before Obama was in the Senate, he made a speech saying intervention would be a mistake. But after the invasion, in 2004, he said he wasn’t sure how he would have voted when the resolution authorizing Bush to use force to overthrow Saddam Hussein came before the Senate. Since being in the Senate, he has voted to continue the occupation. That doesn’t sound much like a peace candidate, does it? Obama has made speeches and written articles demonstrating his full embrace of the interventionist policy that has characterized the U.S. government’s approach to the world for many years. What’s truly frightening is that Obama doesn’t seem to realize that U.S. foreign policy has been interventionist. For example, he said, “We cannot afford to be a country of isolationists right now. 9/11 showed us that try as we might to ignore the rest of the world, our enemies will no longer ignore us. And so we need to maintain a strong foreign policy, relentless in pursuing our enemies and hopeful in promoting our values around the world.” (Emphasis added.) In the last hundred years, when have “we” ignored the rest of the world? U.S. administrations have been interfering in Middle Eastern affairs for more than 50 years. They have been interfering in Latin America even longer. Anyone who takes a close look with an open mind would know that 9/11 was a consequence of U.S. interventionism, not isolationism, which is a smear word. That someone opposes invading other countries doesn’t mean he opposes commercial or cultural relations with them. The great liberals of history (when that word meant freedom and minimum government) favored peace and free trade, Fear of nonintervention is something Obama has expressed before. In the July/August 2007 Foreign Affairs he wrote, “After Iraq, we may be tempted to turn inward. That would be a mistake. The American moment is not over, but it must be seized anew. We must bring the war to a responsible end and then renew our leadership — military, diplomatic, moral — to confront new threats and capitalize on new opportunities.” Those are not the words of peace candidate. Obama has often talked about the need for the United States to project its power around the world. He has made it clear that he supports wars that are not strictly defensive and has expressed admiration for the first President Bush’s war against Iraq: “When we use force in situations other than self-defense, we should make every effort to garner the clear support and participation of others — the kind of burden-sharing and support President George H.W. Bush mustered before he launched Operation Desert Storm.” Obama engages in the same fear-mongering that we have gotten accustomed to with George W. Bush. Obama says, “This century’s threats are at least as dangerous and in some ways more complex than those we have confronted in the past. They come from weapons that can kill on a mass scale and from global terrorists who respond to alienation or perceived injustice with murderous nihilism. They come from rogue states allied to terrorists and from rising powers that could challenge both America and the international foundation of liberal democracy.” Again, he shows no understanding that it is interventionism, not “liberal democracy,” that makes Americans targets. He’s fallen for the Bush line that “they hate us because we are free.” Even parts of the U.S. government know that is nonsense. As the Pentagon’s Defense Science Board put it in 2004, “Muslims do not hate our freedom, but rather, they hate our policies.” And Osama bin Laden himself said that same year, “Contrary to what Bush says and claims — that we hate freedom — let him tell us then, why did we not attack Sweden?” With Obama in the White House, we could look forward to more Wilsonian military adventures: “We have heard much over the last six years about how America’s larger purpose in the world is to promote the spread of freedom. I agree.” With a peace candidate like that, who needs a warmonger?
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1. 25-06-2008 08:35 Oh God! This is sooo depressing No disrespect to Sheldon Richman (He knows and still believes that he needs to some how convince or prove it to the American people) but don't these people see who OWNS BOTH SIDES of the American Two Party System, The Australian Two Party Syatem, The British Two Party System and a whole spectrum of ONE Party Systems? Don't they recognise that they haven't been a democracy since JFK was murdered by Republican accomplices, and that the credibility of the American "Democracy" was dodgier than the Downing Street Dossier even before Kennedy? Haven't they noticed that in American Politics the relationship of the Democrats to the Republicans is "Same Direction, Different Speed"? That tri-colour stars and stripes is very attractive - I've seen naked mannequins painted with it littering Australian Department Stores, perhaps even Australians are falling in love with it - so perhaps it has some mysterious charm that just makes people want to wave the flag, dream of their euphoria and forget the stark realities. But Oh God! This is sooo depressing!!!! Registered 2. 25-06-2008 16:12 Peacemakers? Whoever alluded to the frontrunners of presidential candidates sponsored by both parties were peacemakers is dysfunctional in rationalizing that the USA was a peacemaker. It's more like the freedom for the elite corporate industrialists to do as they please and have the people protect them. It's common knowlkedge that the USA thrives on a war economy to enhance the military industrial complex. Without wars; they don't make a profit. Somehow US Americans have an illusionary idea that the military are defending their freedoms. Better look again to see who really benefits! Guest 3. 26-06-2008 00:05 Peacemakers? this man was ok for a while at the start of the election year but gradually turning to a jerk,piss on him if he didn't go back a peace and justice for all. :grin Guest 4. 26-06-2008 15:06 VOTE NADER Most Democrats I know think that Obama IS the peace candidate - of course, they also thought that the members of Congress that they voted for in the last election were peace candidates. Some people never learn. I really wanted to vote for Obama, and might have if he shared his pastor's views. Wright was right. I'm voting for Nader. Guest Write Comment
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