Speaker Pelosi, More War Funding Next Week Is No "Emergency"
Saturday 26 June 2010
by: Robert Naiman, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Jason Pier in DC, The U.S. Army)
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she is committed to passing an emergency war supplemental before the July Fourth recess, Roll Call reports.
Let us be perfectly clear, as President Obama might say. There is no "emergency" requiring the House to throw another $33 billion into our increasingly bloody and pointless occupation of Afghanistan before we all go off to celebrate the anniversary of our Declaration of Independence from foreign occupation.
This fact - that there is no emergency requiring an immediate appropriation - is absolutely critical, because the claim that there is some "emergency" requiring an immediate infusion of cash, otherwise there will be some new apocalyptic catastrophe, is the means by which the Pentagon and the White House hope to dodge two sets of questions about the war supplemental urgently being asked for by Democratic leaders in the House.
Secretary Gates has complained that if the war money is not approved by July 4, the Pentagon might have to do "stupid things" like furlough civilian Pentagon employees. I am not in favor of furloughs, even of Pentagon employees (can we furlough someone who approves breaking into Afghans' homes in the middle of the night and killing pregnant women?), but as "stupid" goes, furloughing Pentagon employees doesn't hold a candle to laying off public schoolteachers, which is the likely consequence of allowing the Pentagon and the White House to dodge their critics in the House.
The war funding proposal has been sitting in the inbox for six months. What kind of "emergency" is that? The $33 billion represents about five percent of the gargantuan Pentagon budget. The Pentagon can live with a little more delay, while we get answers to some urgent questions.
The first set of questions the Pentagon and the White House want to dodge can be crudely summarized as: now that we've dumped McChrystal, what the hell are we doing in Afghanistan?
Yesterday, 30 members of the House sent a letter to Speaker Pelosi, demanding that the questions about the war raised by Michael Hastings' Rolling Stone article be answered before the House votes on the Pentagon's request for more money.
According to Hastings' article, "Instead of beginning to withdraw troops next year, as Obama promised, the military hopes to ramp up its counterinsurgency campaign even further." A senior military official says, "There's a possibility we could ask for another surge of U.S. forces next summer," (emphasis added) which is a pants-on-fire contradiction to the promises made when the last increase of forces was announced. Meanwhile, McChrystal's Chief of Operations, Maj. Gen. Bill Mayville, said: "It's not going to look like a win ... This is going to end in an argument." If it's going to end in an argument anyway - Mayville is surely right - why shed more blood? Don't we have a right and obligation to demand a straightforward and concrete accounting of what the additional bloodshed is purportedly going to achieve?
Ninety-eight Members of the House - almost a quarter - have now signed on to legislation demanding that President Obama establish a timetable for military withdrawal from Afghanistan. Shall the House not debate establishing a timetable for military withdrawal before voting on more money for pointless killing?
The second set of questions the Pentagon and the White House want to dodge can be crudely summarized as: what the hell is the federal government doing about Main Street's economic crisis? While it is not the responsibility of the Pentagon to do something about Main Street's economic crisis, it is the obligation of the Pentagon to defend more Pentagon spending as the best use of public resources, at a time when states and local governments are looking at mass layoffs of public employees, including schoolteachers.
This is the question that House Appropriations Chair Rep. David Obey (D-Wisconsin) put on the table when he said he would sit on the war appropriation until the White House acted on House Democratic demands to unlock federal money to aid the states in averting a wave of layoffs of teachers and other public employees.
But on money to save teachers' jobs, the White House is still Absent Without Leave, hiding behind the purported threat of a Senate filibuster, just as it did on the public option for health insurance. If it fought for teachers, the White House could win. But it isn't fighting, because unlike the war funding, teachers' jobs are not a White House priority.
If we want this to change, Obey has to be able to make good on his threat. And that means the House has to be willing to call the Pentagon's bluff.

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Comments
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Nancy Pelosi is a total loss
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 13:12 — J (not verified)Nancy Pelosi is a total loss with no insurance!
"what the hell are we doing
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 13:15 — hbro (not verified)"what the hell are we doing in Afghanistan?"
I would suggest that we are in Afghanistan for a reason the military understands quite well.
Unlike the mass media, the Administration, or the Congress, the military has done internal studies and arrived at the conclusion that massed armies, invasions and military occupations are obsolescent, if not already obsolete.
We have learned that you cannot control a modern society by brute force; that, in fact, the attempt to capture a society and bring peace, democracy and prosperity by massed violence and/or "surgical" modern weapons generates more and more of what we choose to call "terrorism" or "insurgency"
The military have faced reality and come up with two possible responses, as they would like to keep their jobs.
One is continuing expanding war supported by fear and hysteria. This could keep the US in places like Afghanistan for generations, with new enemies always available.
The other is the new "Hearts and Minds" style of occupation with the promise that all the evil will be suppressed or destroyed with a process where the military acts as the new Peace Corps.
( No one has suggested that a real Peace Corps with multi billion budget might actually bring peace.)
But it's obvious that killing and destroying are the skills of the military. Using the military occupation to bring peace is like plowing your rose garden with volleys of shells from sixteen inch guns.
By offering both "solutions" at once, the generals and the President and those who profit from war are keeping the wars going till they can think of something better,which will be never.
Food not bombs, Schools not
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 13:40 — radline9 (not verified)Food not bombs, Schools not bombs, healthcare not bombs, Social Security not bombs, Housing not bombs.
"to celebrate the
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 14:06 — Anonymous (not verified)"to celebrate the anniversary of our Declaration of Independence from foreign occupation."
What a perverse jock...
WE ARE AN OCCUPIED COUNTRY
Afghan war funding is not
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 14:17 — An (not verified)Afghan war funding is not only counter to our public interest, it is counter to the economic survival of much of the western world. With our national debt almost in the trillions, we are economically bankrupt. With this useless war continuing, we are morally bankrupt, and economically screwed.
WHO is Obey?!?!
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 17:31 — Anonymous (not verified)WHO is Obey?!?!
How about $33 billion for
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 17:52 — stephen neary (not verified)How about $33 billion for help for U.S. education right now! It is an emergency.
Obey? Someone to Dis- ,
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 18:28 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Obey? Someone to Dis- , until he CUTS THE CORD to Pullosi Punch's ABORTIONS with Obummer! "Judy" Reid's over in the Senate, two!!
Stop the war and reclaim the
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 22:11 — chusmacha (not verified)Stop the war and reclaim the Homeland.
$33 billion more for our
Sat, 06/26/2010 - 22:15 — chusmacha (not verified)$33 billion more for our Gulf of Mexico. Nothing is too good for our precious Homeland!
$33 billion for Medicare And
Sun, 06/27/2010 - 04:18 — Anonymous (not verified)$33 billion for Medicare
And open it up to the rest of the country !
Why keep voting for these democrats ?
Afghanistan is the place
Sun, 06/27/2010 - 07:13 — Stefan Albrecht (not verified)Afghanistan is the place where empires go to die; the US will be no exemption! Affairs overall are lining up for epochal collapse!
If this nation wins the
Sun, 06/27/2010 - 07:57 — Joe Fasulo (not verified)If this nation wins the peace oil companies cannot win the pipeline. If peace is achieved control of the pipeline must be shared. If peace is achieved the oil in the Caspian Sea region must be shared. If peace is achieved the majority if not all the oil will end up in the hands of India and/or China.
Follow the money trail. You'll find far more accurate information. I seriously doubt that anyone with any real and substantial capability is willing to do just that.
"But on money to save
Sun, 06/27/2010 - 11:49 — Liced-christ (not verified)"But on money to save teachers' jobs, the White House is still Absent Without Leave, hiding behind the purported threat of a Senate filibuster, just as it did on the public option for health insurance. If it fought for teachers, the White House could win. But it isn't fighting, because unlike the war funding, teachers' jobs are not a White House priority."
Yes indeed. This is how to write. Slam that hypocritical, posturing Obama, who is, without question, made of the same cloth as George Bush and Ronald Reagan. Obama wore the Democrat label for one reason only: like Feinstein, like all the new Blue Dogs, to get elected or reelected. Keep slamming Obama guys, slam that fucker repeatedly and incessantly. It's all you have. It's all the satisfaction you will amass.
Why Democrats and
Sun, 06/27/2010 - 12:58 — Lucy (not verified)Why Democrats and Republicans are exactly the same.
Why women and men candidates are too.
What's really sad is I remember when Pelosi was actually a progressive voice in Congress on Nicaragua, for example, and pulling aide from the Contras during the dark years of Reagan.
You've come a long way, baby. You're really one of the boys now.
Oh . . . so firing
Fri, 07/02/2010 - 15:02 — Frances in California (not verified)Oh . . . so firing McChrystal was just a sop . . .