http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/apr2004/kerr-a19.shtml

Kerry on "Meet the Press:" Democratic candidate reiterates support for
Iraq war
By Patrick Martin
19 April 2004

In an hour-long appearance Sunday on the NBC News program "Meet the
Press," the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Senator John
Kerry, reiterated his support for the US war in Iraq, while suggesting
that it would take the election of a new president for Washington to
succeed in mobilizing additional foreign troops and resources to
reinforce its grip on the conquered country.

Kerry underscored his solidarity with the Bush administration's policy
of crushing the mass uprising that has brought together Sunni Muslims
in the west-central area of Iraq and Shiites in Baghdad and the south
in a common struggle against the occupation forces. Saying the US
should send in more troops if necessary to defeat the insurgency and
prevent a failure of the Iraq occupation, the Democratic candidate
declared, "Number one, we cannot fail."

"Meet the Press" interviewer Tim Russert asked Kerry about an op-ed
column he wrote for the Washington Post last week, in which he stated:
"Our country has committed to help the Iraqis build a stable, peaceful
and pluralistic society. No matter who is elected president in
November, we will persevere in that mission." Kerry replied by
repeating his unconditional endorsement of the American occupation,
leading Russert to respond, "That sounds exactly like George Bush."

The program began with Russert asking Kerry, "Do you believe the war
in Iraq was a mistake?" Kerry replied, "I think the way the president
went to war is a mistake." This set the tone for the entire interview,
as Russert asked no further questions about the decision to go to war
and focused entirely on Kerry's prescriptions for fighting the war
more effectively.

Kerry made repeated criticisms of Bush's conduct of the war. He said,
"This administration misled America," and declared that Bush "broke
faith with his own promises to the country." He added, "Iraq had
nothing to do with Al Qaeda." But Russert did not ask how a war based
on such lies could be legitimate, and Kerry did not volunteer an
opinion.

Instead, Kerry again voiced a theme first raised in a speech last week
in New York City: that the criteria for a successful completion of the
US intervention in Iraq would be the creation of a stable regime, not
the establishment of a democracy. Following Kerry's pronouncement that
"we cannot fail" in Iraq, the following exchange took place:

Russert: How do you define failure?

Kerry: Well, I think failure is the lack of a stable Iraq. I think a
failed state in Iraq is failure.

Russert: An Islamic regime similar to Iran would be acceptable?

Kerry: You could even go further than what I just said and suggest
that if we are stuck for a long period of time in a quagmire where
young Americans are dying without a sense of that being able to be
achieved, I think most Americans will decide that's failure.

Russert: Could you accept a Shiite theocracy running Iraq similar to
what we have in Iran?

Kerry: I think that what is important is to have a pluralistic
representation. It doesn't have to be, at least in the early days, the
kind of democracy this administration has talked about, though that's
our goal and we should remain there. But what is critical is a stable
Iraq.

In other words, a President Kerry would scrap the messianic and
increasingly ludicrous rhetoric of the Bush administration about
democratizing Iraq and the entire Middle East, and get down to
business: creating the stable conditions required for American
capitalism to extract super profits from Iraq's oil resources, under
some form of clerical/military dictatorship propped up by American
troops.

In the course of the interview, Kerry also declared that if he is
elected, there could well be 100,000 or more American troops in Iraq a
year from now. Kerry went on to say, "Tim, let me be very clear to
you: We are united around our troops. We support our troops. They're
extraordinarily courageous. We have the best military we've ever had
in the history of our country, and they deserve a strategy that's
going to minimize the risk to them. But I am united, along with
everybody else, in knowing that we have to have a success in not
having a failed Iraq. That we are united in."

This declaration of unity is Kerry's assurance to the American ruling
elite that whatever criticisms he may make of the Bush
administration's tactics in the war-particularly its dismissal of the
views of nominal allies like France and Germany, and its contempt for
institutions like the United Nations-he is committed to maintaining US
control of Iraq. With its strategic position in the center of the
Middle East, and its vast oil reserves, a US-dominated Iraq has become
a vital interest of American imperialism, and will not be given up
lightly.

Reassuring the ruling class has been Kerry's main focus all week. At a
public forum at City College in New York, he seized on a question from
a vocal critic of the war to underscore his support of the US
occupation. Retired mathematics professor Walter Daum denounced the
war in Iraq as imperialist, and warned that a President Kerry would
quickly become as hated as Bush if he continued Bush's policies in
Iraq.

Kerry did not try to interrupt his antagonist-evidently welcoming the
opportunity to distance himself from antiwar sentiment. He then
replied, "I have consistently been critical of how we got where we
are. But we are where we are, sir, and it would be unwise beyond
belief for the United States of America to leave a failed Iraq in its
wake."

Later he gave a speech to a fundraising event that netted nearly $3.5
million from Wall Street fat cats and other corporate executives in
which he flatly declared his opposition to "redistribution of the
wealth," and pledged a Kerry administration to fiscal responsibility
and deficit reduction.

On "Meet the Press," Kerry gave other assurances of the right-wing
foreign policy his administration would pursue. Asked about the
Israeli assassination of Hamas leader Abdel-aziz Rantisi, he
responded, "I believe Israel has every right in the world to respond
to any act of terror against it. Hamas is a terrorist, brutal
organization." He also gave uncritical support to Bush's decision last
week to reverse four decades of American foreign policy by officially
supporting Israeli retention of West Bank land illegally occupied by
Israeli settlers.

Finally, Kerry made what amounts to a repudiation of the antiwar
stance which first brought him to public attention during the Vietnam
War. Russert played a tape of Kerry's first appearance on "Meet the
Press," in April 1971, when the Democratic candidate was a leader of
Vietnam Veterans Against the War. The young former Navy lieutenant
showed considerable personal courage by going on national television
to admit his own involvement in actions-search-and-destroy missions,
the burning of villages and other atrocities-which violated the Geneva
Conventions.

More importantly, the antiwar veteran compared the leaders of the US
government to Lt. William Calley, who was tried and convicted of mass
murder in the My Lai massacre: "All of this is contrary to the Geneva
Conventions and all of this ordered as a matter of written established
policy by the government of the United States from the top down. And I
believe that the men who designed these, the men who designed the
free-fire zone, the men who ordered us, the men who signed off the air
raid strike areas, I think these men, by the letter of the law, the
same letter of the law that tried Lieutenant Calley, are war
criminals."

Thirty-three years later, as a senator who is auditioning for the
position of war-criminal-in-chief, Kerry was called upon to make a
public act of contrition. Under prompting from Russert, Kerry declared
that "atrocities" was "a bad word ... an inappropriate word." As for
calling presidents Johnson and Nixon and their top generals war
criminals, he told Russert: "It was, I think, a reflection of the kind
of times we found ourselves in and I don't like it when I hear it
today."

At the same time, Kerry tried to have it both ways. "There were
breaches of the Geneva Conventions," in Vietnam, he said. "There were
policies in place that were not acceptable according to the laws of
warfare, and everybody knows that." He concluded: "I'm proud that I
took the position that I took to oppose it. I think we saved lives,
and I'm proud that I stood up at a time when it was important to stand
up, but I'm not going to quibble, you know, 35 years later that I
might not have phrased things more artfully at times."

The issue, of course, is not artfulness, but truth. The young
Lieutenant Kerry of 1971 gained national attention because he provided
at least a glimpse of the brutal reality of imperialist war. The
Senator Kerry of 2004 seeks to trade on his antiwar reputation to
delude voters opposed to the current imperialist war in Iraq-a war,
which, as the events in Fallujah are making clear, rivals Vietnam in
its barbaric and wanton disregard for human life.

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