-Caveat Lector-

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The War's Dirty Secret: It's About Changing United States, Not Iraq
Steve Lopez
LA Times

Sunday 30 March 2003

Much to her surprise, the federal government is promising to do
everything Los Angeles Congresswoman Maxine Waters has spent years
fighting for.

Education for the neediest souls will be transformed, quality health care
will be guaranteed, damaged roadways and bridges will be rebuilt, and
millions of dollars will be spent to spur new business.

Waters just never figured the beneficiaries would be residents of Iraq.

A few weeks ago, when I spent several hours with her in Washington as the
start of the war approached, Waters had begun to fear the worst.

"I'm very worried about the long-term impact," she said, predicting that as
the cost of the war grows, states, counties and cities will get stiffed.

Waters wasn't talking about the weeks and months ahead, but the years
and decades to come. The cost of the war and rebuilding Iraq, she said,
could drastically limit what government can do.

The effort to turn Iraq into a democracy, in other words, is making the
U.S. less of one. Our opposition party has disappeared, corporate interests
dictate public policy, and the feds may be rummaging through your e-mail.

There's a dirty secret no one has told you, and here it is: This war is not
about changing Iraq, it's about changing America.

Unless you're lucky enough to be an investor in one of the corporations
that will win multimillion-dollar contracts to rebuild Iraq, you may be
hurting when the cost of the war and a new era of deficit spending put
even more of a drag on the economy.

If you don't earn enough to hit the jackpot on President Bush's proposed
tax cuts, you're just going to have to fend for yourself. The whole idea is
to train you to expect less and to feel patriotic about it.

If things get really bad, you can always move to Iraq.

"I think it's terribly arrogant and overly ambitious for this president to think
he can invade that country, turn it into a democracy, and use American
taxpayer dollars to build an infrastructure that still is not built in some
parts of this nation," Waters said.

"In addition to that, he wants to go ahead with tax breaks for the
wealthiest people in this country."

To clarify, Waters isn't against sending American dollars to other countries.

"I believe in foreign assistance, and I think the richest nation in the world
should certainly help our neighbors in other parts of the world," she said.
"But I dislike the idea that we tear up Iraq first, bombing it to smithereens,
and then we go back and put in the water systems, the health-care
facilities and the other things we've torn up."

Last week, Waters and the rest of the country got the first bill for
Operation Iraqi Freedom when the president asked Congress for $74.7
billion to cover war-related costs. Empire-building isn't cheap.

"That's probably going to underwrite about one month's cost of the war,"
said Waters. "And it's just the tip of the iceberg."

Waters got nervous when she saw Halliburton, Vice President Dick
Cheney's former company, grab one of the first rebuilding contracts
before we'd even begun knocking things down. To help prevent a feeding
frenzy by corporations with political connections, Waters introduced two
amendments.

The first would have put a four-year hold on the awarding of military
contracts to companies that helped draft the Iraqi war policy or employed
high-level administration officials.

It was shot down like a sputtering Scud.

Waters went back to the drawing board and came up with a softer
amendment.

"This time I just said, 'OK, let's say the person who's worked for that
company in the last four years can't do the negotiating. He'd have to
recuse himself from that discussion.' Now that's as simple as it can get, and
they voted against that one, too."

One night last week, I called Waters' Capitol Hill office at 9 p.m. her time
and she answered the phone herself, having just returned from a House
session.

"I was on the floor for an hour, helping educate people about the cuts
being made to veterans' programs," she said.

So let's review.

We're asking 200,000 troops to risk life and limb in Iraq, and the White
House and Congress are preparing a welcome-home party by slashing
veterans' benefits.

Last week, I visited the Veterans Affairs dorms in West L.A., where I met a
Vietnam vet who was wounded six times. He had a brace on his leg and
shrapnel scars from head to toe, and he'd finally given up on his fight for
enough disability pay to live on.

When I walked away, patients were calling out to me, saying there's no hot
water for showers.

Things are not looking good for the future veterans of Operation Iraqi
Freedom.

By Waters' count, current budget proposals would trim $15 billion from
veterans' programs -- something's got to cover those big tax cuts -- over
the next 10 years.

And that's if there are no unforeseen costs in the rebuilding of Iraq.

(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and educational purposes.)

© Copyright 2003 by TruthOut.org
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