These Are Obama’s Wars Now
On Monday the Democrat controlled House voted 226-202 to approve a rushed $106 billion dollar war spending bill, guaranteeing more carnage in Iraq and Afghanistan (and lately Pakistan) until September 30, 2009, which marks the end of the budget year. The Senate voted overwhelmingly in favor of the bill’s first draft last month, with the final vote on a compromised version to occur in the Senate sometime in the next couple of weeks.
The majority of opposition in the House came from Republicans who opposed an add-on to the bill that would open up a $5 billion International Monetary Fund line of credit for developing countries. This opposition in the House led Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on Tuesday to quip, "It’ll be interesting to see what happens here. Are my Republican colleagues [in the Senate] going to join with us to fund the troops? I hope so."
No longer can the blame for the turmoil in Iraq and Afghanistan rest at the feet of George W. Bush alone. This is now Obama’s War on Terror, fully funded and operated by the Democratic Party.
The bill that passed the House on Monday, once approved by the Senate, will not be part of the regular defense budget as it’s off the books entirely. Following the attacks on September 11, 2001, Congress has passed similar emergency spending bills to finance US military ventures in the Middle East. The combined "supplementals" are fast approaching $1 trillion, with 30% going to fund the war in Afghanistan.
In addition to the latest increase in war funds, Obama is also asking for an additional $130 billion to be added on to the defense budget for the new fiscal year starting on October 1. The president is upholding his campaign promise to escalate the war in Afghanistan, which also means increasing the use of remote controlled drone planes in neighboring Pakistan that are to blame for hundreds of civilian deaths since Obama took office last January.
Despite Obama’s historic (albeit rhetoric filled) speech in Cairo, the new Commander in Chief is still not about to radically change, let alone reform, the US’s long-standing role in the Middle East. A master of his craft, Obama is simply candy coating the delivery of US imperialism in the region. Given the lack of opposition to Obama’s policies back home, it is becoming clear that he may well be more dangerous than his predecessor when it comes to the US’s motivations internationally.
Had Bush pushed for more military funds at this stage, the antiwar movement (if you can call it that) would have been organizing opposition weeks in advance, calling out the neocons for wasting our scarce tax dollars during a recession on a never-ending, directionless war. But since Obama’s a Democrat, a beloved one at that, mums the word.
Certainly a few progressive Democrats are dismayed by what the Obama administration is up to, but how many of these Democrats that are upset now will be willing to break rank and oppose their party when it matters most, like during the midterm elections coming up next year? Obama had the majority of antiwar support shored up while he ran for the presidency, with absolutely no demands put on his candidacy. And not surprisingly, antiwar progressives have little to show for their fawning support.
All this begs a few questions: If not now, when exactly will Obama’s policies be scrutinized with the same veracity that Bush’s were? When will the media end its love affair with Obama and hold his feet to the fire like they did Bush once the wheels fell off the war in Iraq? When will progressives see their issues as paramount and oppose Obama and the Democratic Party until they embrace their concerns?
If these questions are not answered soon, we are in many more years of war and bloodshed, funded by US taxpayers and approved by a Democrat controlled White House and Congress.
Read more by Joshua Frank
- The Collapse of Saddam’s Secret Subway – October 20th, 2004





DrBrian1
June 18th, 2009 at 6:49 am
Frank is correct that Obama is more dangerous, because he is continuing Bush's imperialist, warmongering ways while bamboozling enough of the American people to preclude large-scale opposition. His decidedly right wing policies, except on abortion-related issues, meet with approval or silence from most self-proclaimed progressives, which proves that their past anti-Bush rhetoric was partisan rather than principled.
radicaltruth
June 18th, 2009 at 11:42 am
Joshua Frank has hit the nail on the head.
It is time to confront the truth: liberals and progressives, so called, have sold out and there is no surprise there, they've been selling out consistently for decades.
There is a collective intellectual deficit in this country that rivals the national debt… (It's bad if the republicans do it but okay if the democrats do the same thing…)
The masses have been effectively, politically, 'dumbed down', buying into the Obamification machinations which will continue to drive us all to ruin.
The status quo, in this country, has killed any and all viable alternatives. They can stew in their own juice.
It's time to get radical and get real.
Peacegeek
June 18th, 2009 at 6:32 pm
As an avid reader of antiwar.com for years, I am somewhat surprised by the column of Joshua Frank — who has failed to notice that Obama has announced the withdrawal of US troops by the end of December, 2011. US troops are now moving out of Iraq's cities in accordance with the Status of Forces Agreement by the end of this month. Equating Obama's policies with those of Bush and Cheney is not sound by any stretch of the imagination. Bush and Cheney and their handpicked successors, John McCain and Sarah Palin, promised as much as 100 years of occupation of Iraq and radical escalation in Afghanistan. How has this fact escaped Joshua Frank and the two commentators above? Obama has stated repeatedly that the US does not want permanent bases in Iraq or Afghanistan, but conspiracy theorists like Frank, DrBrian1 and radicaltruth — ignore the facts. Why does antiwar.com allow Frank the space to misinform the gullible public? Is there a right wing conspiracy to undermine the most progressive president since Carter?
Peaceful_Idiot
June 18th, 2009 at 7:33 pm
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL @ YOU!!!!!!!!!!
It doesn't take any stretch at all to put the pieces together. Try here:
http://antiwar.com/justin/
or here:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/
or here:
http://antiwar.com/horton/
http://antiwar.com/radio/
And there is plenty more where that came from.
I was wondering the same thing, about you.
Since when has antiwar.com ever been about promoting progressives? How long have you been reading this site again?
radicaltruth
June 19th, 2009 at 3:15 pm
When I made reference to the 'status quo' in my comment, I was referring to people just like yourself, who cannot see that the Obama regime is simply an extension of the Bush regime…
As for Joshua Frank, he like so many others who write for Antiwar.com, are doing their best to enlighten and inform.
The only thing required from people who cannot see the forest for the trees, it to take the blinders off and begin to see things as they really are.
The staus quo will continue to buy into our rigged political system so that in the end we will never have any real choices in our political process.
It truly is an 'Obamination'…
Peace.