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Michael Lind

Obama the Hawk?

Barack Obama Ssg. Lorie Jewell/AP Why the antiwar left is already disappointed with Obama’s foreign policy.

Barack Obama is not yet commander-in-chief, yet already the antiwar left is denouncing him as a captive if not a captain of the dreaded military-industrial complex. Tom Hayden, a founder of Progressives for Obama, writes of “Obama’s multiple wars—Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, not to mention Iran and the Israel-Palestine conflict.” Robert Scheer, another veteran of the '60s antiwar movement, has denounced Obama for taking counsel from “unrepentant Democratic hawks” like Zbigniew Brzezinski. The fact that Marine General Jim Jones will be Obama’s national security adviser, while Robert Gates will continue as secretary of defense, is inspiring many on the left with buyer’s remorse about the candidate of change. With an announced intention of reminding Obama of his promises, a group of leftists has announced plans to camp in tents near the Obama home in Hyde Park, Chicago, in January. No doubt Cindy Sheehan will be on the scene.

The magic bus of history has driven past the peace movement...The truth is that those on the radical left who oppose all uses of military force by the US were always a minority among Democrats.

All of this is as anachronistic as it seems. The magic bus of history has driven past the peace movement. Obama’s election night speech at Grant Park in Chicago did more than close the rift in the Democratic Party that lingered from the battles between police and antiwar protesters at the 1968 Democratic Party Convention, not far from where Obama spoke. The rift was sealed in terms favorable to the muscular internationalist wing of the Democratic Party, led by Barack Obama today.

The truth is that those on the radical left who oppose all uses of military force by the US, rather than only particular misguided military interventions like the Iraq war, were always a minority among Democrats as well as Americans as a whole. Throughout the 20th century, there had been progressive isolationists, secular and religious pacifists like Quakers; during the Cold War these were joined by pro-communist leftists, who objected to US opposition to communism, not to “wars of liberation” by Marxist-Leninist totalitarians. The catastrophe of the Vietnam War temporarily enlarged the audience in the Democratic Party for the antiwar left, particularly among college students threatened by the draft before its 1973 abolition and their parents. But the victory of the antiwar left following the US defeat in Vietnam was a Pyrrhic one. Their increased influence in the party permitted the Republican Party to caricature the Democrats as appeasers. And the same public that displayed a post-Vietnam skepticism about foreign intervention also put hawkish Republican presidents in the White House between 1968 and 1992. The exception, Jimmy Carter, was a center-right Southern Democrat who played up his military experience as a naval officer. In a disastrous feedback loop, Republican dominance of the White House, itself in part the product of perceived Democratic foreign policy weakness, further cemented the hold of antiwar liberals on liberalism as a whole.

Everything changed, however, with Bill Clinton, the first Democrat since FDR to serve two terms in the White House. Now that the Democrats controlled the executive branch, Democratic partisanship and knee-jerk opposition to the exercise of military power were no longer compatible. With the end of the Cold War and the reshaping of the geopolitical landscape, new issues and new alliances appeared. Most liberals had reflexively opposed the 1991 Gulf War, even though it was a classic exercise of collective security to punish inter-state aggression approved by the United Nations. But the relatively low cost in US casualties of the Gulf War persuaded many liberals to support US/NATO intervention in the Balkan wars and end ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims and Kosovars by the Serbs. Still, there remained left-wing opposition to Clinton’s use of force against Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda.

While some liberals sympathized with the proclaimed anti-colonial and egalitarian ideals of Third World communists and leftists during the Cold War, after September 11 jihadists appeared not only as religious reactionaries but also as vicious racists, like No. 2 Al Qaeda terrorist Ayman al-Zawahri, who described Barack Obama as a “house slave.” The 2003 Iraq war also found many supporters among liberals and even on the left, who later became disillusioned with the Bush administration’s manipulations and incompetence.

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December 2, 2008 | 6:19am
Comments ()
madmonq

I seem to recall Obama hedging a bit then modifying his statements on Iraq. He was as specific as a candidate could be on Afghanistan.

Although it's not just baby boomers in the anti war far left peace faction, I'd love to see a piece on the waning influence of baby boomers in the Democratic party and/or society altogether. From classic hippie to suburban conservatives.

I appreciated the early influence and push to the left that is mostly contributed to the boomers, but don't appreciate the sort of entitled attitude that seems to come well before any well meaning ideas. It's a little Hillary-during-the-election like

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2:48 pm, Dec 2, 2008
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Obama the Hawk?

by Michael Lind

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