In last Friday's presidential
debate, John McCain went after Barack Obama on the surge in Iraq: "Senator
Obama said the surge could not work, said it would increase sectarian violence,
said it was doomed to failure. Recently on a television program, he said it
exceeded our wildest expectations…"
The senator responded with a clever formulation: "John, you like to pretend
like the war started in 2007. You talk about the surge. The war started in
2003, and at the time when the war started, you said it was going to be quick
and easy. You said we knew where the weapons of mass destruction were. You
were wrong. You said that we were going to be greeted as liberators. You were
wrong. You said that there was no history of violence between Shi'ite and Sunni.
And you were wrong. And so… if the question is who is best-equipped as the
next president to make good decisions about how we use our military, how we
make sure that we are prepared and ready for the next conflict, then I think
we can take a look at our judgment."
It was a striking response because, if we're thinking in terms of analogies,
McCain is essentially the arsonist who helps set a fire in someone's house
and then tries to take credit for keeping it under control, if not putting
it out. And yet the question remains: Whose war, McCain's or Obama's, will
be the decisive one in American politics this year?
TomDispatch regular, American historian, and professor of religious studies
Ira Chernus is both a canny observer of campaign politics and deeply knowledgeable
about why certain kinds of easy-to-manipulate symbols affect so many Americans.
It's clear that Iraq has, for the time being, been pushed out of the main stream
(as well as the mainstream) of American news and that this matters in the present
election. Here, Chernus considers just how it matters and how, even
out of sight, the Iraq War will continue to play a crucial role in domestic
politics. And by the way, don't assume that the war will remain buried news.
Iraq is a tinderbox. It could explode at any moment. Tom
How Forgotten Iraq May Elect the Next President
Whose war will win the election – McCain's or Obama's?
by Ira Chernus
In 1932, in the midst of a disastrous economic
meltdown, Franklin D. Roosevelt made "the forgotten man" the centerpiece of
his presidential election campaign. Far more than we suspect, this year's election
may turn not on a forgotten man, but on a forgotten war in a forgotten country.
Even before the present financial meltdown hit the news, the Iraq War had
slipped out of the headlines and off the political stage. Now, as investment
houses totter and bailout plans fill the headlines, it will be even harder
for Iraq to get major media attention. Yet the war remains just beneath the
surface of the presidential campaign, and so is sure to affect the outcome
in ways too complicated to fully grasp.
Think of that war not as one, but two currents, affecting the coming election
all the more powerfully because they are out of sight, out of mind, and – interacting
in unpredictable ways – out of anyone's control.
Obama's War: The Realistic Disaster
The first current is that of realistic perception. Polls continue to show
that at least 60 percent of prospective voters see the war for what it is:
a disastrous mistake. Among Democrats, the percentage is far higher than among
Republicans, which may be the main reason that Barack Obama is now the party's
candidate for president.
As the only major candidate in the Democratic primaries who opposed the war
from the beginning, his stance proved decisive. It remains a powerful factor
in his favor as undecided voters make up their minds, even if they don't fully
realize it. Remember, most people's electoral decision-making processes – like
the war in American consciousness at this point – run largely below the surface.
Widespread opposition to and unhappiness with the war (and its expense) has
long fueled a broader feeling that the U.S. is "on the wrong track" and needs
change of some kind. About 80 percent of voters were voicing that feeling even
before the recent financial collapse began. Much of it came from frustration
over a major Vietnam-like military effort that, somehow, once again went terribly
awry. Once again, we tried to save a nation by destroying it. Once again, American
treasure was poured into a hopeless, hapless venture abroad. From this, there
remains a powerful feeling of disillusionment and mistrust across the political
spectrum, largely directed at the party in power.
Until recently, it was the war more than anything else that made George W.
Bush such an albatross around the McCain campaign's neck. It was the war (and
McCain's ongoing support of it) that let the Obama campaign score so many points
with the simple slogan: McCain = Bush's Third Term. There will never be any
way to measure just how many votes that anti-Bush feeling will cost McCain,
but it will surely be felt on Election Day.
In fact, it's already being felt in the halls of Congress as negotiations
over an instantaneous emergency fix of the financial system drag on. If it
were not for the web of deceit the administration wove around Iraq, the public
might have rolled over and accepted the proposed "bailout" with little question.
But having been fooled by one rush to power – supposedly to save us from Saddam's
dreaded WMDs – the people are sending a message to a president who has a job
approval rating in the mid-20 percent range and, in a recent CBS poll, a 16
percent approval rating on the economy. That's bound to help the Democrats.
"The forgotten man," now joined by an equally empowered "forgotten woman,"
is back in American politics. Terrified by a financial system they are assured
is beyond anyone's control, they are shouting from Main Street loud enough
for Wall Street and K Street to hear. Americans know enough about finance to
understand one simple fact: When you're wasting jaw-dropping amounts of public
money every day on a disastrous war, you can't be cavalier about spending hundreds
of billions more on another self-proclaimed emergency, especially when there's
no reason in the world to believe the administration has the answer to either
of them. Come Election Day, many may simply say: Let the other guy run the
show for a while.
The sense that the other guy – Obama – has a better approach to the war is
borne out by one powerful fact that most Americans have probably not taken
in. The position the senator has espoused all along is now essentially the
official
Bush administration position: U.S. combat troops must be withdrawn from
Iraq by a date certain. In case anyone in Washington misses the point, top
Iraqi government officials
seem eager to remind them at every opportunity that it's Obama's position which
makes sense to them.
Much as they may have given up on the president's war long ago, most voters
haven't heard about this because, in one of its few triumphs of the last year,
the administration has managed to preside over the tamping down of violence
in Iraq just enough to push the whole ongoing story of the war out of the media
spotlight. That's why few voters know that Bush has now, however reluctantly
and quietly, embraced the basic principle of Obama's withdrawal plan.
Nor do many Americans realize just
how little the surge had to do with diminishing the violence in Iraq, or
how unstable the post-surge situation actually
remains. On that we have the witness of none other than the strategy's
main architect, Gen. David Petraeus, who recently
doubted that the U.S. could ever claim victory in Iraq and warned that
American gains were "not irreversible. … Many storm clouds on the horizon could
develop into real problems." Yet his warning, like most of the news from and
about Iraq, has quietly slipped beneath the surface of our political waters.
The eclipse of the war – which was supposed to be Obama's winning issue –
is one big reason that he has, until recently, remained stuck in a statistical
tie with McCain in the opinion polls.
McCain's War: The Symbolic Victory
Why has the war generally been consigned to the dustbin of news and so largely
forgotten? Here's one reason: The realistic American perception of disaster
is continually blocked by a powerful countercurrent that runs deep in our political
culture in which war is perceived not as a bloody fact but as a web of symbolism
and a test of "traditional American values." This countercurrent triggers powerful
nationalistic feelings.
On that level, there seems to be no need to dwell on Iraq any more because
"the surge worked." In other words – the war is over… we won (sorta)! Even
Sarah
Palin says so.
Of course the administration and the media designers of war symbolism don't
put it that bluntly. They know that they don't need to. The simple disappearance
of scenes of Iraqi carnage from front pages and the TV news does the trick
just as well. The public, getting no news and assuming that means good news,
hears what it wants to hear.
The idea that we're on a path to "victory" – or at least "success" – is seductive
exactly because it seems to prove that we are still the good guys wearing the
white hats. Don't they always win? It's easy to submerge frustration and disillusionment
beneath a reassuring feeling that America is still the world's shining beacon
of moral hope.
For some voters, that remains crucial. Another military defeat, whether in
Iraq or Afghanistan, could raise deeply disturbing questions about moral order,
not merely in international affairs but in the cosmos.
So when a white-haired "hero"
shows up, crying "country first" and proclaiming
America "the only nation I know that really is deeply concerned about adhering
to the principle that all of us are created equal," some may follow him, regardless
of his policies – especially if what made him a war hero was five years of
Christ-like suffering at the hands of America's enemies.
Who better to lead the forces of virtue in their endless battle against the
"me-first crowd"? And where better to do it than on a battlefield far away,
where evil seems to hold sway and "victory" remains on the American banner?
Yes, such symbolism is a rip tide running against the current of reality.
It has an often unassailable logic
all its own, which can be very compelling.
For how many voters? No one can say – especially when these currents of realism
and symbolism are colliding largely out of sight in the murky waters of the
presidential race, as equally murky poll results have been indicating.
For many months, clear majorities of voters have supported the policy that
Obama touts as his own: Get the combat troops (or even all U.S. troops) out
of Iraq by a date certain. Yet a majority, even if a slimmer one, has consistently
claimed to trust McCain, who wants to stay until we "win," more than Obama
when it comes to the handling of the war (as well as other national security
issues).
Typically, in the most recent Los
Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll, McCain topped Obama as "best at achieving
success in Iraq" by a margin of 50 percent to 34 percent. Yet when the same
voters were read the positions of the two and asked, "Which do you agree with
more?" the outcome was a virtual tie. In other words, fully 14 percent of those
who sided with Obama's Iraq position failed to name him best at handling the
issue.
That's puzzling to those who think that voters simply listen to candidate
positions and then choose the one closest to their own views. If only it were
so. In that same poll, for instance, just about a quarter of the voters said
they would base their decision in the polling booth mainly on issues – and
that's typical of other polls that ask the same question. Among that quarter,
tellingly, Obama was favored by a whopping margin of 70 percent to 24 percent.
Among the other three-quarters, the choice went decidedly for McCain.
McCain has stayed competitive, in part, because a significant number of voters
remain ready to choose him not for what he would actually do in Iraq, but for
what he seems to symbolize
in the hall of mirrors that is American politics. On the other hand, at least
one poll earlier this year found that a third of those who trusted McCain more
on Iraq did not plan to vote for him anyway.
Amid all the confusing crosscurrents, one thing is clear: No wave of symbolism
can stop the flow of empirical realities in Iraq. No matter who moves into
the Oval Office on Jan. 20, those harsh realities and their fallout around
the world will be waiting on his desk, piled high and deep. They may, unfortunately,
still be there when that president ends his first (or only) term in office
four years later.
That fallout is strongest and most ominous in the Muslim lands to the west
of Iraq. Let's just hope the next president is wise enough and open-minded
enough to hear us when we point out: One presidency was wrecked in the jungles
of Vietnam, another in the sands of Iraq. Don't let a third presidency be destroyed
in the mountains of Afghanistan or Pakistan, or over Iran. That danger alone
should be more than enough reason to keep the Iraq War in the forefront of
our minds as we decide on, and then usher in, a new presidency.
Ira Chernus is professor of religious studies at the University of Colorado
at Boulder and author of Monsters
to Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror and Sin. He can be reached
at chernus@colorado.edu.
Copyright 2008 Ira Chernus