Exclusive: Though the
mainstream media is focused on Republican divisions, a more important story
could be the coming Democratic crackup, as anti-war Democrats resist Hillary
Clinton’s pro-war agenda, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
If the Democratic Party
presses ahead and nominates hawkish Hillary Clinton for President, it could
recreate the conditions that caused the party to splinter in the late 1960s and
early 1970s when anti-war and pro-war Democrats turned on one another and
opened a path for decades of Republican dominance of the White House.
This new Democratic crackup
could come as early as this fall if anti-war progressives refuse to rally
behind Clinton because of her neoconservative foreign policy – thus infuriating
Clinton’s backers – or it could happen in four years if Clinton wins the White
House and implements her militaristic agenda, including expanding the U.S. war
in Syria while continuing other wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya – and
challenging Russia on its borders.
Clinton’s neocon policies in a
prospective first term could generate a “peace” challenge similar to the
youth-driven uprising against President Lyndon Johnson and the Vietnam War in
1968.
Indeed, in 2020, anti-war
elements of the Democratic Party might see little choice but to seek a
candidate willing to challenge an incumbent President Clinton much as Sen.
Eugene McCarthy took on President Johnson, leading eventually to the chaotic
and bloody Chicago convention, which in turn contributed to Richard Nixon’s
narrow victory that fall.
A difference between Johnson
and Clinton, however, is that in 1964, LBJ ran as the “peace candidate” against
the hawkish Republican Barry Goldwater (who incidentally was supported by a
young Hillary Clinton), whereas in 2016, Clinton has made clear her warlike
plans (albeit framing them in “humanitarian” terms).
After winning a landslide
victory against Goldwater, Johnson reversed himself and plunged into the
Vietnam War, fearing he otherwise might be blamed for “losing” Indochina. With
Clinton, there’s no reason to expect a reversal since she’s made no secret
about her plans for invading Syria under the guise of creating a “safe zone”
and for confronting nuclear-armed Russia along its western borders, from
Ukraine through the Baltic States. In her belligerent rhetoric, she has
compared Russian President Vladimir Putin to Hitler.
Courting Bibi
Clinton also has vowed to take
the U.S.-Israeli relationship to “the next level” by embracing right-wing
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who expects to convince President
Hillary Clinton to end any détente with Iran and put the prospect of bombing
Iran back on the table. Clinton would seem to be an easy sell.
Another feature of the
LBJ-Hillary comparison is that the Democratic Party’s turn against the Vietnam
War in the 1968 and 1972 campaigns prompted a collection of pro-war
intellectuals to bolt the Democratic Party and align themselves with the
Republicans, especially around Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Those Democratic hawks became
known as the neoconservatives and remained attached to the Republican Party for
the next 35 years, eventually emerging as Official Washington’s foreign policy
establishment. However, in some prominent cases (such as Robert Kagan), neocons
are now switching over to Clinton because of the rise of Donald Trump, who
rejects the neocon passion for interventionism.
In other words, just as
Johnson’s Vietnam War escalation — and the resulting fierce opposition
from anti-war Democrats — set in motion the neocons’ defection from the
Democrats to the Republicans, Clinton’s enthusiasm for the Iraq War, her
support for escalation of the Afghan War, and her scheming for “regime change”
wars in Libya and Syria are bringing some neocon hawks back to their first
nesting place in the Democratic Party.
But a President
Clinton’s transformation of the Democratic Party into “an aggressive war
party,” whereas under President Barack Obama it has been “a reluctant war
party,” would force principled anti-war Democrats to stop making excuses and to
start trying to expel Clinton’s neocon pro-war attitudes from the party.
Such an internecine battle
over the party’s soul could deeply divide the Democrats between those
supporting Clinton – as “the first woman president” and because of her liberal
attitudes on gay rights and other social issues – and those opposing Clinton
because of her desire to continue and expand America’s “perpetual wars.”
The Sanders Resistance
Some of that hostility is
already playing out as Clinton backers express their anger at progressives who
balk at lining up for Clinton’s long-delayed coronation parade. The stubborn
support for Sen. Bernie Sanders, even after Clinton has seemingly locked up the
Democratic nomination, is a forewarning of the nasty fight ahead.
The prospects are that the
animosities will get worse if Clinton loses in November – with many anti-war
Democrats defecting or staying home thus infuriating the Hillary Democrats – or
if Clinton were to win and begin implementing her neocon foreign policy agenda
which will involve further demonizing “enemies” to justify “regime changes.”
If anti-war Democrats begin to
resist, they can expect the Clinton-45 administration to stigmatize them as
(fill-in-the-blank) “apologists” and “stooges” of “enemy” powers, much as
happened to protesters against the Vietnam War and, more recently, to Americans
who objected to such U.S. interventions as the Iraq War in 2003 and the Ukraine
coup in 2014.
Yet, few Democratic
strategists seem to be aware of this looming chasm between anti-war and pro-war
Democrats. Many of these insiders seem to believe that the anti-war Democrats
will simply fall in line behind Hillary Clinton out of fear and loathing for
Donald Trump. That may be the case for many, but my conversations with anti-war
activists suggest that a significant number will vote for a third party or
might even go for Trump.
Meanwhile, most mainstream
media commentators are focused on the divisions between the pro-Trump and
anti-Trump Republicans, giving extensive TV coverage to various stop-Trump
scenarios, even as many establishment Republicans begin to accommodate to Trump’s
populist conquest of the party.
But it’s clear that some
prominent Republicans, especially from the neocon camp, are unalterably opposed
to Trump’s election in November, fearing that he will turn the GOP away from
them and toward an “America First” perspective that would repudiate “regime
change” interventions favored by Israel.
Thus, for many neocon
Republicans, a Trump defeat is preferable to a Trump victory because his defeat
would let them reclaim command of the party’s foreign policy infrastructure. They
also could encourage President Clinton to pursue their neocon agenda – and
watch as pro- and anti-war stresses rip apart the Democratic Party.
So, the establishment
Democrats – with their grim determination to resuscitate Hillary Clinton’s
nearly lifeless campaign – may be engaging in the political equivalent of
whistling past the graveyard, as the ghosts of the party’s Vietnam War crackup
hover over Election 2016.
[For more on this topic, see
Consortiumnews.com’s “Neocons
and Neolibs: How ‘Dead’ Ideas Kill”; “Yes,
Hillary Clinton Is a Neocon”; and “Would
a Clinton Win Mean More Wars?”]
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an e-book (from Amazon
and barnesandnoble.com).
No comments:
Post a Comment