September 24, 2009
By Tom Hayden
Feingold has learned to play the Senate game when it comes to new proposals. Like chess, when a single senator moves, other senators follow or readjust. That's what is happening. Not a single senator had spoken out against the war until Feingold said in an Aug. 24 interview in Appleton that the U.S. should consider a flexible timetable.
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Published by Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
The United States Senate is our version of a house of
lords, where time slows down in the name of a "deliberative process"
even when the world seems on fire to the ordinary eye.
And so the other day, with concern about Afghanistan rising, with
American troops dying at record rates, with the U.S.-supported Kabul
regime in tatters, it was typical of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
to declare that "the thing I'm going to do and recommend to my caucus
is let's just take it easy. I'm going to wait until the president makes
up his mind as to what he thinks should be done."
Then there is Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold. By everyday standards, he
is a cautious person, calling for a "flexible timetable" for American
troop withdrawals but also for "continued strikes on Taliban and
al-Qaida leaders." Sounds like an uncertain trumpet. But in the culture
of the Senate, Feingold is considered downright hyperactive, often
accused of being a loner who doesn't play well with the senior
oligarchs.
The truth is that Feingold has learned to play the Senate game when it
comes to new proposals. Like chess, when a single senator moves, other
senators follow or readjust. That's what is happening. Not a single
senator had spoken out against the war until Feingold said in an Aug.
24 interview in Appleton that the U.S. should consider a flexible
timetable.
Feingold amplified his views in a Sept. 17 interview I held with him,
asserting that he will vote against any troop escalation, "unless I
hear some very different arguments than what I've already heard." He
also will vote against the coming defense authorization bill if it
"follows down this misguided path." He said he might offer amendments
to the bill, perhaps on the timetable.
Feingold's timetable proposal triggered a stampede, or at least a
crawl, to the microphones. Sen. Carl Levin said an increase of U.S.
troops should be delayed for one year, proposing a buildup of Afghan
troops instead. Sen. John Kerry said he was rethinking Afghanistan. So
did senators Dianne Feinstein, Barbara Boxer, Robert Casey, Sherrod
Brown and Bernie Sanders. Speaker Nancy Pelosi opined that votes for
another year of war might not be there in the House.
That was a pretty fast response for a senator the critics describe as
isolated. The label is perhaps the price Feingold pays for being
prematurely right.
We have been here before. In 2005, Feingold was the first senator to
propose a specific withdrawal deadline of one-year from Iraq. I wrote
at the time that his suggestion, while too modest, was a "brave
departure from the ice house of the Senate." By 2006, Feingold was
joined by 13 senators on his withdrawal proposal and had prompted a
proposal from Levin for a more gradual phased withdrawal. By July 2007,
Reid had joined the entire Democratic Senate bloc in supporting an
amendment to phase out the U.S. occupation.
Feingold now stands in a Democratic tradition that includes Sens.
Eugene McCarthy, George McGovern and Robert F. Kennedy, all the way
back to Wisconsin's Sen. Robert LaFollette. The major difference is
that those recent Democratic candidates were running for president in
the wake of a passionate "dump Johnson" movement, whereas the challenge
for Feingold and other Democrats today is to dump the Afghanistan war
without dumping President Barack Obama and the party's congressional
majorities.
Military leaders and Republicans are sure to weigh in that they see
"light at the end of the tunnel." Feingold has tried to armor himself
with the argument that America is becoming weaker in the war against
al-Qaida as long as it occupies Afghanistan. As for firing drones into
Pakistan, he told me, "We will always reserve the right to act in the
national security interests of the American people including targeting
al-Qaida and Taliban leadership." Civilian casualties, he argues, can
best be avoided "if we reduce our military footprint in that country."
The conflict is intensifying. Seventy percent of Democrats oppose the
war. Wisconsin Rep. David Obey, the House appropriations chair, has
given the president one year to show progress or face funding cuts. The
Pentagon and national security hawks argue that there must be 18 to 24
months of "hard fighting" followed by 10 to 12 years of continued
nation-building. At the present rate, that means 1,100 more American
soldiers will die in Afghanistan by the end of 2011, as Obama faces
re-election. More than 700 died during the Bush presidency. Although
budget figures are foggy, Afghanistan is likely to become another $1
trillion war over a two-term Obama presidency.
That's why the Democrats already are facing a voter mandate, similar to
those in 2006 and 2008, to somehow end the war and turn to more urgent
priorities on the home front.
Feingold could be the Gene McCarthy of our time, though one seeking to
end a war to save a presidency, not the other way around. But his
inherent caution could leave the anti-war public wanting a bolder
leadership. A flexible timetable is a talking point, not a proposal.
The further use of Predators is likely to inflame anti-American
sentiment to the benefit of insurgents. Why he lumps al-Qaida with the
Taliban will need clarification.
The opening for Feingold may lie in the utter collapse of the Kabul
government, a Humpty Dumpty that all the king's men will not be able to
put back together with any legitimacy. Having failed to produce a
credible client in Kabul, it could be time for the U.S. to launch
all-party talks, including the Taliban and regional powers, in a
diplomatic surge to stabilize Afghanistan. What Feingold needs to
define is a face-saving exit strategy to complement his proposal for a
troop withdrawal. For now, he only says he is "concerned" and "closely
monitoring" the mounting evidence of fraud in Kabul, which could leave
the United States without a partner that Americans - not to mention
Afghans--can believe in.
Authors Website: http://www.tomhayden.com
Authors Bio:After fifty years of activism, politics and writing, Tom Hayden still is a leading voice for ending the war in Iraq, erasing sweatshops, saving the environment, and reforming politics through greater citizen participation.
Currently he is writing and advocating for US exiting Afghanistan.
A more comprehensive bio, going back to the sixties, when he co-founded SDS and protested in the deep south