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  • Barack Obama Democratic Camp And Sudan

    BARACK OBAMA DEMOCRATIC CAMP AND SUDAN
    By Steve Paterno

    Sudan Tribune
    Wed, Sep 24, 2008
    Sudan

    September 23, 2008 -- More often, the members of Democratic Party in
    America are portrayed as dovish and their Republican counterparts are
    portrayed as hawkish when it comes to American foreign policy. However,
    such portrayal can hardly measure up to American history. The reality
    reveals that the past greatest wars America ever involved in are the
    results of interventions by Democratic Party administrations.

    The first President to have ever done that was Woodrow Wilson from the
    Democratic Party who got Americans involved in World War I. Wilson did
    not only involved the United States in the world's greatest war, but
    he established a legacy of American international interventionism--a
    legacy that is interestingly followed to date by the Neo-Cons of
    Republican Party in President George W. Bush's administration, and
    to a great deal embraced by European countries. David M. Kennedy,
    a history professor, captures this point well when he argues that,
    "Wilson's ideas continue to dominate American foreign policy in the
    twenty-first century. In the aftermath of 9/11 they have, if anything,
    taken on even greater vitality." Another historian, Walter Russell
    Mead, says, "Wilson's principles... still guide European politics
    today: self-determination, democratic government, collective security,
    international law, and a league of nations" are among those principles.

    Under Wilson's leadership, American fought the greatest war the world
    ever experienced. In the American hemisphere, Wilson maintained
    American superiority through military interventions, occupations,
    and regime changes. In Europe, Wilson sent troops to keep in check
    the newly emerging Soviet aggression. He went on to intervene in
    stopping Armenian's genocide.

    The World War II is another greatest war that witnessed American
    intervention on a massive scale than never before. It was also the work
    of a Democratic Party President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Roosevelt
    saw America as the "Arsenal of Democracy." He rejected the neutrality
    attitude and instead embarked on expanding American military bases
    around the world. If American military today occupy bases throughout
    the globe, it must partly be owed to Roosevelt. President Roosevelt
    eventually got Americans involved in World War II, and his successor,
    also a Democrat; Harry S. Truman not only helped finished the war
    for him, but did it decisively by dropping the atomic bombs--the only
    person to have ever authorized the use of such weapon against the arch
    rival. Indeed, a convincing proof that a Democratic Party President
    cannot only intervene militarily, but can also pull the trigger,
    provide economic assistance and protect peace as confirmed by the
    Truman Doctrine that led to Marshall Plan and set the basis for the
    North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), European Economic Union,
    and ultimately, the policies of containing Soviet aggressions.

    The Vietnam War was also a result of a Democratic President
    intervention, made central in President John F. Kennedy's
    administration, especially in his inaugural address, where he pledged
    to the Americans to "pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship,
    support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival
    and success of liberty." Kennedy's successor, also a Democrat,
    Lyndon Baines Johnson upgraded the significance of Vietnam military
    intervention in his administration and escalated it further. The
    Americans had to find a Republican President, Richard Nixon to
    reverse the interventionism advanced by Democratic administrations;
    Nixon had to withdraw US troops out from Vietnam.

    Even President William Jefferson Clinton, a Democrat who seems to
    be an exception to this rule had made some unilateral attempts of
    interventions. The misfiring of U.S. cruise missiles that hit Osama
    bin Laden's parking lot in Afghanistan and killing a camel in Sahara
    Desert in the Sudan are some of the credits that can be attributed
    into Clinton's attempts of unilateral interventions. Perhaps the most
    memorable Clinton's unilateral intervention was the one in Kosovo
    where some of Clinton's aid still brag about it that the Americans
    "bombed Serbian targets until Slobodan Milosevic acquiesced. Not a
    single American died in combat. Many nations protested that the United
    States violated international law, but the United Nations subsequently
    deployed a mission to administer Kosovo and effectively blessed NATO
    military action retroactively." Speaking of Kosovo and Milosevic,
    one will clearly draw comparisons and Parallels to the current state
    of affairs in Sudan.

    Of course, Clinton regretted very much not intervening to stop the
    genocide in Rwanda and apologized for not "fully appreciating the
    depth and speed" of the Rwandan genocide. Nonetheless, it seems
    Barack Obama and his Democratic team is about to redeem Clinton and
    follow-up on the footstep of their predecessors, started by Woodrow
    Wilson legacy of interventionism. Obama may naively be portrayed to
    have said he is going to have tea with the provocatively agitated
    President of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. However, the message Obama
    have for the President of Khartoum in Sudan is different, hawkish in
    style, if you like. Obama pledges, as a matter of priority to hold
    accountable President Omar al-Bashir and the company for war crimes
    and end the genocide in Darfur. Obama running mate, Joe Biden is even
    more explicit in his tone in dealing with Khartoum. Biden proposes that
    "it's time to put force on the table and use it." Biden's argument is
    that America is capable of going it alone and it must do so because
    "those kids will be dead by the time the diplomacy is over."

    Other foreign policy advisors and supporters of Barack Obama are on
    the record, arguing for unilateral US military intervention to stop
    the ongoing genocide in Darfur. Among the pack is Susan E. Rice, a
    prominent foreign policy chief advisor to Obama's camp. For example,
    in an article title, "US should act without UN in Darfur" (co-authored
    by two other prominent figures in Democratic Party, Congressman
    Donald M. Payne and Anthony Lake, a long-term US diplomat), they
    argue that there is only "one language Khartoum understands: the
    credible threat or use of force." They go into proposing that with
    or without the U.N. blessings, the US military must "strike Sudanese
    airfields, aircraft and other military assets. It could blockade Port
    Sudan, through which Sudan's oil exports flow. Then U.N. troops would
    deploy--by force, if necessary, with U.S. and NATO backing." Toting-up
    to these growing voices, another long-term diplomat from Obama's camp,
    Richard Holbrooke, has gone on the record, calling for al-Bashir's
    arrest by International Criminal Court (ICC) base on pending charges
    against al-Bashir for war crimes and genocide.

    Given these factual evidences, the Democratic Party under Barack
    Obama, if elected, can reclaim the legacy of interventionism set
    forth by Woodrow Wilson--the legacy, which has ever since been
    practiced in both America and Europe by both conservatives and liberals
    alike. For Obama, fortune has provided time and place to practice this
    legacy. The time is now and the place is Sudan. But one will wonder
    that what if John McCain instead of Obama wins the election, then one
    will hope that McCain will do the same, follow on Bush's policy of
    unilateral intervention, a typical Wilsonian foreign policy. As for
    those Europeans, Wilson's ideals are still very much alive in their
    political culture. They can use it in the ICC by making sure that
    the international justice system is functioning well to prosecute
    real international criminals like President Omar al-Bashir. After
    all, the Europeans were the ones behind foundation of the court,
    the fact that the Rome Statue of ICC is bearing the name of one of
    their prominent cities.

    Steve Paterno is the author of The Rev. Fr. Saturnino Lohure,
    A Romain Catholic Priest Turned Rebel. He can be reached at
    [email protected]
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