Senator Obama, Black America and the War(s)
Senator Obama, Black America and the War(s)
As much as anyone else, I am interested in being inspired by a Presidential candidate, and I am certainly looking for something new and fresh in the White House, particularly after years of stagnation and death. Nevertheless, in the recent Presidential debates, when it came to articulating a vision for the end of the
Strike #1, Senator.
In the same week, there was a crucial vote in the Senate, a vote that may turn out to be of great historical significance. Incited by the Bush/Cheney drumbeat for military strikes against Iran to allegedly halt supposed Iranian support for Iraqi militias and to halt the Iranian enrichment of uranium (which the Bush administration argues WITHOUT SUPPORT AND EVIDENCE is aimed at producing nuclear weapons), the Senate passed a jingoistic amendment that would support the characterizing of Iran's Revolutionary Guards as a "terrorist organization," in addition to giving a green light to US military action as a legitimate option to address Iran's alleged misdeeds.
Strike #2, Senator.
I have to come back to something I have raised elsewhere: who is Senator Obama? If he is to be a breath of fresh air rather than air from the crypt, it would seem that he would identify a foreign policy that fundamentally breaks with the belligerent and failed policies of the Bush administration (and for that matter, the Clinton administration). Instead, Senator Obama seems to be doing all that he can do to avoid controversy. Thus, rather than a clear statement on withdrawal from
I am very deeply worried that the Bush administration, in its maniacal efforts at global domination, will launch military strikes against
I can hear it already, from some of the Senator's supporters: ...the Senator has to be careful if he wants to get elected...he can't jump out there too far... I am sure that you have heard this as well. My question, however, is fairly simple: WHO would we be electing in choosing Senator Obama? Is it the person who is prepared to keep US troops in Iraq indefinitely with no plan for withdrawal, or is it the Senator who -- prior to arriving in office -- had the courage of his convictions to oppose this war of aggression? Is it the person who decided to take a pass on a vote that could lead to war with
I sometimes feel like I am watching that old game show "To Tell the Truth." At the end, after three people had pretended to be a certain character, the show's host would ask the real person to stand up. In that light: Will the real Senator Barak Obama please stand up...and keep standing?!
[BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a labor and international writer and activist, and the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum.]



