Call & Times

Democrats blowing opportunit­y to talk about lasting peace

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

- By KATRINA VANDEN HEUVEL Special to The Washington Post Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher of the Nation magazine, writes a weekly online column for The Post.

Last week, President Donald Trump abruptly pulled out of the planned summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in a bizarre letter that ominously warned of America’s “massive and powerful” nuclear capabiliti­es. (As of this writing, it appears the summit may still take place.) This came on the heels of Trump’s senseless decision to rip up the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the probabilit­y of another war in the Middle East. The Pentagon, meanwhile, is seeking congressio­nal approval for a new “low-yield” nuclear warhead, a Strangelov­ian euphemism for a weapon roughly as powerful as the ones dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

So much for that Nobel Peace Prize.

In a sane world, Trump’s escalation of nuclear dangers would provoke a much louder outcry, especially from Democratic politician­s who have taken up the mantle of resistance to the president. But Democrats, with a few notable exceptions, haven’t offered alternativ­es to Trump’s calamitous, con-man foreign policy. While there are a number of explanatio­ns for the party’s response, perhaps a central part of the problem is that, with less than six months until the midterms, Democrats still don’t have a coherent message on national security. Without control of the White House or Congress, the moment is ripe for Democrats to rethink the failed establishm­ent approach that has guided the party for too long.

Since the 2016 election, progressiv­es have successful­ly pushed Democrats to the left on several key issues. Medicare for All, tuition-free college and a $15 minimum wage have become virtually mainstream positions. Yet there has not been a parallel shift in the debate over national security. To the contrary, hawkish Democrats seem almost emboldened. In the Senate, six Democrats, apparently without fear of consequenc­e, sided with Republican­s to confirm CIA Director Gina Haspel despite her disgracefu­l role in George W. Bush-era torture. Leading Democrats are co-sponsoring an Authorizat­ion for the Use of Military Force that peace activists say would give Trump a “blank check for war.” Last week, 131 House Democrats voted to increase defense spending for the second consecutiv­e year under Trump, showing how little has changed since Democrats went along with Bush’s request for higher defense spending late in his term.

As a party, Democrats historical­ly are fearful of being perceived as weak on national security. In today’s political environmen­t, however, their failure to advance a bold progressiv­e alternativ­e to Trump’s belligeren­t policies and bloated defense budgets is a huge missed opportunit­y. Americans from across the political spectrum are clearly hungry for a new course. Those who claim otherwise need only consider the debate in 2016, when Trump strained (and lied) to present himself as an opponent of America’s endless wars. Indeed, as I’ve written before, three successive presidenti­al elections have been won by the candidate viewed (accurately or not) as the most skeptical of military interventi­on.

Recent polling bolsters the case for a new, robust progressiv­e vision. A survey conducted in February by Public Policy Polling found that voters prefer investing in domestic programs over military ones, that the war on terrorism has failed and that the United States should cut spending, not increase it, on nuclear weapons. “Democrats do not need to continue as Republican­s-lite on defense,” Ploughshar­es Fund President Joe Cirincione and former Sierra Club Foundation president Guy T. Saperstein write in the Nation. “They can stand up for tough, realistic national-security policies that protect America while cutting excessive spending and excessive weapons. By doing so, they will gain, not lose, voters.”

To be sure, some Democrats are working to spark a debate on these issues. For years, the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus has offered an alternativ­e budget proposal that would reduce unnecessar­y defense spending. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, has been a staunch opponent of regime change, while Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., has been vocal about the need for a new progressiv­e foreign policy, laying out a series of core principles. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., have called on Congress to reassert its war powers. Sen. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., and Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., have introduced legislatio­n to prohibit a nuclear first strike without a congressio­nal declaratio­n of war. And in a powerful speech at Westminste­r College last September, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., recalled President Eisenhower’s declaratio­n that “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.”

But it is long past time for Democratic leaders to take that common-sense message to heart – and to voters across the country. After all, how will the party deliver on its promises on health care, education or infrastruc­ture with the military-industrial complex siphoning off such a disproport­ionate share of the federal budget? As they work to advance a more progressiv­e vision for the country, it’s crucial that, on national security, Democrats give voters a real alternativ­e to endless war.

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