By Larry Kaplow and Lennox Samuels
We don't have a
scientific survey but would hazard to guess that most U.S. soldiers in Iraq are voting for Sen. John
McCain. However, the spread between him and Sen. Barack Obama is probably much
smaller than it was between George W. Bush and John Kerry four years ago.
Meanwhile, military contractors, a motley crew ranging from accountants to bus
drivers and usually attached to big defense companies, tend further toward the
right than soldiers. And security contractors – former soldiers and cops
pulling in lucrative incomes – are more right still. In that spirit, here
are a few things we've overheard on U.S. installations in recent days
about the upcoming elections:
"If Joe the
Plumber wants a job, he should bring his ass to Iraq. There are plenty of plumbing
jobs here,"—from a U.S.
soldier who won't explicitly state his preference but we're guessing is for
Obama. He says his vote is based on the economic problems he hears from his
wife back home, not the Iraq
war. "This is where the jobs are. We need to be doing this in America," he grouses, gesturing at the large
U.S.
infrastructure around him.
"My wife is
talking about moving . . . to South Africa,"
said a U.S. logistics
contractor lamenting a possible Obama victory that would leave America with an
"even worse administration than the one we have now."
And from a
Blackwater security guard there was this pithy declaration: "I'm voting against
socialism." Well, Obama is on record saying there's too great a difference
between the modest salaries of U.S.
troops and the high pay for the private gunmen. It sounds like economics, not
the Iraq
war, might be their deciding factor, too.