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Patriots Who Love the Troops to Death
GERALD FORD spoke the truth when he called Watergate "our long national nightmare," but even a nightmare can have its interludes of rib-splitting farce.
None were zanier than the antics of Baruch Korff, a small-town New England rabbi who became a full-time Richard Nixon sycophant as the walls closed in. Korff was ubiquitous in the press and on television, where he would lambaste Democrats and the media "lynch mob" for vilifying "the greatest president of the century." Despite Nixon's reflexive anti-Semitism, he returned the favor by granting the rabbi audiences and an interview that allowed the embattled president to soliloquize about how his own faith and serenity reinforced his conviction "deep inside" that everything he did was right.
Clearly we've reached our own Korffian moment in our latest long national nightmare. The Nixon interviewed by the rabbi sounded uncannily like the resolute leader chronicled by the conservative columnists and talk-show jocks President Bush has lately welcomed into his bunker. For his part, William Kristol even published a Korffian manifesto, "Why Bush Will Be a Winner," in The Washington Post. It reassured us that the Bush presidency would "probably be a successful one" and that "we now seem to be on course to a successful outcome" in Iraq. A Bush flack let it be known that the president liked this piece so much that he recommended it to his White House staff.
Are you laughing yet? Maybe not. No one died in Watergate. This time around, the White House lying and cover-ups have been not just in the service of political thuggery but to gin up a gratuitous war without end.
There is another significant difference as well. Washington never drank the Nixon Kool-Aid. It kept a skeptical bipartisan eye on Tricky Dick throughout his political career, long before the Watergate complex had even been built. The charmed Mr. Bush, by contrast, got a free pass; both Democrats and Republicans in Congress and both liberals and conservatives in the news media were credulous enablers of the Iraq fiasco. Now a reckoning awaits, and the denouement is getting ugly.
The ranks of unreconstructed Iraq hawks are thinner than they used to be. Some politicians in both parties (John Edwards, Chris Dodd, Gordon Smith) and truculent pundits (Peter Beinart, Andrew Sullivan) who cheered on the war recanted (sooner in some cases than others), learned from their errors and moved on. One particularly eloquent mea culpa can be found in today's New York Times Magazine, where the former war supporter Michael Ignatieff acknowledges that those who "truly showed good judgment on Iraq" might have had no more information than those who got it wrong, but did not make the mistake of confusing "wishes for reality."
But those who remain dug in are having none of that. Some of them are busily lashing out Korff-style. Some are melting down. Some are rewriting history. Most seem more interested in saving their own reputations than the American troops they ritualistically invoke to bludgeon the wars' critics and to parade their own self-congratulatory patriotism.
It was a rewriting of history that made the blogosphere (and others) go berserk last week over an Op-Ed article in The Times, "A War We Just Might Win," by Michael O'Hanlon and Kenneth Pollack. The two Brookings Institution scholars, after a government-guided tour, pointed selectively to successes on the ground in Iraq in arguing that the surge should be continued "at least into 2008."
The hole in their argument was gaping. As Adm. Michael Mullen, the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs, said honorably and bluntly in his Congressional confirmation hearings, "No amount of troops in no amount of time will make much of a difference" in Iraq if there's no functioning Iraqi government. Opting for wishes over reality, Mr. O'Hanlon and Mr. Pollack buried their pro forma acknowledgment of that huge hurdle near the end of their piece.
But even more galling was the authors' effort to elevate their credibility by describing themselves as "analysts who have harshly criticized the Bush administration's miserable handling of Iraq." That's disingenuous. For all their late-in-the-game criticisms of the administration's incompetence, Mr. Pollack proselytized vociferously for the war before it started, including in an appearance with Oprah, and both men have helped prolong the quagmire with mistakenly optimistic sightings of progress since the days of "Mission Accomplished."
You can find a compendium of their past wisdom in Glenn Greenwald's Salon column. That think-tank pundits with this track record would try to pass themselves off as harsh war critics in 2007 shows how desperate they are to preserve their status as Beltway "experts" now that the political winds have shifted. Such blatant careerism would be less offensive if they didn't do so on the backs of the additional American troops they ask to be sacrificed to the doomed mission of providing security for an Iraqi government that is both on vacation and on the verge of collapse.
At least the more rabid and Korff-like of the war's last defenders have the intellectual honesty not to deny what they've been saying all along. But their invective has gone over the top, with even mild recent critics of the war like John Warner and Richard Lugar being branded defeatist "pre- 9/11 Republicans" by Mr. Kristol.
It's also the tic of Mr. Kristol's magazine, The Weekly Standard (and its Murdoch sibling The New York Post), to claim that the war's critics hate the troops. When The New Republic ran a less-than-jingoistic essay by a pseudonymous American soldier in Iraq, The Weekly Standard even accused it of fabrication - only to have its bluff called when the author's identity was revealed and his controversial anecdotes were verified by other sources.
A similar over-the-top tirade erupted on "Meet the Press" last month, when another war defender in meltdown, Senator Lindsey Graham, repeatedly cut off his fellow guest by saying that soldiers he met on official Congressional visits to Iraq endorsed his own enthusiasm for the surge. Unfortunately for Mr. Graham, his sparring partner was Jim Webb, the take-no-prisoners Virginia Democrat who is a Vietnam veteran and the father of a soldier serving in the war. Senator Webb reduced Mr. Graham to a stammering heap of Jell-O when he chastised him for trying to put his political views "into the mouths of soldiers." As Mr. Webb noted, the last New York Times-CBS News poll on the subject found that most members of the military and their immediate families have turned against the war, like other Americans.
As is becoming clearer than ever in this Korffian endgame, hiding behind the troops is the last refuge of this war's sponsors. This too is a rewrite of history. It has been the war's champions who have more often dishonored the troops than the war's opponents.
Mr. Bush created the template by doing everything possible to keep the sacrifice of American armed forces in Iraq off-camera, forbidding photos of coffins and skipping military funerals. That set the stage for the ensuing demonization of Ted Koppel, whose decision to salute the fallen by reading a list of their names in the spotlight of "Nightline" was branded unpatriotic by the right's vigilantes.
The same playbook was followed by the war's champions when a soldier confronted Donald Rumsfeld about the woeful shortage of armor during a town-hall meeting in Kuwait in December 2004. Rather than campaign for the armor the troops so desperately needed, the right attacked the questioner for what Rush Limbaugh called his "near insubordination." When The Washington Post some two years later exposed the indignities visited upon the grievously injured troops at Walter Reed Medical Center, The Weekly Standard and the equally hawkish Wall Street Journal editorial page took three weeks to notice, with The Standard giving the story all of two sentences. Protecting the White House from scandal, not the troops from squalor, was the higher priority.
One person who has had enough of this hypocrisy is the war critic Andrew J. Bacevich, a Boston University professor of international relations who is also a Vietnam veteran, a product of the United States Military Academy and a former teacher at West Point. After his 27-year-old son was killed in May while serving in Iraq, he said that Americans should not believe Memorial Day orators who talk about how priceless the troops' lives are.
"I know what value the U.S. government assigns to a soldier's life," Professor Bacevich wrote in The Washington Post. "I've been handed the check." The amount, he said, was "roughly what the Yankees will pay Roger Clemens per inning."
Anyone who questions this bleak perspective need only have watched last week's sad and ultimately pointless Congressional hearings into the 2004 friendly-fire death of Pat Tillman. Seven investigations later, we still don't know who rewrote the witness statements of Tillman's cohort so that Pentagon propagandists could trumpet a fictionalized battle death to the public and his family.
But it was nonetheless illuminating to watch Mr. Rumsfeld and his top brass sit there under oath and repeatedly go mentally AWOL about crucial events in the case. Their convenient mass amnesia about their army's most famous and lied-about casualty is as good a definition as any of just what "supporting the troops" means to those who even now beat the drums for this war.
© 2007 The New York Times



20 Comments so far
Show All"AND SO IT GOES"
Please ... no more of this textbook example of a lazy columnist rehashing/recycling everything in sight ... Please, no more. We are not cows. We do not have to chew everything four times. Also go to
http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2007350453,00.html for a slightly more original thought.
asnet sunday 11:35 pm EDT
Lucky Mr. Rich remembered to mention the Loonitary Decider at least three times, or he might have had his assets frozen. However, the failure to evoke the dark word, Cheney, may result in negative consequences.
'I will not withdraw even if Laura and Barney are the only ones supporting me.'
Haven't seen the three of them together in a while... wonder if Barney went Blue and got sent to Rudy's wife for a bit of medical demonstration...
Barney is the only member of the Bush family and his supporters I can stand. When W. calls him he runs the other way. Too bad the 29% that still support W.'s corporate fascism don't have that much sense.
Excellent by Mr Rich.
It wasn't amnesia that Rummy & The Generals displayed, it was prevarication.
The thing with essays/articles like this one is that the Bush/Cheney mob just laughs at them. Congress has been stuck in reverse gear for the last couple of hundred years, and everyone knows that there'll never be another revolution in the US because those who could benefit from a real change haven't got time to take to the streets.
It's amazing what goes on, as if it all had a life of its own, unstoppable and impervious to any considerations of right, wrong, justice, and all that other nice stuff that, once-upon-a-time, mattered in everyday earthly life, especially in the US, at least on the smaller scale of life outside of DC and state capitals.
The frenzied rush to control all the oil—and now just to maintain the image of the superpower par excellence—has got the US by the balls.
All there is to do is shake the head and watch.
Until war is recognizes as the supreme failure of diplomacy and every other possible resource, rather than a celebration of macho force first (whatever the resource "in need" of co-optation) this march towards folly will recur. Of course the odds have gotten eerily greater, both because of the reach and efficiency of major weapon's system and because of the scarcity of that singular resource (oil) that the military machine must itself run upon. We are witnessing a myth in progress... a cautionary tale about mankind's shortsightedness when it entrusts its wisdom to those that would fawn over the emperor who wears no clothes. All for the price of not one, but several kingdoms, and their precious peoples.
RE: PROTECTING BUSH UBER ALLES
Bush asslicks have been ready to sacrifice any number of human bodies - U.S. or Iraqi - to protect the CheneyBush from criticism for its hideous, lying criminal invasion.
Bodyguards throw themselves in the path of a bullet; Bush toadies throw U.S. troops.
Know the progressive cartoonist Tom Tomorrow, everyone? See this this one on right wing asslicks who play the patriot card while sending others to die -
http://www.workingforchange.com/comic.cfm?itemid=19300
What in hell were Laura and W flying out to Minneapolis for? Photo ops. Stay the hell back in Washington, do your job, stop burning av gas and polluting the atmosphere.
Bless u Asnet - evry medium is used to simplify and direct the public - I am SO glad you spoke out.
Power to you and do more of it- !!
The ludicrous enthusiasm attempts at positive spin in the face of disaster are really a result of the failing market. Good news, real or imagined, is used to boost consumer confidence and shore up an economy and stock market based on lies and rumors of lies -- much like the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. Soldier's are expendable capital in this venture as are we all.
Having seen so many people being anti-war during the vietnam war period it is amazing how pro-war americans got in iraq. Support the troops should include first and foremost using them only as needed to defend the usa. Using them as pawns in business strategies is not supporting them. Too many are blinded by the patriotic bluster. I will never support my child going into the us military unless something more evil than our own government is at our borders. I can't believe it when I hear parents proudly saying their child died for our country when they are in fact fools who threw their lives away for nothing good.
just what "supporting the troops" means to those who even now beat the drums for this war.
What I don't understand is this: If some folks BELIEVE in this war on Iraq so much, then what in hell are they still doing HERE?? I'm pretty sure the Army -- getting low on recruits -- would be glad to have them. I think if you're not willing to pick up a rifle yourself and go into harm's way, you really might just ought to shut up.
Enough of this "Let's you and him fight," from blustering cowards.
SJ
www.spartacusjones.com
frank rich, like most MSM commentators w/their quibbles about the iraq war, would be singing quite a different tune if the war were going "well". what kind of insight or courage does it take to point out the hypocrisies and inanities of a rush limbaugh? or the tactical, bureaucratic, and logistical errors of the on-going occupation?
like m. igantieff's piece in today's NYTimes, there are no "mea culpas" for the iraqi dead and displaced, or a destroyed society. those factors don't even figure into the moral radar.
topainca should not be surprised "how pro-war Americans got in Iraq". With more Americans invested in the stock market than ever before, they love a BULL MARKET, even if it is based on BULL SHIT. The neocons are throwing boatloads of money at the military industrial complex and that is driving the stock market up up up!!!! Every time Bush says the war on terror is a never ending war, more money is thrown at the military industrial complex and the stock market keeps going up up up!!!!
Topainca -- you might be more careful with tossing around the word 'fools' when you speak of our dead children.
Instead do what you can to stop the murdering traitors in Washington.
It is an all volunteer army and if the people who are being sent to war realize that what they are doing is not defending their country then the "murdering traitors" are rendered powerless. Think of it as an effective form of peaceful resistance. Remember the vietnam era line: "what if they started a war but no but no one showed up to fight it" I don't mean to be cruel to people who lost loved ones but sometimes people need a slap in the face to realize they are being used.
asnet, that is so very Don Quixote. I would like to address a trend I have been seeing lately...
The blogosphere these days seems cynical and disgruntled. All things in moderation people. Keep in mind reading, interacting with each and blogging on the net are HOT mediums. They require active brain participation. This is directly in contrast to television and radio where the audience sits passively by soaking up all the messages, overt, covert and implied absorbing into their conscious and unconscious minds, stimulating little if anything in their own brains. The statements I have been hearing about how talking this stuff on the net does NOTHING to oppose the Neocon agenda is not strictly true. We ARE resisting their brainwashing, exchanging points of view, modeling open and honest discussions on nuances of issues and assimilating alternate points of view. I just do not aggree that this is without merit.
Excellent article! Thanks, much!
Have you noticed how almost all, maybe all, of those self styled Super Patriots have never been in actual combat themselves? Bush, Cheney, Rove, ad infinitum. I'd sure like to see some of those gutless wonders touring Iraq on the back of an unarmored truck as our overextended, underpaid, ill used soldiers are forced to do again and again. And, I am not talking about full battalion of men and helicopters that the gutless wonders usually surround themselves with when they are briefly seeking photo ops in Iraq if they have ever gone there at all. Maybe then, the loud proponents of getting others killed would be less strident about a war that never should have been fought in the first place
Notice too how they astonishingly equate their holding office (air conditioned ones at that) as somehow equal to serving in a war zone with the chance of dying. Romney and his pack of military age boys who won't enlist are classic examples. I can't blame them for being afraid, but they can be despised for claiming others should go in their place.
Their hiding out while others are dying and being maimed for their country are the best reasons I can think of to re-institute the draft starting with them and their families. Once they have earned their combat infantry badge under fire, I'll be happy to listen to what they have to say. Until then, all those arrogant ignorant chicken hawk REMFs should be too embarrassed to talk about what they do not know.