Today a group of former senior diplomatic officials and retired
military commanders--several of whom are the kind who "have never
spoken out before" on such matters--issued a bracing statement
arguing that George W. Bush has damaged the country's national
security and calling on Americans to defeat him in November. It's too
early to tell if the statement will have an impact on this fall's
campaign. But Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change, as the
group is called, reveals (again) how dangerously isolated the Bush
Administration is not just around the world but even from America's
own bipartisan foreign policy and military establishments.
This latest missive, as the LA Times and the Washington Post reported
last Sunday, is being sent by Democratic and Republican officials who
refuse to stay silent in the face of Bush's extremist and ideological
foreign policy which, they say, is squandering America's moral
standing. These signatories aren't exactly a Who's Who of the
American left.
Jack Matlock, who served as Reagan and Bush 41's ambassador to the
Soviet Union, has signed the statement, as has Ret. Adm. William
Crowe, who served as Reagan's Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Retired Marine Gen. Joseph Hoar has added his name to the list, and
he commanded US forces in the Middle East under Bush Sr. Phyllis
Oakley, who served as a State Department spokesperson under Reagan,
is another signatory. The vast majority of the signatories are, in
fact, either conservative Republicans who served under Reagan and
Bush 41 or they are bipartisan, consensus-driven ex-diplomats who
served their country from Africa to Asia because they believed in
America's leadership role around the world.
Now they feel so enraged by Bush's extremist foreign policies that
they can no longer stand by as this Administration makes America less
secure by upending alliances and alienating much of the world.
Against the metastasizing scandal of Abu Ghraib; the botched postwar
occupation of Iraq; and the Administration's lies about WMDs in Iraq
in the run-up to the war, these old hands are now taking an
uncompromising, intelligent stand against what they see as the most
arrogant, unilateral and incompetent foreign policy in their adult
lifetimes.
Today's signatories join a large and growing chorus of former senior
officials who were so enraged by Bush's conduct of the Iraq war that sitting on the
sidelines simply wasn't an option for them. John Brady Kiesling, now
a retired diplomat, led the charge in February 2003 when he
courageously quit his foreign-service job with the American Embassy
in Athens, and wrote a stinging rebuke to Bush's headlong rush to
wage a war in Iraq. Then another career diplomat Gregory Thielmann
went public, telling Bill Moyers that Iraq didn't pose an "imminent
security threat" to America. Thielmann attacked Bush for hyping
intelligence reports and for misleading the American people about the
need to go to war in the Middle East. The Administration, he said,
"has had a faith-based intelligence attitude.We know the
answers--give us the intelligence to support those answers'."
Around the same time, retired military commanders were growing aghast
at Bush's utterly inept lack of planning for the occupation of Iraq.
That's why, for example, the former Centcom commander Gen. Anthony
Zinni ultimately went on 60 Minutes last month and argued that if
Bush stayed on the current course in Iraq, America was "headed over
Niagara Falls." Hoar, the retired Marine general, has publicly
declared that the United States is "absolutely on the brink of
failure" in Iraq.
Meanwhile, other former ambassadors and career foreign-service
officers began speaking up, each in their own way and on their own
timetables. GOP strategists with ties to the White House were quick
and shameless in denigrating those who've spent their life serving
the national interest.
Ronald Spiers, the former Ambassador to Turkey and Pakistan and well
versed in the politics of the Middle East, argued that W.'s policies
have unraveled our most important alliances around the globe. Spiers
faulted Bush for causing us to lose "a lot of our international
partnerships. We've lost a lot of lives. We've lost a lot of money
for something that wasn't justified."
George Harrop, a former ambassador to Kenya and Israel, spoke for
many in the diplomatic corps, and I suspect for even some former Bush
I officials like Brent Scowcroft, when he said: "I really am
essentially a Republican. I voted for George Bush's father, and I
voted for George Bush. But what we got was not the George Bush we
voted for." And former Ambassador Joseph Wilson has reminded
Americans of just how many lies the Administration was willing to
make in its quest to convince people that Iraq posed a nuclear threat
to the United States.
Then, of course, there are the high-level NSC officials who, after
getting a ringside seat for Bush's bungling national security
strategies, decided that enough was enough, and that now was the
season to speak up and take a stand. Rand Beers left W.'s White House
after serving under Reagan and Bush I, and he is now running foreign
policy operations for John Kerry's presidential campaign. Richard
Clarke, is one of the most experienced counterterrorism officials
America has produced in the last three decades; he, too, could no
longer stand idly by as the Administration pursued a fool's errand by
starting a war against Iraq.
Just last month a separate group of fifty-three ex-diplomats and other
high-level national security officials wrote a letter to Bush in which they excoriated the
President for sacrificing America's credibility in the Arab world and
squandering America's status as honest broker in the
Israeli-Palestinian crisis.
The statement issued today marks the high-water point of dissent
among diplomats and military commanders who cannot stomach Bush any
longer, but there is still time, and a need, for more high-level
officials to come forward and voice their opposition to policies that
are undermining our security.
The anger towards W., and the antipathy towards his extremely
dangerous policies has now, at long last, reached a critical mass.
Today's statement reveals just how extremist the Administration's
approach has been, and the staggering stupidity of their radical
ideologies. This letter is a profound wake-up call to all Americans:
George W. Bush must be defeated.
Copyright © 2004 The Nation
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