The Sheehan Movement
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
In June, I ventured a prediction: "A Eugene
McCarthy will appear soon to pressure and challenge Hillary Clinton
in 2008, if Hillary does not convert herself into an antiwar candidate
..."
Observing the Cindy Sheehan protest, I updated
the prediction just last week: "September could see the coalescing
of an antiwar movement that ... divides (the) Democratic Party ..."
And so it has come to pass.
On Sunday's "Meet the Press," Gene McCarthy
emerged in the person of Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin. Monday,
the top headline in The Washington Post read, "Democrats Split Over
Position on Iraq War." The opening paragraph:
"Democrats say a longstanding rift in the party
over the Iraq war has grown increasingly raw in recent days, as
stay-the-course elected leaders who voted for the war three years
ago confront rising impatience from activists and strategists who
want to challenge President Bush aggressively to withdraw troops."
In the long run, the Democratic Party stands
to lose far more from this war than a GOP whose president led us
into it. How can that be? How can a war that will go down in history
as "Bush's War" end up dividing Democrats and gravely damaging their
party?
First, there is the Democratic complicity in
taking America into a war in which some of them never believed.
In October 2002, when the war drums were beating and Bush was pawing
the ground to take down Saddam, Sens. Clinton, Biden, Edwards, Kerry
and Daschle voted for the war. It is thus their war, as well as
Bush's war.
Some voted their interests, not their consciences.
They did it to get the war issue, which was working for the Republicans
in 2002, behind them.
They failed in their duty to do due diligence
before transferring the war power the Constitution invested in Congress
to President Bush. Like the Enron and WorldCom boards of directors,
they failed to monitor the executive over whom they had oversight
authority.
If Pentagon preparations for the war were deficient,
why did the Democratic senators, who chaired all the relevant committees,
fail to review the postwar plans of Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and Feith?
More dangerous for the Democrats is that the
growing split in their party is along the same fault line as the
old Vietnam fissure.
In 1964, only Sens. Gruening of Alaska and Morse
of Oregon voted against the Tonkin Gulf Resolution authorizing war.
But by 1967, Sen. William Fulbright, chairman of the Foreign Relations
Committee, was hectoring Secretary of State Rusk, a revolt had broken
out in Democratic leadership councils over the war, and antiwar
teach-ins and demonstrations had been escalating for years.
The reason Democrats must worry most today
is that the antiwar movement taking shape is virulently anti-Bush;
it is lodged, by and large, inside their party; it is passionate
and intolerant; it has given new life to the Howard Deaniacs who
went missing after the Iowa caucuses; and it will turn on any leader
who does not voice its convictions.
Cindy Sheehan has sympathizers in Middle America,
but to the Left she is "Mother Sheehan."
Consider Hillary's predicament. Today, she is
taking the same cautious position on Iraq that Richard Nixon took
in the fall of 1968 on Vietnam. She is saying she supports the war
and the troops, but the war has been mismanaged and America needs
new leadership.
No risk there. Hillary's problem is she is three
years away from 2008, the antiwar movement increasingly looks on
her as a collaborator in "Bush's War," and Democrats like Feingold
are going to give these antiwar militants the rhetoric and stances
they demand. Hillary's most rabid followers will depart if she does
not leave Bush's side – to lead them.
This surging antiwar movement will not permit
moderates to get away with a stay-the-course, we-support-the-troops
position. They will demand a timetable for withdrawal and rally
to the candidate who offers one, just as antiwar Democrats rallied
to Gene McCarthy, Bobby Kennedy and George McGovern in 1968.
The Democrats' dilemma is hellish. If this war
ends successfully, Republicans get the credit. If it ends badly,
Bush will be gone, but antiwar Democrats will be blamed for having
cut and run, for losing the war and for the disastrous consequences
in the Persian Gulf and Arab world.
And if there are terror attacks on U.S. soil,
Americans may not demand that we get out of Iraq, but that we smash
the terrorists and insurgents inside Iraq, to whom the antiwar movement
will be accused of giving aid and comfort.
The London bombings did not weaken Tony Blair,
they strengthened him. And the history of America's wars is that
wartime presidents win, unless – like Truman and Johnson –
they quit. Then, they are succeeded by the more hawkish of the candidates
the nation is offered.
Even in unpopular wars, the antiwar party is
not necessarily the most rewarding place to be – politically
speaking.
August
24, 2005
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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