Still Not 'Deconflicted' Over 'Datagate'
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
Last Thursday,
as the U.S. Senate was preparing to vote on an amendment to make
English the official language of the United States, President Bush’s
nominee for director of the Central Intelligence Agency was testifying
before a Senate committee. Clarity begins at home, it might be said,
and before Congress tries its hand at legislating languages, its
members and those who testify before its committees should themselves
strive for fluency in English.
That was painfully
obvious during the hearing on the nomination of General Michael
Hayden by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. That name
says a lot, doesn’t it? The House Intelligence Committee is widely
regarded as an oxymoron, but the Senate apparently has intelligence
it brings to bear only on "select" subjects – like raising
money for the senators’ reelection campaigns. They might try amending
an appropriations bill to add money for English as a Second Language
training for senators, generals and bureaucrats in the nation’s
capital.
The hearings
were expected to focus on the scandal du jour, the recently disclosed
news that that the National Security Agency under General Hayden
has been secretly gathering the telephone calling records of millions
of Americans. I guess you could call that "Datagate."
Not much light
was shed on that or any other subject during the hearing, however.
Most of the questions had to do with problems at the CIA and how
Hayden expected to right the ship. The general frequently answered
in that form of bureaucratic language that might be called "Pentagonese."
He spoke more than once, for example, of getting situations "deconflicted"
and arriving at "deconfliction."
"What
does ‘deconflicted’ mean?" the editor of a New Hampshire business
publication – an English language publication, I might add – asked
me.
"Well
I guess it means the resolution of a conflict," I said, hazarding
my best semi-educated guess. It was, under the circumstances, the
best explanation available to me at that point in time, self-referentially
speaking. I mean, I’ve visited Washington and actually spent part
of a summer there long ago, but I’ve never really lived there. I’m
still a stranger to this kind of talk.
Yes, I admit,
I’ve missed a lot of the words of wisdom coming out of Washington,
D.C. over the years, including those years when I was living with
some of the consequences of Washington’s wisdom, in a place called
Vietnam. I was "in country," as was commonly said, through
the latter half of 1968, for example, so I missed one of the most
entertaining – and frightening – presidential campaigns in history.
I do remember following it as much as I could, via overseas editions
of Time magazine, through the armed forces newspaper, Stars and
Stripes, and listening to Armed Forces Radio, famous for its daily
6 a.m. greeting, "Good MORNING, Vietnam!" The answer,
shouted from thousands of barracks, tents and bunkers throughout
the Republic of Vietnam, was in "a language that the strangers
do not know."
Surely, you
remember, or have heard and read about, the great presidential campaign
of 1968. It ended in an early morning cliffhanger between Richard
Nixon and Hubert Humphrey, which Nixon finally won. But it also
featured the best third-party candidacy since Teddy Roosevelt. H.
Ross Perot, for all his billions and all his guest appearances on
Larry King in 1992, couldn’t hold a candle to former Gov. George
Corley Wallace of Alabama in 1968.
Wallace enlivened
the "tweedledee" and "tweedledumber" contest
between Nixon and Humphrey with his own feisty campaign style, ranting
against school busing for integration, PhD’s who couldn’t even "park
their bicycles straight" and "poiny-headed in’elleckchuls
that look down theyuh nose at plain folks like you an’ me!"
He also introduced to the world his running mate, retired Air Force
General Curtis LeMay.
The general
turned out to be a little too blunt and plainspoken even for Wallace.
At a joint news conference, when the general was talking about using
the big nuke to bomb North Vietnam "back to the stone age," Gov.
Wallace tried to clarify and, as Gen. Hayden would say, "deconflict"
his running mate’s remarks with assurances that began with, "Now
what the general said is… and "What the
general means is…"
I think that’s
what was needed on Capitol Hill last week. Someone to tell us what
the "deconflicted" general was really trying to say. All
I got out of it was that the general would be "happy"
to answer any thorny questions on potentially embarrassing subjects
in closed session. That way, neither the general, nor the White
House, nor the Congress would have to share with the public – formerly
known as "We the People" – what they are doing for us,
and quite possibly to us, in our name and with our money.
Somehow, I’m
not entirely "deconflicted" over that.
May
23, 2006
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
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© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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