Abandon All Hope, Ye Who Enter Here
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
I
didn’t want to watch it. It was everything that I feared it would
be…boring, excruciating, and mind-numbing. But nevertheless, I sat
through almost the entire 90 minutes of the Presidential debate
last Thursday evening and endured it all…the lies, the deceit, and
the evasions. The viewers were exposed to so much toxic BS that
I found myself scanning my living room for a HazMat suit.
While
it may have been painful for me, the experience must have been positively
agonizing for President Bush. He stood on the podium, dumb-founded,
while John Kerry ripped his Iraq adventure to shreds. It didn’t
appear that Bush had ever been aggressively exposed to a real dissection
of his war up until this contest. He seemed to be angered that anyone
could have the impudence to question his policies, much less excoriate
them.
Again
and again, Bush retaliated by accusing Kerry of vacillation of his
opinions. As he did so, I kept being reminded of that famous quote
by Ralph Waldo Emerson: "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin
of a little mind." And President Bush is nothing if not consistent.
It is inconceivable to me that anyone could still think that this
invasion was a good idea. But apparently President Bush does.
Overall,
I must confess to a certain schadenfreude during this whole
affair. Seeing Bush squirm was my sole pleasure of the evening…one
of the few that I’ve had since this awful campaign began.
Although
watching Bush stumble and mumble may have been amusing, I was much
more alarmed by Senator Kerry’s performance. I was awed by the ease
with which he slithered around his past foreign policy positions
and shed his skin to reveal a shiny new antiwar paint-job.
But
we cannot allow ourselves to take our eyes off of the ball. Specifically,
three issues surrounding Kerry’s debating points were most disturbing
and need to be further examined.
#1
Where was Kerry when it mattered most?
As
much as he may attempt to rationalize his actions, Senator Kerry
voted in favor of the Iraq War resolution. Why he did so remains
a matter of opinion. My hunch is that he opposed an attack on Iraq,
but was intimidated by the overwhelming support that the invasion
had amongst the post-9/11 masses. They were howling for blood, and
Kerry was simply unwilling to stand up and speak the truth.
Leadership
is about stating your convictions even when it hurts and even when
it might be unpopular. In the months leading up to this war, America
was in desperate need of a national political figure who was willing
to lay his career on the line and speak out against this unfolding
tragedy.
Senator
Kerry was not that man. When the going got tough, he followed the
path of least resistance.
And
even more annoying, he has attempted to parse the issue of his vote
with murky legalisms. He repeated his belief that prudence required
that the president be given authority to invade Iraq, and he claims
that he had no idea that Bush would attack with such haste and in
such a reckless manner.
Baloney.
Everyone
on the planet knew that Bush was champing at the bit to invade Iraq.
And everyone knew that he was going to use the congressional resolution
as political cover to do so. Kerry’s weasel-words notwithstanding,
his explanation doesn’t hold water.
The
time to stop this atrocity was before the invasion, before the deaths,
and before the expenditure of hundreds of billions of taxpayers’
money.
Kerry laid out a beautiful case for the inanity of the invasion,
but he was a day late and a dollar short.
And
furthermore, why does he still believe that Bush should have been
given congressional authority to invade Iraq? Iraq did not attack
America. Iraq was not threatening to attack America. Iraq was not
involved in 9/11, and it had only tenuous connections to Islamist
terror organizations.
Given
these facts, by what standard does Kerry still believe that the
war resolution was the right thing to do?
And
this opens a Pandora’s Box of additional questions. Are there any
other nations that Kerry thinks congress should permit the
president to invade? Syria? Iran? North Korea? If the target of
the war needs not be a direct threat to America, then exactly what
criteria does Senator Kerry use to decide who gets invaded and who
doesn’t? And why did he vote for a war resolution when he didn’t
think that it should actually be carried out?
His
entire approach to this issue is awash in non-sequiturs. He was
molting and morphing right before our very eyes. Had it been about
anything less crucial, it would have been funny.
#2
What’s the deal with Kerry’s alleged "plan"?
Despite
long, entertaining dissertations on the foolishness of invading
Iraq, Kerry does not really have any legitimate ideas on how to
end the conflict. It is one thing to run from his war vote and trash
Bush’s performance…but what are we going to do now?
The
obvious answer, in my opinion, is to withdraw the troops immediately
and allow the Iraqis to sort this mess out for themselves. The country
may well fall apart, but our staying there will only continue to
make the situation even worse.
But
Kerry absolutely rejects a withdrawal. He stated flatly, "I’m
not talking about leaving, I’m talking about winning."
But
how does he define "win"?
Back
in his anti-Vietnam War days, Kerry famously asked, "How do
you ask men to continue to die for a mistake?" That is a very
good question. If he now admits that this war is a debacle which
was carried out under false pretenses, how can he rationalize keeping
troops there even for another minute, much less into the indefinite
future?
And
since he discards the possibility of a withdrawal, what are his
specific ideas about prosecuting the conflict?
The
only things that I’ve heard from him are banalities that are already
being tried by Bush. Kerry wants to bring more allies into the war.
But France and Germany have already said that they will not send
troops, regardless of who wins the election. Realistically, what
sane nation would go there now given the situation on the ground?
Kerry says he wants to train indigenous forces. But Bush is already
doing that, albeit poorly. And it is doubtful that Kerry will be
able to make these forces into any more of an efficient military
than Bush has.
In
essence, Kerry’s ideas are more of the same failed ones already
being implemented by the president.
The
bottom line is that if Kerry believes that the war is as big of
a disaster as he vividly described on Thursday, then there is no
legitimate moral justification for keeping our troops there. Period.
#3
Kerry is still an imperialist in sheep’s clothing
Senator
Kerry spent most of the debate skewering Bush’s Iraq policy. But
he also touched on several other brewing crises. Most specifically,
he ruminated about the ongoing weapons programs in Iran and North
Korea. While he was berating President Bush for not doing anything
about these "rogue nations," I was left in a rhetorical
whipsaw. How on earth can he complain about Bush invading Iraq,
ostensibly to rid that nation of WMDs, and simultaneously clamor
for urgent action to prevent Iran and North Korea from further developing
these very same weapons?
He
again lapsed into banalities about bilateral negotiations and sanctions,
but does anyone really believe that North Korea cares about written
agreements? If Kerry thinks that it is intolerable that these nations
should develop WMDs, then exactly how does he plan to stop them
if they ignore negotiations? Will he go to war? And if so, how does
that make him different from Bush in Iraq?
In
short, does Kerry believe that we have the right to invade sovereign
nations on the suspicion of WMD development alone? If so, then how
can he criticize Bush’s invasion of Iraq? If not, then how does
he propose to stop these other nations from building the weapons
that he has flatly stated they must not to be permitted to possess?
After
moving on from WMDs, the issue of the Sudan appeared. Kerry was
asked what, if anything, he thinks should be done about the ethnic
conflict in Darfur. While expressing the usual hope that "US
troops don’t need to go" and that the "African Union would
take care of the situation," Kerry implied that he would send
American troops to the Sudan if things deteriorated and no one else
picked up the ball.
I
nearly fell from my chair. Did we learn nothing in Somalia?
How on earth can Kerry spend an hour trashing Bush for trying to
"build democracy" in Iraq, and then quickly turn around
and suggest the possibility of a "nation building" escapade
in the Sudan?
And
this is the ultimate crux of the matter. Neither of these candidates
is opposed to overseas adventurism. As best I can tell, Kerry’s
major complaint about Iraq is that it was a Republican who launched
the war. Assertions of what is in the best interest of the American
people have almost dropped off the radar screen entirely. Apparently,
Kerry is OK with sending US troops into a Sudanese meat grinder
if the excuses are more PC than Bush’s Iraq ones.
Near
the end of the debate, Jim Lehrer asked both candidates what is
the most urgent national security concern for the United States.
Both men replied that it was the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction.
I
disagree. From what I’ve seen over the past several years, the correct
answer to that question is the insane ideology of military interventionism
that has captivated the elites across both political parties. No
Americans have died from nuclear or biological weapons. But this
manic series of wars, either of the rightist/imperialist or the
leftist/nanny-state variety, has already killed over 1000 Americans
in Iraq, plus dozens more in Somalia, Panama, Haiti, etc… going
all the way back to the 58,000 who fell in Vietnam. And there is
no end in sight.
Regardless
of who wins this election, the only certainty is that there will
be continued war in various locales, and that American soldiers
will continue to die even as America sinks into bankruptcy.
People
shouldn’t delude themselves into thinking that this election represents
a season of renewal. Judging from what I saw in the debate, more
of the same is on the way.
October
4, 2004
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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