Truth and War
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
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"Naturally
the common people don't want war: Neither in Russia, nor in England,
nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after
all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy
and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether
it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament,
or a communist dictatorship. Voice or no voice, the people can
always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy.
All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce
the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country
to danger. It works the same in any country."
~
Nazi Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering
It has often
been said that "truth is the first casualty of war."
While this
cliché is undeniably true, it reveals, like most clichés,
a certain world-weary cynicism that is unflattering and downright
dangerous, for it betrays the blithe acceptance of something that,
in my opinion, should never, ever be tolerated: Leaders who lie
about wars.
The American
people are not, contrary to the assertions of our postmodern professoriate,
an innately warlike people. For the most part, they prefer to be
left alone to raise their children, toil at their work, and worship
their God in relative peace.
Unfortunately,
almost from our nation’s founding, Americans have been plagued by
a political elite harboring globalist and utopian pretensions, a
dark coterie of decision-makers who believe that no skirmish anywhere
in the world should occur without American soldiers partaking in
the bloodshed. Time and again, the American people have been manipulated
and cajoled – sometimes kicking and screaming – into wars that were
ultimately irrelevant to our national security.
Historically,
this bloody trail began with phony stories about the sinking of
the USS Maine, the casus belli of our involvement
in the Spanish American War. The scam was perfected by Woodrow Wilson
and FDR, who campaigned on platforms opposing our entry into European
wars, even while they simultaneously plotted the opposite.
Having learned
nothing, the American people fell for the same trick when LBJ staged
the Gulf of Tonkin incident to precipitate our involvement in Vietnam,
and yet again when George W Bush fabricated WMD intelligence to
justify our invasion of Iraq.
Through the
years, at cocktail parties and the like, I’ve had many occasions
to recite this litany of lies and infamy to members of the "establishment"
(journalists, foreign policy intellectuals, or sometimes just particularly
well-informed friends). They listen, respectfully and patiently
– but unmoved – until my outrage is exhausted.
And then IT
happens.
Sometimes IT
is blunt and without shame, while at other times IT is carefully
veiled with innuendos and code words. But the essence is always
the same.
Inevitably,
the "sophisticated insider" will hunch his shoulders ever-so-slightly
and glance shiftily around the room, as if to ensure that no one
else is listening. And then he’ll say something like: "Steve,
what you’re saying is quaint, but it’s also unreasonable and more
than a little naïve. Of course people don’t want to fight
wars, but what are our leaders supposed to do? We all know that
some wars need to be fought. Unfortunately, the American people
are selfish. They’re provincial. They are too wrapped up in their
own little lives to care about what is happening in the outside
world."
Then, he’ll
lean forward and put a soothing hand on my shoulder. "I know
it’s an ugly business, Steve, but sometimes our leaders have to
tell noble lies. They do it for the greater good."
For a pregnant
moment, this drivel sits there, simmering and smoking like a lump
of molten sulfur from Hell.
Even now, safely
removed from one of these exchanges, I can barely express my disagreement
in a manner that won’t surge through the internet lines and detonate
everyone’s motherboards.
Obviously,
politicians tell lies, early and often. Such behavior seems to be
an unfortunate but eternal vice plaguing our fallen race.
But that’s
where the comparison ends.
If some small-town
mayor claims that a new sewage project is vital to his community
– although his real motive is to dole out contracts to campaign
contributors – he is without doubt acting immorally. When a congressman
swears he’ll never vote for a tax increase, and then does, he is
committing a grave offense.
But the
leader who uses fear-mongering and deliberate falsehoods to start
a war resides on an entirely different plane of evil.
War is an utterly
profound and tragic event, far different from sewage pipes and tax-hikes.
When the dogs of war are unleashed, men and women are sent to fight,
kill, and die. Children lose their fathers and mothers, parents
bury their sons and daughters, and survivors return crippled, both
physically and emotionally. As the "collateral damage"
mounts, hospitals are flattened, schools are destroyed, and cities
are burned to the ground.
How dare anyone
defend lies of this magnitude with such casual and patronizing indifference?
Yet this morally
bankrupt argument is accepted, verbatim, by the vast majority of
our political and intellectual leadership.
Contrary to
such elitist assertions, the American people are not ignorant cannon
fodder, to be marched off at the whim of their liege-lords, nor
are they calves to be fattened for the slaughter. Although our leaders
often seem to forget, Americans are free citizens of a free republic.
Admittedly,
the world is a dangerous place, and sometimes it is better to fight
than not. But if a president becomes aware of a situation that he
honestly believes might endanger our nation; he is obligated to
address the people and to describe the nature and origins of the
conflict. When he does so, it is his sacred duty to tell the
truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
With so much
at stake, there can be no room for lies, no place for exaggeration
or manipulation.
Once the president
makes his case, it is up to the American people to weigh the arguments
and make a decision (which they can express through freedom of speech,
freedom of assembly, and through their elected representatives).
Without doubt,
this republican system exposes us to a certain peril, for it is
entirely possible that, having heard the truth from the president
about a gathering threat, the American people might decline to fight
(Though I consider this to be extremely unlikely. Americans have
never walked away from any danger that truly threatened our nation
and our constitutional form of government). Nevertheless, through
some combination of cowardice, indifference, and slothfulness, the
American people might someday decline to fight just such
a war. As a worst-case scenario, our nation could even be overrun
and our people reduced to languishing under the boot of foreign
domination.
In that case,
the American people will have reaped the consequences of their decision.
They will have purchased their enslavement with the coin of their
cowardice. (One could only hope that someday a better generation
would arise, one more willing to make the sacrifices that freedom
sometimes requires.)
But the
avoidance of such a tragic outcome does not legitimize the use of
lies, fear-mongering, and deception on the part of our leaders.
There is no philosophical justification, no twisted concoction of
logic, which can claim otherwise.
When men march
to war, they have an absolute, sacred right to understand the exact
nature of the conflict and the precise reasons for their involvement.
Any leader behaving differently, any official who tells "noble
lies" or, even worse, incites wars at the behest of powerful
special interest groups harboring ulterior motives, is not really
a member of the human family at all. He is, rather, a being of abject
evil.
Such practices
may have been acceptable in Hermann Goering’s Germany, but they
have no place in a land that claims to be free.
May
15, 2008
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.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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