Still
Stranded
by
Murray Polner
"Very
few of those who maintain that it is sweet to die for one’s country
have ever done it."
~
William L. White, Saturday Evening Post, October 18, 1941
Each
time I read that some liberals and neoliberals, conservatives, neo-
and otherwise, and a few hawkish academics have again begun talking
up the supposed virtues of a military draft, I return to James J.
Martin, that sadly disregarded anarchist-conservative-libertarian
whose magisterial work Men
Against the State badly needs to be read and debated by
each new generation of pundits, professors and politicians.
I
also take up my tattered copy of his Revisionist
Viewpoints: Essays in a Dissident Historical Tradition in
which he condemns any government that shanghais its young men: "Conscription
has been inextricably intertwined with vast foreign wars and an
economy more or less geared to these struggles. The magic word has
always been ‘defense" and where "the interrelation of
business, the military, and the state seems to be [for most Americans]
beyond comprehension." And when a Midwestern academic recently
urged universal service, I could only recall that Martin memorably
pronounced the idea a "great totalitarian dream"
From
the Cold War to the end of the Vietnam War, "conscription has
maintained its Svengali-like grip on the American imagination,"
he wrote. The rationale today is if military recruiters don’t find
enough candidates and if America’s overseas commitments continue
to expand we’ll need ever more troops. Now, more than 90% of 18-25-year-old
males, about 15 million males, who are still required to register
or the draft at age 18, are available should our foreign policy
elite call for another draft.
Opponents
of the voluntary military have for years advanced many reasons for
a draft, ranging from an alleged need to mend the country’s moral
fiber to fostering civic responsibility and drawing closer the professional
military and civilians. Some have even argued that it would make
the military more democratic. (As a former draftee, I can’t recall
much democracy while on active duty).
For
many on the political right, a draft means recapturing the fictitious
ethos of World War II and the ensuing pre-civil rights, pre-Vietnam
War eras when all Americans supposedly pulled together. In that
imaginary paradise, their were no Jim Crow laws, no McCarthyism,
and women knew their place while the government backed homicidal
despots abroad in the name of anti-communism. And when young men
were called to the colors they went willingly, eager to fulfill
their patriotic obligation.
The
faith of many political liberals rests on social engineering. The
military, they argue, would in part be transformed into a combination
prep school and job center for America’s have-nots, while their
own kids (especially among perennially bellicose neoconservatives)
safely matriculate at the university.
The
primary reason for the draft trial balloons is not that America
has a "hollow" military or that it lacks "readiness"
(both patently absurd) or that it can’t recruit enough warm bodies
for the ranks. That’s the spin. The main reasons are the excessive
number of warm bodies required to fulfill the antiquated and improbable
two-war strategy devised in the Pentagon. That’s the inane notion
that his country could successfully fight two major wars at the
same time (while keeping the support of the rest of us), an overreaching,
grandiose fantasy that allows the Pentagon and Congress greater
opportunities to grab more money for their insatiable pork-barrel
projects while manipulating an indifferent public and friendly media
into believing that they’re enhancing "national security."
Unlikely as it seems, can anyone imagine fighting, say, North Korea
and China, while simultaneously fighting Iran and Iraq to defend
"democratic" Saudi Arabia (I mean, oil)?
Then,
too, so long as this country’s worldwide, open-ended, and endless
military commitments continue, this country is going to need a steady
supply of conscripts to serve as its global gendarmes. Who’s next:
Iraq? Colombia? China? The Balkans again?
Mark Danner put it very well some years ago in World Policy Journal.
This nation. he properly observed, is "marooned in the Cold
War." Madeleine Albright’s "indispensable nation"
and neoconservatives’ love affair with "hegemony" – really
an American empire, nothing more, nothing less – keeps us frozen
in time, as if Stalin was still in the Kremlin. Left to the Beltway’s
hardline insiders who never saw a war that didn’t like, and to heavily
subsidized special interests, and absent any genuine and protracted
national debate, this country will continue to lurch along, unable
and unwilling to fashion, let alone consider, a much less militarized
and far less interventionist approach.
In
the end, a draft would cost billions and possibly give rise to renewed
domestic discord when
there is absolutely no credible threat to Americans in sight. In
their arrogance and hypocrisy, "The Cold Warriors," James
J. Martin once astutely warned us, "demand a monopoly of violence,
that ‘peace’ may not be ‘endangered.’" Their way of thinking
has brought about a lot of needless violence and not much peace.
March
7, 2001
Murray
Polner wrote No
Victory Parades: The Return of the Vietnam Veteran and co-authored
(with Jim O’Grady) Disarmed
and Dangerous: The Radical Lives and Times of Daniel and Philip
Berrigan.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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