McNamara’s
Evil Lives On
by Robert Scheer
Why not speak
ill of the dead?
Robert McNamara,
who died this week, was a complex man charming even, in a blustery
way, and someone I found quite thoughtful when I interviewed him.
In the third act of his life he was often an advocate for enlightened
positions on world poverty and the dangers of the nuclear arms race.
But whatever his better nature, it was the stark evil he perpetrated
as secretary of defense that must indelibly frame our memory of
him.
To not speak
out fully because of respect for the deceased would be to mock the
memory of the millions of innocent people McNamara caused to be
maimed and killed in a war that he later freely admitted never made
any sense. Much has been made of the fact that he recanted his support
for the war, but that came 20 years after the holocaust he visited
upon Vietnam was over.
Is holocaust
too emotionally charged a word? How many millions of dead innocent
civilians does it take to qualify labels like holocaust,
genocide or terrorism? How many of the limbless victims
of his fragmentation bombs and land mines whom I saw in Vietnam
during and after the war? Or are Americas leaders always to
be exempted from such questions? Perhaps if McNamara had been held
legally accountable for his actions, the architects of the Iraq
debacle might have paused.
Instead, McNamara
was honored with the Medal of Freedom by President Lyndon Johnson,
to whom he had written a private memo nine months earlier offering
this assessment of their Vietnam carnage: The picture of the
worlds greatest superpower killing or seriously injuring 1,000
noncombatants a week, while trying to pound a tiny backward nation
into submission on an issue whose merits are hotly disputed, is
not a pretty one.
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the rest of the article
July
10, 2009
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