A Bad Choice
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Sen. John
McCain, already confused about Sunnis and Shiites, now is confused
about geography and recent history. Take it from a gray-hair, the
guy is too old to be trusted with the presidency.
The press
has been kind to McCain, not even reporting some of his gaffes,
apparently on the grounds that "Well, he's an old guy, so he'll
occasionally misspeak." On his last trip to the Middle East,
he got his Sunnis and Shiites confused three times in one day. More
recently, he referred to the Iraq-Pakistan border, which, of course,
does not exist. Now trying to claim credit for the misnamed surge
(actually, it was an escalation of troop levels), he's got his history
confused. He claimed the Sunni tribes' decision to fight al-Qaida
was part of the surge.
The Sunni
tribes turned against al-Qaida before the extra troops were even
authorized, much less had arrived. Incidentally, the sheik that
McCain claimed we protected was assassinated. The presence of the
extra troops can probably be credited with encouraging the Mahdi
Army to stand down. That certainly contributed to a lessening of
the violence.
As Sen. Barack
Obama freely and publicly acknowledges, while the extra troops helped
quell the violence, it was not the sole cause of the drop in violence,
which is what McCain and some members of the press want Obama to
say. One of the big flaws of American journalism today is the urge
by many to play "gotcha" games over semantics.
As for McCain's
rhetoric, it's pathetic. He demonstrates no sound knowledge of the
Middle East or of any other part of the world. He showed bad judgment
from the beginning by backing an invasion that was, lest we forget,
illegal, unnecessary, horribly mismanaged, wasteful of American
lives and treasure, justified with lies, and a strategic blunder
of the first order. If that's what people want in a commander in
chief, then God have mercy on this country.
Forty years
ago, McCain was shot down and made a prisoner of war. In refusing
an early release, he acted with courage and honor. Being a fighter
pilot and prisoner of war, however, does not qualify anyone to be
president. One of our greatest fighter pilots who also went into
politics is sitting in a federal prison for taking bribes. Some
of the greatest fighter pilots of all time, measured by their number
of kills, wore the uniforms of America's enemies. Proficiency in
arms has more to do with eyesight and reflexes than with strategic
thinking and general knowledge of history and economics.
The presidency
is a civilian job. The Founding Fathers included the duty of commander
in chief precisely to ensure civilian domination of the military.
The president seeks advice from his generals and admirals, but he
is not bound by their advice. One should remember that our professional
warriors are technicians whose vocation is killing people and destroying
property. But they can kill and destroy only on the orders of the
civilian president and the civilian Congress.
If
we had a president who would slavishly do everything his generals
suggested, then we would no longer have a civilian government but
instead a military junta. The military people have only to concentrate
on their mission. The president has to concentrate not only on the
mission, but on the world at large, and on domestic problems and
priorities. We don't want idiot civilians making tactical decisions,
as happened in the Vietnam War, but we also don't want generals
setting strategy and policy for the United States. The generals
in Iraq are there because the civilian government sent them there.
When the civilian government decides they should leave, then their
duty will be to shut up and leave.
Harry Truman
reminded Americans of that when he fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur
during the Korean War. MacArthur was a lot more famous than any
general in Iraq or Washington, but he was insubordinate, and Truman
canned him. That's the duty of a commander in chief – to make sure
the generals don't forget that the boss is the civilian president.
July
28, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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