Common Dreams posts the transcript of the important Bill Moyers essay I linked to Friday.
Here is the link to the transcript and a link to the video.
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Common Dreams posts the transcript of the important Bill Moyers essay I linked to Friday.
Here is the link to the transcript and a link to the video.
South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick
E-mail me by clicking here
President George W. Bush certainly is not listening to Democrats who want to bring an end to the tragic mistake that is Iraq (I use the word tragic in its original Greek meaning to mean a fall or failure built on hubris and arrogance).
Nor is he listening to the opinion polls that have been pretty clear about public opposition to the war.
Or voters who removed the president’s party from the majority in both houses of Congress.
Or even members of his own party, an increasing number of whom are calling for an end to the Iraqi misadventure.
The question is, will he listen to the men and women forced to fight, kill and die under his orders.
I doubt it.
And that might be the saddest indictment of all against President Bush, a president who continually speaks on behalf of the soldiers, who continually claims to be upholding their honor and pledges to make their sacrifices worthwhile.
Precise numbers are probably difficult to come by, and it is likely that a majority of the military and their families remain loyal to the president’s policy. But there is a growing subset that is questioning the war. Consider today’s story in The New York Times:
Cpl. April Ponce De Leon describes herself and her husband as “gung-ho marines,” and in two weeks she deploys to Iraq, where her husband has been fighting since March.
But she says she stopped believing in the war last month after a telephone conversation with him.
“He started telling me that he doesn’t want me to go and do the things he has been doing,” said Corporal Ponce De Leon, 22, speaking by telephone as she boxed up her belongings in their apartment near Camp Lejeune, N.C.
“He said that ‘we have all decided that it’s time for us to go home.’ I said, ‘You mean go home and rest?’ And he said, ‘I mean go home and not go back.’
“This is from someone who has been training for the past nine years to go to combat and who has spent his whole life wanting to be a marine,” she continued. “That’s when I realized I couldn’t support the war anymore, even though I will follow my orders.”
Comments like this explain this:
Among military members and their immediate families who responded to a national New York Times/CBS News poll in May, two-thirds said things were going badly, compared with just over half, about 53 percent, a year ago. Fewer than half of the families and military members said the United States did the right thing in invading Iraq. A year ago more than half held that view, according to the a similar poll taken last July. The May poll had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 7 percentage points.
Recruiting efforts are also suffering. Despite granting more waivers for recruits with criminal backgrounds, offering larger cash bonuses, loosening age and weight restrictions, and accepting more high school dropouts, the Army said it had missed its recruiting targets in May and June. Pentagon officials say resistance from families is a major recruiting obstacle. Membership is also increasing among antiwar groups that represent the active military and veterans. Military Families Speak Out, one such group, which was started in the fall of 2002, now has about 3,500 member families. About 500 of them have joined since January.
This stands as a stark contrast to the rhetoric of war supporters like U.S. Sen. John McClain (R-Ariz.) , who ignore the costs the war already is having on the military. McCain offered this Vietnam analogy earlier in the week as the Senate debated war funding:
“I saw a defeated military and I saw how long it took a military that was defeated to recover. And I saw a divided nation beset by assassinations and riots and a breakdown in a civil society.”
Someone should tell Sen. McCain that we reached this point aleady. It is time to be honest with ourselves and do the right thing — for American soldiers and contractors, their families and the Iraqis. It is time to begin bringing the troops home now.
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This story sums up the debacle in Iraq and is just another reason why even members of his own party are jumping ship on the president.
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Bill Moyers tonight offered his thoughts on the divide Congress and its failure to reign in a presidency that sees indefinite war as this nation’s future — “a constitution crisis that could change the nature of our democracy.”
His close is too important not to quote:
We should keep Iraq in primetime every week, the fighting and dying, the suffering, the debate, the politics, the extraordinary cost. It is months until September and this war is killing us now, body and soul.
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The president was in Cleveland yesterday, once again showing just how divorced from reality he is on the question of Iraq and just how willing he is to fudge the facts to make his points:
In his speech, Bush once again conflated two organizations, al-Qaeda in Iraq and the nternational network led by Osama bin Laden, saying that the same group that attacked the United States on Sept. 11, 2001, is responsible for much of the violence in Iraq. While the Iraq militants are inspired by bin Laden, intelligence analysts say the Iraqi group is composed overwhelmingly of Iraqis and does not take direction from bin Laden.
But this line is the one that really struck me — one not included in the major news stories:
Failure in Iraq would have serious consequences for the security of your children and your grandchildren.
Failure — as if the mission in Iraq was not already a failure, a four-year war built on shifting rationales that has cost the United States thousands of lives, wounded tens of thousands more Americans and killed and maimed countless Iraqis, a war that has cut us off in many ways from nations that should be our allies.
He talks about the impact that the war will have on how we are viewed by Iran and “the extremists,” implying that a show of weakness on our part would only empower them. That — it seems to me, sitting here in my suburban New Jersey perch, distant from the halls of power — is an incredible distortion of the facts. As if the extremists weren’t already using Iraq as a recruiting tool.
As for Iran, it already is distrustful of the United States, believes the Bush administration to be an aggressor and is incredibly protective of its own sovereignty. A bellicose United States waging war next door is something the Iranians view as a threat and, given the power imbalance, a nuclear weapon becomes an attractive equalizer.
I’m not endorsing an Iranian bomb — I am a nuclear abolitionist and believe all countries, this one included, need to find a way to end the nuclear madness. But my reading of the last couple of decades — since the end of the Reagan administration, actually — is that our continued willingness to stockpile nuclear arms, our more recently stated willingness to use them and the misguided notion that we have a right to violate national sovereignty and remove leaders (whether covertly or overtly) with whom we disagree or whom we view (rightly in most cases) as venal and evil acts as the impetus behind the current spread of weapons to more and more nations.
Jonathan Schell, writing recently in The Nation (sorry, it is a subscriber item), offered this account of the history, beginning with Reagan’s call for a Strategic Defense Initiative (the Star Wars system) — essentially a missile shield — in 1983. However, dubious a proposition, it allowed Reagan to think differently about nuclear weapons. Star Wars mean that the
two superpowers, finding their nuclear weapons now “impotent and obsolete,” could do away with them. The motivation for co-opting the freeze is well documented, yet so is the sincerity of Reagan’s fervent desire not just to freeze but actually to abolish nuclear weapons. That sincerity was put on spectacular display at the summit meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland, in October 1986, between Reagan and Soviet Communist Party General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev, also a nuclear abolitionist. As memorandums of the summit show, the two leaders came within a hair’s breadth of agreeing to eliminate their nuclear arsenals. Thus, in a sense the spirit of June 12 reached a high point and expired at Reykjavik.
The aftermath has been dispiriting. Arms control resumed and had some successes, but no fresh or bold initiative to deal with the nuclear danger has been launched. No heir to either the freeze movement or Reagan has arisen. The end of the cold war, seemingly the greatest opportunity to lift nuclear danger since 1946, was wasted. Instead, the whole issue fell into a shocking state of neglect, as if people believed that a mortal illness could be dealt with by forgetting about it.
In the years of silence, the unattended predicament quietly went haywire, assuming a malevolent post-cold war shape. Observing that the cold war powers, whatever they might say or not say, were determined to hold on to their nuclear arsenals, other nations — India, Pakistan, North Korea, perhaps Iran — determined to join the undissolved nuclear club. Whereupon the nuclear powers suddenly awoke to the danger and declared that these nuclear arsenals were intolerable. Having, in the early post-cold war years, mutely forgone the idea of negotiated nuclear disarmament for all, the United States soon turned to war as the ultimate solution to proliferation, and the Bush Doctrine of preventive war was born. There followed the Iraq War and, now, the threat of war with Iran, including the multiplying threats to use nuclear weapons.
But the Bush administration does not see things this way. Iran’s weapons are viewed in a vacuum, separate and apart from allies like Pakistan and Israel or even India (forget North Korea).
The hypocrisy is its own trigger. If the Americans have them, the rationale goes around the world, then why can’t we? Especially, if those nations see the United States as a potential aggressor.
In the end, Bush is right to link Iraq and Iran. We will need Iran’s help to keep Iraq from spiralling further out of control when we pull up stakes; and we need to begin leaving Iraq and to renounce our “pre-emptive war” doctrine if we are to bring Iran to the table, both to discuss Iraq and the Iranian nuclear program.
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