
He treads
carelessly on the Bill of Rights, the United Nations and international
law while creating a costly but largely useless new federal bureaucracy
loosely called "Homeland Security." Meanwhile, such fundamental
building blocks of national security as full employment and a strong
labor movement are of no concern. The nearly $1.5 trillion tax giveaway,
largely for the further enrichment of those already rich, will have
to be made up by cutting government services and shifting a larger share
of the tax burden to workers and the elderly. This President and his
advisers know well how to get us involved in imperial crusades abroad
while pillaging the ordinary American at home. The same families who
are exploited by a rich man's government find their sons and daughters
being called to war, as they were in Vietnam--but not the sons of the
rich and well connected. (Let me note that the son of South Dakota Senator
Tim Johnson is now on duty in the Persian Gulf. He did not use his obvious
political connections to avoid military service, nor did his father
seek exemptions for his son. That goes well with me, with my fellow
South Dakotans and with every fair-minded American.).

"The invasion of Iraq and other costly wars now being planned in
secret are fattening the ever-growing military-industrial complex of
which President Eisenhower warned in his great farewell address."
War profits
are booming, as is the case in all wars. While young Americans die,
profits go up. But our economy is not booming, and our stock market
is not booming. Our wages and incomes are not booming. While waging
a war against Iraq, the Bush Administration is waging another war against
the well-being of America.
Following the 9/11 tragedy at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
the entire world was united in sympathy and support for America. But
thanks to the arrogant unilateralism, the bullying and the clumsy, unimaginative
diplomacy of Washington, Bush converted a world of support into a world
united against us, with the exception of Tony Blair and one or two others.
My fellow South Dakotan, Tom Daschle, the US Senate Democratic leader,
has well described the collapse of American diplomacy during the Bush
Administration. For this he has been savaged by the Bush propaganda
machine. For their part, the House of Representatives has censured the
French by changing the name of french fries on the house dining room
menu to freedom fries. Does this mean our almost sacred Statue of Liberty--a
gift from France--will now have to be demolished? And will we have to
give up the French kiss? What a cruel blow to romance.
During
his presidential campaign Bush cried, "I'm a uniter, not a divider."
As one critic put it, "He's got that right. He's united the entire
world against him." In his brusque, go-it-alone approach to Congress,
the UN and countless nations big and small, Bush seemed to be saying,
"Go with us if you will, but we're going to war with a small desert
kingdom that has done us no harm, whether you like it or not."
This is a good line for the macho business. But it flies in the face
of Jefferson's phrase, "a decent respect to the opinions of mankind."
As I have watched America's moral and political standing in the world
fade as the globe's inhabitants view the senseless and immoral bombing
of ancient, historic Baghdad, I think often of another Jefferson observation
during an earlier bad time in the nation's history: "I tremble
for my country when I reflect that God is just."
The President frequently confides to individuals and friendly audiences
that he is guided by God's hand. But if God guided him into an invasion
of Iraq, He sent a different message to the Pope, the Conference of
Catholic Bishops, the mainline Protestant National Council of Churches
and many distinguished rabbis--all of whom believe the invasion and
bombardment of Iraq is against God's will. In all due respect, I suspect
that Karl Rove, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleezza
Rice--and other sideline warriors--are the gods (or goddesses) reaching
the ear of our President.
As a World War II bomber pilot, I was always troubled by the title of
a then-popular book, God Is My Co-pilot. My co-pilot was Bill Rounds
of Wichita, Kansas, who was anything but godly, but he was a skillful
pilot, and he helped me bring our B-24 Liberator through thirty-five
combat missions over the most heavily defended targets in Europe. I
give thanks to God for our survival, but somehow I could never quite
picture God sitting at the controls of a bomber or squinting through
a bombsight deciding which of his creatures should survive and which
should die. It did not simplify matters theologically when Sam Adams,
my navigator--and easily the godliest man on my ten-member crew--was
killed in action early in the war. He was planning to become a clergyman
at war's end.
Of course,
my dear mother went to her grave believing that her prayers brought
her son safely home. Maybe they did. But how could I explain that to
the mother of my close friend, Eddie Kendall, who prayed with equal
fervor for her son's safe return? Eddie was torn in half by a blast
of shrapnel during the Battle of the Bulge--dead at age 19, during the
opening days of the battle--the best baseball player and pheasant hunter
I knew.
I most certainly do not see God at work in the slaughter and destruction
now unfolding in Iraq or in the war plans now being developed for additional
American invasions of other lands. The hand of the Devil? Perhaps.
But how
can I suggest that a fellow Methodist with a good Methodist wife is getting
guidance from the Devil? I don't want to get too self-righteous about
all of this. After all, I have passed the 80 mark, so I don't want to
set the bar of acceptable behavior too high lest I fail to meet the standard
for a passing grade on Judgment Day. I've already got a long list of strikes
against me. So President Bush, forgive me if I've been too tough on you.
But I must tell you, Mr. President, you are the greatest threat to American
troops. Only you can put our young people in harm's way in a needless
war. Only you can weaken America's good name and influence in world affairs.
We hear much talk these days, as we did during the Vietnam War, of "supporting
our troops." Like most Americans, I have always supported our troops,
and I have always believed we had the best fighting forces in the world--with
the possible exception of the Vietnamese, who were fortified by their
hunger for national independence, whereas we placed our troops in the
impossible position of opposing an independent Vietnam, albeit a Communist
one. But I believed then as I do now that the best way to support our
troops is to avoid sending them on mistaken military campaigns that needlessly
endanger their lives and limbs.
That is what went on in Vietnam for nearly thirty years--first as we financed
the French in their failing effort to regain control of their colonial
empire in Southeast Asia, 1946-54, and then for the next twenty years
as we sought unsuccessfully to stop the Vietnamese independence struggle
led by Ho Chi Minh and Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap--two great men whom we should
have accepted as the legitimate leaders of Vietnam at the end of World
War II. I should add that Ho and his men were our allies against the Japanese
in World War II. Some of my fellow pilots who were shot down by Japanese
gunners over Vietnam were brought safely back to American lines by Ho's
guerrilla forces.
During the long years of my opposition to that war, including a presidential
campaign dedicated to ending the American involvement, I said in a moment
of disgust: "I'm sick and tired of old men dreaming up wars in which
young men do the dying." That terrible American blunder, in which
58,000 of our bravest young men died, and many times that number were
crippled physically or psychologically, also cost the lives of some 2
million Vietnamese as well as a similar number of Cambodians and Laotians,
in addition to laying waste most of Indochina--its villages, fields, trees
and waterways; its schools, churches, markets and hospitals.
I had thought after that horrible tragedy--sold to the American people
by our policy-makers as a mission of freedom and mercy--that we never
again would carry out a needless, ill-conceived invasion of another country
that had done us no harm and posed no threat to our security. I was wrong
in that assumption.
The President and his team, building on the trauma of 9/11, have falsely
linked Saddam Hussein's Iraq to that tragedy and then falsely built him
up as a deadly threat to America and to world peace. These falsehoods
are rejected by the UN and nearly all of the world's people. We will,
of course, win the war with Iraq. But what of the question raised in the
Bible that both George Bush and I read: "What does it profit a man
to gain the whole world and lose his own soul," or the soul of his
nation?
It has been argued that the Iraqi leader is hiding a few weapons of mass
destruction, which we and eight other countries have long held. But can
it be assumed that he would insure his incineration by attacking the United
States? Can it be assumed that if we are to save ourselves we must strike
Iraq before Iraq strikes us? This same reasoning was frequently employed
during the half-century of cold war by hotheads recommending that we atomize
the Soviet Union and China before they atomize us. Courtesy of The New
Yorker, we are reminded of Tolstoy's observation: "What an immense
mass of evil must result...from allowing men to assume the right of anticipating
what may happen." Or again, consider the words of Lord Stanmore,
who concluded after the suicidal charge of the Light Brigade that it was
"undertaken to resist an attack that was never threatened and probably
never contemplated." The symphony of falsehood orchestrated by the
Bush team has been de-vised to defeat an Iraqi onslaught that "was
never threatened and probably never comtemplated."
I'm grateful to The Nation, as I was to Harper's, for giving me opportunities
to write about these matters. Major newspapers, especially the Washington
Post, haven't been nearly as receptive.
The destruction of Baghdad has a special poignancy for many of us. In
my fourth-grade geography class under a superb teacher, Miss Wagner, I
was first introduced to the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the palm trees
and dates, the kayaks plying the rivers, camel caravans and desert oases,
the Arabian Nights, Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp (my first movie), the
ancient city of Baghdad, Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent. This was the
first class in elementary school that fired my imagination. Those wondrous
images have stayed with me for more than seventy years. And it now troubles
me to hear of America's bombs, missiles and military machines ravishing
the cradle of civilization.
But in God's good time, perhaps this most ancient of civilizations can
be redeemed. My prayer is that most of our soldiers and most of the long-suffering
people of Iraq will survive this war after it has joined the historical
march of folly that is man's inhumanity to man. <<
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