Washington — As the debate over the fate of Saddam Hussein
moves from a simmer to a boil, perhaps you have noticed that the
Scrupling Few are again employing the term “chicken hawk.” The
Scrupling Few are those who at once are negative towards war with
Saddam and also positive — at least vaguely positive. This is not
to say they are positive for war exactly but for good things to
come from Washington, despite the evil Republicans. In describing
the Scrupling Few, one cannot be much more concrete. They worry,
they pontificate, they Scruple. That is about it. Save for one
other thing: they apply the term chick hawk to those who favor war
but have not actually experienced war. Then they Scruple about
having done so. It is fair to say that the Scrupling Few are on
both sides of the issue of war with Iraq. They are also on both
sides of the legitimacy of the term chicken hawk. Some would call
them poseurs; the less mature would call them chickens.
New York Times columnist Bill Keller employed the term
chicken hawk the other day in a typically mealy-mouthed column
whose vaporous point was that the Scruples of Senator John Kerry
about attacking Baghdad must be taken very seriously because of his
Vietnam War record. On the other hand, “the current White House
warriors” should be taken less seriously because they are not
actually warriors — neither George W. Bush nor Dick Cheney served
in Vietnam. On yet another hand, Keller does not mean to say that
lack of a war record disqualifies a statesman from advocating war.
And on his third hand, Keller displays Franklin Roosevelt and
Ronald Reagan, two chicken hawks whose military decisions he
presumably admires. (Incidentally, Keller must know that chicken
hawk Reagan served in the military. He is merely Scrupling again.)
And on the fourth hand, Keller does not approve of the term chicken
hawk, though he does not disapprove — regular readers of Keller’s
Times column must be devotees of magic acts.
Continuing his balmy sleight of hand with the term chicken hawk,
Keller raises the key question: “Does that mean that those of us
who avoided combat, including the current White House warriors (and
your astigmatic columnist [self-effacing humor, that!]), are less
worthy of trust on the subject of war?” Well, as you can imagine,
Keller believes himself abundantly worthy of our trust; despite his
admission to having “avoided” combat. He is, however, less
confident of investing trust in the President and Vice President.
Now is it fair or even accurate for Keller to accuse them of
avoiding combat? Strictly speaking he is saying that they “shunned”
combat. Has Keller any evidence?
Perhaps it is at this point appropriate to interrupt Keller’s
magic act and puncture another of the Liberals’ many myths about
the Vietnam War. Keller and his confreres would have us believe
that any member of the Vietnam generation (roughly, those men of
draft-age between 1964 and 1975) who did not serve in the military
“avoided” the military. That would make the Vietnam generation the
largest cohort of draft dodgers in American history. It would also
make Bill Clinton just one of the guys; though his now
well-documented efforts in the 1960s to avoid his physical and dupe
his draft board were highly unusual and shameful.
Only about 8% of the Vietnam generation ever went to Southeast
Asia, most to Vietnam. Only about 25% ever served in any branch of
the military, overseas or stateside. Today the Liberals solemnly
praise the Vietnamese veterans, but during the late 1960s and early
1970s they often reviled them as war criminals. Jane Fonda went so
far as to call our POWs “hypocrites and liars,” for claiming
torture at the hands of the North Vietnamese. Thus some 75% of the
Vietnam generation never wore a uniform. They were not supposed to.
The military had no need of them. If it had needed them standards
would have been lowered and exemptions tightened. The vast majority
of the Vietnam generation’s draft records were perfectly legal and
honorable.
Finally Keller’s dismissal of President George W. Bush’s
military service is as misleading as his dismissal of President
Reagan’s. When the other 75% of his generation was following its
civilian pursuits, the future president was flying F106s in the Air
National Guard. Is this combat avoidance? Tell that to the tens of
thousands of National Guard troops serving abroad in the war on
terror.
Bootlegging a person’s military record into his presentation of
whether or not to fight a war is another example of the genetic
fallacy. The validity of an idea depends on the coherence of the
evidence adduced not on whether we like or admire those advancing
the idea. If the Scrupling Few come up with a compelling argument
for allowing Saddam Hussein to remain in power I shall be on their
side. But to Scruple is not to convince.