By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 10.30.03 @ 12:53AM
With an unprecedented lack of restraint, Democratic presidential aspirants are doing the devil's work.
WASHINGTON -- With the sudden eruption of violence in Iraq at
the vestibule of Ramadan it is now apparent that at least someone
reads American history, Saddam's brutes and perhaps the terrorists
from al Qaeda. American schoolchildren know very little American
history, lost as they are in courses on gender genius and conflict
resolution. Yet, our enemies in the Middle East remember the
Vietnam War, the Tet Offensive, and how while our army triumphed in
Vietnam our politicians rendered the war unwinnable at home.
Ahead of the curve once again, the New York Sun
editorialized early this week that the parallels being drawn
between the Ramadan violence and the 1968 Tet Offensive do not
reflect all that well on today's war critics. In 1968 the Tet
Offensive was a dreadful defeat for the Communists, costing them
43,000 dead while our losses were relatively light. Yet in 1968
America's growing chorus of anti-war voices drew just the wrong
conclusion. The New York Times, one of the early
proponents of the Vietnam War, actually referred to the Tet
Offensive at the time as "the spectacularly successful Communist
Tet offensive." Thus began the anti-war critics' campaign for a
negotiated settlement in Vietnam. They eventually got their
settlement promising "peace and freedom" in Vietnam. What they got
was a Communist dictatorship and the peace of "reeducation camps".
The dictatorship still exists.
Who would Dr. Howard Dean, Senator John Pierre Kerry and General
Wesley Clark have us negotiate with today? Oh, let us cooperate
with the United Nations, they say, ignoring the fact that we tried
and there was not much cooperation. Moreover the United Nations has
no policy for pacifying Iraq or even anyone to negotiate with,
though maybe Secretary-General Kofi Annan will find an Iraqi
version of Yasser Arafat to negotiate with.
What we are seeing in Iraq is the politicization of a war. One
of the reasons Americans used to abide by the principle that
foreign policy stops at the water's edge was to prevent
politicizing a policy that would always leave our government
outnumbered in negotiations. There would be the American government
on one side of the table and our adversary on the other, seated
alongside the American government's domestic critics. Both our
adversary and Washington's domestic critics could cooperate in
weakening our government's position.
That is the prospect Washington faces today in the Middle East
unless the Democrats show restraint, the kind of restraint
responsible Republicans showed in the 1940s when the Roosevelt and
Truman Administrations developed the tough policies against Moscow
that eventually led to a peaceful end to the Cold War and to world
Communism.
Today the Bush administration, like the Roosevelt and Truman
administrations, has no alternative but to resist terrorism and the
states that support terrorism. The administration's job is made all
the more difficult by the Democratic presidential candidates' cheap
shots. The candidates who supported the Iraqi war resolution and
now obfuscate their support and disparage our policy are shameless
opportunists who will make our policy in Iraq all the more
difficult and expensive. Of them I think General Clark is the
cheapest and most reckless. He is also a political greenhorn, as
inexpert at explaining himself as he is impudent at lying.
Early this week he began publicly opposing the administration's
$87 billion package for pacifying and rebuilding Iraq and
Afghanistan. In no time he was contradicting himself. Reporters
overheard his saying of Iraq, "We broke the dishes, we're going to
have to pay for them." When they asked him about the contradiction,
the New York Times reported his saying, "Eventually we're
going to have to do our part in the reconstruction."
That is a brazen deception, but a few days earlier he was even
more brazen. At one of the Democrats' debates Clark was asked about
the assertion of his former superior, retired Joint Chiefs of Staff
chairman H. Hugh Shelton, that "the reason he [Clark] came out of
Europe early had to do with integrity and character issues." Clark
looked dramatically into the cameras and solemnized that the word
for that sort of claim was "McCarthyism." Retired General Shelton
was not calling Clark a Communist. He was calling him a man of
dubious character. Clark's response proved Shelton accurate.
Opportunists such as Clark will only make our policy in Iraq
more difficult, but most Americans understand there is no
alternative. That is why the Democrats are ensuring their own
defeat in 2004.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Education, Iraq, United Nations, NATO, Communism