By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 4.8.04 @ 12:04AM
Not since Ambassador Joe has a Kennedy been such slavish appeaser.
WASHINGTON -- If, as Senator Teddy Kennedy rumbled recently,
Iraq is President George W. Bush's Vietnam, surely the
silver-haired Senator is becoming Mr. Bush's Jane Fonda. Of course
Teddy is not as svelte as Miss Fonda, for he has never been an
adept of fad diets, and an aerobics regimen could impair his
precarious health. Nonetheless, Teddy is becoming the Fonda of our
time. Possibly he will fly off to Falluja to be photographed on a
burned out Humvee or visit Najaf to confer with the scowling Muslim
cleric, the Rev. Muqtada al-Sadr. Having become so
historically-minded Teddy goes on to call President Bush our era's
Richard Nixon.
Actually for this man to encourage Americans to reflect back on
1960s history is quite reckless given his blemished history. They
might come across news reports of a senator leaving a girl to drown
in his car while he slept off a drunk and later dialing up his
high-powered advisers for urgent public relations counsel. They
might also find stories of that same senator later boozing with his
young nephews before their carousals ended in a rape charge. Other
indelicacies have followed.
Yet, as the Senator has brought up the always-illuminating
guidance of history, it might help us to understand the present war
by considering the wartime leadership of a Democrat whom Senator
Kennedy might admire, Franklin D. Roosevelt laboring through World
War II. On second thought, Senator Kennedy might not admire FDR's
leadership against the Axis all that much. His father, Ambassador
Joe Kennedy, opposed Roosevelt's entry into the War. The Ambassador
was virtually an isolationist. From our embassy in London he
collaborated with some of Europe's most slavish appeasers. In his
repulsive October 19, 1938 speech commemorating the Battle of
Trafalgar, Kennedy gave an appeasement stem-winder that even
troubled British supporters of the doomed Munich agreement. FDR
believed his Ambassador was in truth a Fascist sympathizer.
Kennedy was at least an isolationist, and so it seems his son is
today. It might prove rewarding for members of the Bush
Administration to review Roosevelt's brilliant treatment of the
isolationists of his day. By the time Roosevelt was finished
depicting the futility and irresponsibility of their anti-war
rants, he had defeated the isolationists completely. His tactic was
to characterize them as Hitler's dupes. As Roosevelt understood, by
the late 1930s there was no alternative to defeating the Axis; and
there is no alternative to defeating the Islamofascists today. This
is a point the President cannot make too frequently. Nor should he
and his surrogates shy away from characterizing their Democratic
opponents as dupes.
They may not be dupes of any bellicose mullah or Middle Eastern
tyrant, but they are surely dupes of what we might call the United
Nations mystique. Watching Senator Kennedy and the presumptive
Democratic presidential nominee, Senator John François
Kerry, rhapsodize on the United Nations' capacity to resolve
violence in the Middle East suggests images of Neville Chamberlain
praising the Munich agreement after the Germans roared into Poland
-- though even stubborn Chamberlain was that besotted.
The United Nations has already failed in Iraq. It does not want
to be in Iraq. It is a corrupt collection of poseurs, many of whose
functionaries have already been exposed as on the take from Saddam.
While he was engaged in torture and aiding terrorists -- for
instance paying off suicide bombers in Israel -- these grafters and
many Europeans were cashing in on the Iraq Oil for Food
Program.
There is only one course available in Iraq for civilized
nations: resolve and rough treatment for any of the brutes who
oppose pacification of the country. Senator Kennedy's Vietnam
parallel does not exist. The Iraqi resistance is supported at best
only by the radical mullahs of Iran and the terrorists of
Islamofascism. They cannot summon the Communist protagonists of the
Cold War from Moscow and Beijing. Moreover they have no negotiators
to go off to Paris and nothing to negotiate.
President Bush's Jane Fonda is living in a fantasy as is Senator
Kerry. The other day on National Public Radio Kerry actually
defended the Rev. Sadr, an outlaw accused of murdering another
mullah, as a "legitimate voice" in Iraq. Then he backed off and
said, "Well, let me…change the term legitimate. It belongs to
a voice -- because he has clearly taken on a far more radical tone
in recent days and aligned himself with both Hamas and Hezbollah,
which is a sort of terrorist alignment." Yes, it is, and his
galoots have also killed a score of American soldiers. Senators
Kennedy and Kerry are not doing much to build the morale of our
troops abroad, but then they played the same role thirty years ago
during the Vietnam War. Now there is a historic parallel to
meditate on.
topics:
Islam, Law, Iraq, Iran, Israel, United Nations, NATO, Fascism, Oil