By Manon McKinnon on 7.31.07 @ 12:07AM
Defeatism used to be unthinkable for anyone who grew up during World War II.
I am appalled at the disgraceful parade of Americans who, seeing
their country at war with a savage enemy, have become "advocates of
surrender, withdrawal and defeat." They "see the violence as
senseless, the bloodshed as repugnant and the current strategies as
too flawed to continue to invest in them." These words from Newt
Gingrich describe what we all see daily played out in the press and
Congress -- with a special performance during the Senate's recent
all-night and ill-fated surrender show. Judging by their age, I'd
have once thought that those defeatist senators knew better.
But here is where it really hits home: my own sister is singing
the same song! When we visited recently she had all the MoveOn
talking points down pat. "Bush lied us into war...it's all for
oil...we're killing innocent Iraqis..." and of course, not much
clue about the consequences of quitting.
What happened? Bill Kristol of the Weekly Standard puts
it this way, "The Democratic party in Congress, much of the media,
and the foreign policy establishment have joined together to panic
the country, and the Bush administration, into giving up." True,
but that's no excuse for my sister. She knows better. Like me, my
sister was alive during World War II when the whole country was
mobilized for victory. Like me, she remembers the Hollywood
celebrities -- the Tom Cruises and Brad Pitts of their day -- who
joined up and fought the enemy. Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart, Henry
Fonda, Glenn Ford, Paul Newman, Kirk Douglas, and Alec Guiness are
but a few. Big name stars and directors enlisted, performed before
soldiers at military bases, or in other ways contributed to the war
mobilization.
She remembers, as I do, the long-ago and very exciting night
that the glamour-girl Hollywood star Dorothy Lamour came to town to
launch a war bond drive riding in a parade with our very own
grandfather (!), the local U.S. congressman. How we wanted to go to
the parade, but were declared too young and put to bed
brokenhearted.
She remembers the stamps that children were given to save toward
buying war bonds -- getting war stamps for our birthdays was a very
big deal. She remembers collecting tin foil, and learning to knit
squares to sew into blankets for the troops. She remembers
memorizing all the military songs and singing them with our friends
-- "Up we go into the wild blue yonder...." She remembers rationed
food and gasoline, blackouts, and the lengths to which Americans
accommodated themselves to win The War. And nobody complained.
Americans did what had to be done and they never -- as far as I
knew -- mentioned surrender.
Nope, not one soul wanted to lose, even though this war, like
all wars, was fraught with foul-ups, unforeseen consequences,
missed opportunities and casualties, casualties, casualties -- over
400,000. Concerning D-Day alone, historian Victor Davis Hanson said
it well, "When the disaster in the boscage near the Normandy
beaches ended more than two months after D-Day, the victorious
Americans, British and Canadians had been bled white. Altogether,
the winners of the Normandy campaign suffered quarter-million dead,
wounded or missing, including almost 30,000 American fatalities --
losing nearly 10 times the number of combat dead in four years of
fighting in Iraq....By any historical measure, our forefathers
committed as many strategic blunders as we have in Afghanistan and
Iraq -- but lost tens of thousands more Americans as a result of
such errors."
Hanson offers that "World War II was an all-out fight for our
very existence, in a way many believe the war against terror is
not." But the lesson of that war, he says was "how to overcome
occasional abject stupidity while never giving up in the face of an
utterly savage enemy."
So now I'm left with the question: Just now, as the Surge seems
starting to work, how can my sister and all those WWII-era senators
have forgotten what they once knew so well -- that victory is the
only goal? Whatever has come over them, it must not be
allowed to prevail.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Hollywood, Law, Military, Iraq, NATO, Oil