By Abe Greenwald on 9.14.09 @ 6:07AM
Or better yet, why won't he?
Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, told reporters in Washington
on Thursday that she has observed little American support for a
troop surge in Afghanistan. Mrs. Pelosi has it right: Afghanistan
fatigue is now a palpable American malady.
Yet recent indications from the White House and Pentagon hint at
President Obama's continued commitment to what was once thought
of as the good war.
With Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal's request for additional troops
in Afghanistan expected to come later this month, and a growing
sense of defeatism among the pundit class, the Obama
administration will have a hard road ahead if it hopes to get
Americans behind the war. But Barack Obama has yet to talk about
America or its ideals as being worth the fight. It's no wonder
public support for our commitment in Afghanistan is lower today
than at any point during the Bush administration.
The disconnect between rhetoric and mission is stark. Since
taking office, President Obama has continuously spoken of the
United States as a country that "all too often…starts by
dictating," a place that "has shown arrogance and been
dismissive, even derisive" toward allies, where "our government
made decisions based on fear rather than foresight, [and] all too
often our government trimmed facts and evidence to fit
ideological predispositions." America, in Mr. Obama's words, "is
still working through some of our own darker periods in our
history."
What kind of dupe would rally behind that place?
To make matters worse, while the situation deteriorated in
Afghanistan and loose speculation abounded the president went
silent on matters of war. When he finally broke his months-long
moratorium on Afghanistan with a speech at a Veterans of Foreign
Wars convention in August, Mr. Obama described the rationale for
war as follows: "Those who attacked America on 9/11 are plotting
to do so again. If left unchecked, the Taliban insurgency will
mean an even larger safe haven from which al Qaeda would plot to
kill more Americans. So this is not only a war worth fighting.
This is fundamental to the defense of our people."
Perfectly true. But as clinical and perfunctory as an automobile
mechanic's explication of a brake job -- and as
narrowly focused. America is the realization of an unremitting
vision -- freedom and equal opportunity for all. Americans have
always needed more than a utilitarian breakdown of dangers to
inspire them in times of war. European nations coalesced
centuries back when tribes banded together to hold off hostiles
who were doing the same on opposite sides of mountain ranges or
bodies of water. Unlike Europe, America's founding was not a
survivalist undertaking dictated by the demands of geography and
tribal accord. It was a work of profound imagination. The
"defense of our people" is critical, but not sufficient to awaken
America's warrior spirit.
Past presidents recognized this. Mr. Obama need look no further
than to his Democratic predecessors. Preparing to enter World War
I, Woodrow Wilson called on Americans to "fight thus for the
ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation of its
peoples, the German peoples included: for the rights of nations
great and small and the privilege of men everywhere to choose
their way of life and of obedience," adding famously, "The world
must be made safe for democracy."
Before the country got drawn into World War II, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt proposed that America become an "Arsenal of Democracy"
and supply Allied Nations with materials for war. He framed the
initiative thusly: "Let us say to the democracies: 'We Americans
are vitally concerned in your defense of freedom. We are putting
forth our energies, our resources and our organizing powers to
give you the strength to regain and maintain a free world."
Harry Truman's explanation for fighting in Korea was composed
around the idea that "Communist leaders have demonstrated their
contempt for the basic moral principles on which the United
Nations is founded. This is a direct challenge to the efforts of
the free nations to build the kind of world in which men can live
in freedom and peace."
Liberty, freedom, democracy. The terms are nowhere to be found in
President Obama's recent war speech.
America's ideological core has been stirred by the current health
care debate. Citizens want something more complicated than the
promise of a government issued security blanket. In fact, they
view such promises suspiciously, as threats to liberty and the
stuff of demagogues. Why, then, would Mr. Obama choose to sell
the Afghanistan war solely as a means of caretaking?
The president may believe that George W. Bush ruined ideology
forever. But the notion that all people should be free to choose
representative government was never Mr. Bush's to ruin. It is
enshrined in this country's founding documents, and has been
advanced ever since. It is larger than the either the Bush or
Obama presidencies.
If the president wants to boost morale on Afghanistan, he is
going to have to drink from the well of American exceptionalism.
Warnings about the Hindu Kush as the "graveyard of empires" must
be countered with the reminder that America is not an empire. It
is the most benevolent global force history has ever seen. And it
is that benevolence which, in part, guides our current fighting
strategy. For unlike the 19th century British or the Soviets,
American soldiers and marines are currently in the greater Middle
East defending ordinary people from extraordinary threats.
America's promise to protect basic rights and freedoms has become
its winning strategy in these new wars.
Nor should the president forget his Afghan audience. Most recent
polls show that many more Afghans have a favorable opinion of
Americans than of the Taliban. This remains at heart a war of
ideas. Let's not throw away an opportunity to inspire a Muslim
population that is more open to American cooperation than
Islamist brutality.
Without recourse to ideology, President Obama will not only be
unable to sell the mission in Afghanistan; he will be unable to
define it. Marginalizing terrorists in a particular region is a
vital national security accomplishment. But terrorism, like
cancer, can always return. The institutions of democracy and a
constitution that safeguards human rights comprise the only
lasting bulwark against lawlessness and radicalism. By happy
coincidence, they also lay at the heart of the American
experiment.
topics:
Afghanistan War