[Mb-civic] Patriotism is truth, today as in Vietnam - John F. Kerry - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Apr 22 06:40:59 PDT 2006
Patriotism is truth, today as in Vietnam
By John F. Kerry | April 22, 2006 | The Boston Globe
THIRTY-FIVE YEARS ago today, I testified before the United States
Senate. I was a 27-year-old Vietnam veteran who believed the war had to
come to an end.
It was 1971.
Three years earlier, Richard Nixon had been elected president with a
secret plan for peace -- a plan he kept secret from the American people
as young Americans continued to die for a mission high-ranking officials
of two administrations had decided was unwinnable.
We would watch the Nixon administration lie, break the law, and work
overtime to squash dissent -- all the while claiming absurdly they were
prolonging war to protect our troops as they withdrew. We were a country
deeply divided. World War II fathers split with Vietnam generation sons
over a war that was tearing us apart -- and split, particularly, over
our responsibilities during a time of war.
Many people did not understand or agree with my act of public dissent.
To them, supporting the troops meant continuing to support the war, or
at least keeping my mouth shut.
But I couldn't remain silent. I felt compelled to speak out about what
was happening in Vietnam, where the children of America were pulled from
front porches and living rooms and plunged almost overnight into a world
of sniper fire, ambushes, rockets, booby traps, body bags, explosions,
sleeplessness, and the confusion created by an enemy who was sometimes
invisible and firing at us, and sometimes right next to us and smiling.
It was clear that thousands of Americans were losing their lives in
Vietnam while politicians in Washington schemed to save their political
reputations.
Thirty-five years later, in another war gone off course, I see history
repeating itself. It is both a right and an obligation for Americans
today to disagree with a president who is wrong, a policy that is wrong,
and a course in Iraq that weakens the nation. Again, we must refuse to
sit quietly and watch our troops sacrificed for a policy that isn't
working while Americans who dissent and ask tough questions are branded
unpatriotic.
Just as it was in 1971, it is again right to make clear that the best
way to support the troops is to oppose a course that squanders their
lives, dishonors their sacrifice, and disserves the American people and
our principles.
True patriots must defend the right of dissent and listen to the
dissenters. Dissenters are not always right, but it is always a warning
sign when they are accused of unpatriotic sentiments by politicians
trying to avoid accountability or debate on their own policies. We
should know by now that those who are right should never fear scrutiny
of their policy and thorough debate.
In World War I, America's values were degraded, not defended, when
dissenters were jailed and the teaching of German was banned in some
public schools. It was panic and prejudice, not true patriotism, that
brought the internment of the Japanese-Americans during World War II, a
measure upheld by Supreme Court justices who did not uphold their oaths
to defend the Constitution. We are stronger today because no less a
rock-ribbed conservative than Robert Taft stood up at the height of
World War II and asserted, ''The maintenance of the right of criticism
in the long run will do the country maintaining it a great deal more
good than it will do the enemy, and will prevent mistakes which might
otherwise occur."
In recent weeks, a number of retired high-ranking military leaders have
publicly called for the resignation of Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld. And from the ranks of this administration and its conservative
surrogates, we've heard these calls dismissed as acts of disloyalty or
as a threat to civilian control of the armed forces. We have even heard
accusations that this dissent gives aid and comfort to the enemy. That
line of attack is shameful, especially coming from those who have never
worn the uniform.
Generals and others who call for recognizing the facts on the ground in
Iraq are not defeatists, they are patriots. At a time when mistake after
mistake is being compounded by the very civilian leadership in the
Pentagon that ignored expert military advice in the invasion and
occupation of Iraq, those who understand the price being paid for each
mistake by our troops, our country, and Iraq itself must be heard. At a
time when our nation is imprisoned in a failed policy and we are being
told once again that admitting the mistakes, not the mistakes
themselves, will provide our enemies with an intolerable propaganda
victory, that we literally have no choice but to stay the course even to
a bitter end, those who seek to reclaim America's true sovereignty and
freedom of action must be respected.
Iraq is not Vietnam, and the war on terrorism is not the Cold War. But
the threat of jihadist extremism is another ''long, twilight struggle,"
as President Kennedy said in his inaugural, and the threat is very real,
but we will never defeat terrorists by trampling our own freedom and
democracy. The Swift Boat-style attacks that have been aimed at
dissenters from Gold Star mothers to decorated veterans like Jack Murtha
hurt our democracy even more than they wound their target.
I still believe as strongly as I did 35 years ago that the most
important way to support our troops is to tell the truth. Patriotism
does not belong to those who defend a president's position -- it belongs
to those who defend our country, in battle and in dissent. That is a
lesson of Vietnam worth remembering today.
John F. Kerry is speaking at Faneuil Hall today on the 35th anniversary
of his Senate testimony on the Vietnam War.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/22/patriotism_is_truth_today_as_in_vietnam/
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