The Columbus Institute of Contemporary Journalism (CICJ) has operated Freepress.org since 2000 and ColumbusFreepress.com was started initially as a separate project to highlight the print newspaper and local content.
ColumbusFreepress.com has been operating as a project of the CICJ for many years and so the sites are now being merged so all content on ColumbusFreepress.com now lives on Freepress.org
The Columbus Freepress is a non-profit funded by donations we need your support to help keep local journalism that isn't afraid to speak truth to power alive.
“The specter of Vietnam has been buried forever in the desert sands of
the Arabian peninsula,” President George H. W. Bush said of the Gulf War
victory in early 1991. He told a gathering of state legislators, “It's a
proud day for America -- and, by God, we've kicked the Vietnam syndrome once
and for all.”
Often discussed by news media, the “Vietnam syndrome” usually has a
negative connotation, implying knee-jerk opposition to military involvement.
Yet public backing for a war has much to do with duration and justification.
A year after the invasion of Iraq began, Noam Chomsky observed: “Polls have
demonstrated time and time again that Americans are willing to accept a high
death toll -- although they don't like it, they're willing to accept it --
if they think it's a just cause. There's never been anything like the
so-called Vietnam syndrome: it's mostly a fabrication. And in this case too
if they thought it was a just cause, the 500 or so [American] deaths would
be mourned, but not considered a dominant reason for not continuing. No, the
problem is the justice of the cause.”
Overall, if history is any guide, most Americans are inclined to favor
just about any war after it starts -- in the short run -- but if the war
drags on and loses its rationale in the public mind, support is apt to
plummet. “World War II support levels never fell below 77 percent, despite
the prolonged and damaging nature of the conflict,” writes Chris Hedges in
his book “What Every Person Should Know About War.” In contrast, he adds,
“the Korean and Vietnam Wars ended with support levels near 30 percent.” The
American public's initially high levels of support for the Iraq war have
fallen sharply as bloodshed continues and Washington's prewar lies become
more apparent. In a recent poll conducted by CNN, USA Today and the Gallup
organization, 54 percent of respondents said that the United States made a
mistake in sending troops to Iraq.
[ You fight them ]
Thirty-five years before President George W. Bush assured the American
public that like-minded Iraqis would take up the burdens of fighting and
dying as the occupation of their country wore on, President Richard Nixon
unveiled a doctrine envisioning that more soldiers of Asian allies would die
in place of American troops.
During a visit to Guam in July 1969, Nixon announced that the U.S.
government “would furnish military and economic assistance when requested in
accordance with our treaty commitments. But we shall look to the nation
directly threatened to assume the primary responsibility for its defense.” A
year after Nixon proclaimed his ballyhooed doctrine, amounting to
let's-you-and-them-fight, I. F. Stone wrote: “White House briefers speak of
abandoning our world policeman role, but the alternative they offer is not a
revitalized U.N. but the so-called Guam Doctrine. This is imperialism by
proxy. We may be on the verge of imposing quotas against the Orient's
low-wage textiles but we are eager to buy its low-wage soldier-power. The
Guam Doctrine will be seen in Asia as a rich white man's idea of fighting a
war: we handle the elite airpower while coolies do the killing on the
ground.”
To ease stateside worries about U.S. troops being entangled in
continuing warfare, the White House is eager to convey that the military
burden will increasingly rest on the broadening shoulders of the people who
live in the country at stake. Yet Stone's July 1970 essay concluded
presciently: “Not enough Asians are going to fight Asians for us even if the
price is right.”
A third of a century after Stone's prediction, an observer of the war
in Iraq would have a strong basis to forecast that “not enough Arabs are
going to fight Arabs for us.” After disbanding Saddam Hussein's army, the
Pentagon tried to build a new one, but a year into the occupation the
recruit numbers were low -- just 10 percent of the 40,000 target level.
After half of the initial battalion quit in December 2003, a pay raise
helped in retaining soldiers. Nevertheless, the occupying authorities were
let down the following spring, as the Wall Street Journal reported: “When
the second battalion was pressed last week to fight Sunni insurgents
alongside Marines ... in Fallujah, soldiers refused, saying they had signed
up to defend Iraq from foreign threats, not fight fellow Iraqis.”
[ Democracy versus policy ]
In effect, condemnations of “the Vietnam syndrome” attempt to promote
the legitimacy of at least two wars at once -- the past one in Vietnam and
the war that's currently underway (or future wars). To boosters of U.S.
military intervention, the United States will triumph if only it is willing
to show enough resolve.
But the U.S. government's problems in Iraq after the invasion, as in
Vietnam, are intimately related to the basic realities -- and the actual
merits -- of the war itself. The eagerness of so many supposed beneficiaries
of American intervention to eject the occupiers was pivotal, not
coincidental: It corresponded to the weakness of the U.S. warmakers'
position in multiple, concentric ways. At the core of the war's long-term
lack of viability (or “winnability”) was the hollowness of Washington's
claims, not the least of which were -- and are -- the pretensions of
benevolence and zeal to foster a new democratic government for the benighted
land.
Rhetoric aside, democracy in Iraq would run counter to U.S. policy
priorities. “From the start,” the Wall Street Journal noted in April 2004,
“the effort to build a government was marked by unresolved tension between
political leaders who are palatable to the U.S. but have little public
support in Iraq, and religious figures who have the biggest popular
followings but also hold religious views that alarm American policy makers.”
Stated another way, it is a classic imperial problem, with the
occupiers seeking to retain control of an Iraqi government, while most of
the people have very different ideas about who they want their leaders to
be.
A year after a Saddam statue dramatically fell in Baghdad, some of the
tyrant's bitterest enemies were firing rocket-propelled grenades at American
troops. The turn of events -- the launch of a fierce Shiite insurrection
against the occupiers -- undermined many of the basic claims from
administration officials who had been preening themselves as liberators.
As the president and appointees tried to paper over the vast
disconnects between Washington's narrative and emerging realities in Iraq,
the rhetoric was familiar stuff, the foreign-policy rough equivalent of
whistling past graveyards. In an April 2004 piece headlined “A War
President's Job,” George Will cut to the chase with a revised logic for the
occupation. “In the war against the militias,” Will wrote, “every door
American troops crash through, every civilian bystander shot -- there will
be many -- will make matters worse, for a while. Nevertheless, the first
task of the occupation remains the first task of government: to establish a
monopoly on violence.”
Despite all the belated media exposure of the Bush administration's
prewar deceptions about Iraq, the public was seeing a familiar limited
spectrum of responses in mainstream U.S. media -- many liberals wringing
their hands, many conservatives rubbing their hands -- at the sight of
military escalation. In almost ritualistic fashion, numerous commentators
reacted by criticizing the president for policy flaws. A New York Times
editorial lamented that Washington “and its occupation partners” were “in
real danger of handing over a meaningless badge of sovereignty to a
government that is divided internally, is regarded as illegitimate by the
people and has no means other than foreign armies in Iraq to enforce its
authority.” Such careful language was notable for what it emphatically
refused to say: Get U.S. troops out of Iraq.
[ Protective stupidity ]
Part of the process was for major U.S. news media to simultaneously
acknowledge and deny fundamental contradictions between the Bush
administration's rhetoric about democracy and its actual policies. In his
novel 1984, George Orwell wrote about a process that “in short, means
protective stupidity” -- an approach that involves “holding two
contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously, and accepting both of
them.”
By April 2004, the planet's only superpower was straining to tighten a
grip on Iraq while turning concepts of national autonomy into national
abnegation. Not coincidentally, a New York Times story that pegged
“self-rule” for Iraq to June 30 appeared under the headline “General Says He
May Ask for More Troops.”
During the '60s, the ask-for-more-troops shuffle was a morbid art form
in Washington as President Lyndon Johnson, General William Westmoreland, and
the Joint Chiefs of Staff steadily upped the numbers of soldiers being
packed off to Vietnam. During the spring and early summer of 1965, Johnson
considered -- and then decided to okay -- a request from the Joint Chiefs of
Staff to add 100,000 more troops to supplement the 75,000 already in some
stage of Vietnam deployment. But at a news conference on July 28, 1965,
Johnson dissembled and merely announced a decision to send an additional
50,000 soldiers. Nor did he disclose that deploying a total of approximately
400,000 troops in Vietnam was under serious consideration.
LBJ was heeding advice from something called a “Special National
Security Estimate” -- a secret document issued days earlier about the
already-approved new deployment, urging that “in order to mitigate somewhat
the crisis atmosphere that would result from this major U.S. action ...
announcements about it be made piecemeal with no more high-level emphasis
than necessary.” Translation: Avoid upsetting the American public more than
unavoidable.
History will record the spring of 2004 as a time when the Bush
administration was not forthcoming about the outlook for American troop
deployments in Iraq. Such duplicity has continued.
[ Iraq syndrome and beyond ]
When a country -- particularly a democracy -- goes to war, the tacit
consent of the governed lubricates the machinery. There remains a kind of
spectator relationship to military actions being implemented in our names.
We're apt to crave the insulation that news outlets offer. We tell ourselves
that our personal lives are difficult enough without getting too upset about
world events.
“Anyone who has the power to make you believe absurdities has the power
to make you commit injustices,” Voltaire wrote. A quarter of a millennium
later, Voltaire's statement is all too relevant to this moment. As an astute
cliché says, truth is the first casualty of war. But another early casualty
is conscience. And for many Americans, the gap between what they believe and
what's on their TV sets is the distance between their truer selves and their
fearful passivity.
Conscience is not on the military's radar screen, and it's not on our
television screen. But government officials and media messages do not define
the limits and possibilities of conscience. We do.
______________________________
Norman Solomon is founder and executive director of the Institute for Public
Accuracy, a national consortium of policy researchers. His most recent book
is “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death”
(John Wiley & Sons), from which this article was adapted. This piece appears
in the September 19, 2005, edition of In These Times.