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To: JohnM who wrote (65108)1/9/2003 1:08:43 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Despite so many fans, war is no game

Americans see it as the dark twin of the Olympics

By Robert Scheer
Columnist
Creators Syndicate
01.07.03



As an unabashed, nail-biting Oakland Raiders fanatic who sits in the nose-bleed seats and who just bought my grandson pajamas and a dishware set emblazoned with the team's infamous pirate logo, I still must admit that there is something unsettling about this year's whirlwind of playoff and bowl games.

Isn't there something perverse about a nation completely engrossed in football while the drumbeats of war, a deadlier game, beat persistently yet quietly in the background?

While the symbols of patriotism are everywhere -- from the ubiquitous military recruitment ads to the stars and stripes affixed to referee uniforms at the Orange Bowl -- television news anchors chirp about the latest troop movements and "incidents" in the "no-fly" zone. And for many Americans huddled around the tube in midwinter, knocking off Saddam Hussein is an easy sell, offering as it does a cheap thrill demanding less sacrifice than that needed to acquire playoff tickets -- and less angst over the outcome.

However, the viewing public doesn't seem to understand that what is being planned by our president is not Gulf War II -- a swift punch in the mouth to our old ally Hussein -- but rather a multiyear occupation by the U.S. of an independent, powerful and modern Muslim nation rife with ethnic tension.

If people think the invasion of Iraq is something that can fit neatly in the slot between the Super Bowl and spring training, they ought to read Monday's New York Times report that the "final plans for administering and democratizing Iraq... amount to the most ambitious American effort to administer a country since the occupations of Japan and Germany at the end of World War II."

The Times' Sunday magazine cover story was even more explicit: "The American Empire: Get Used to It," challenged the headline. History tells us that wars of empire are wars without end, as nationalism is a force that never can be truly suppressed -- just ask the relatives of those killed in the latest suicide bomb attack in Tel Aviv how well Palestinian dreams of statehood are being managed.

Is the U.S. ready to be fully responsible for the future of Iraq's stateless Kurds and its repressed Shiite population? Some U.S.-based corporations will make out like bandits in a post-occupation Iraq, as a Western power again attempts to bring enlightenment to the region while ripping off its oil. However, U.S. taxpayers and soldiers and, most of all, Iraqi women and children will ultimately suffer the consequences.

It seems clear that if Americans were to devote the same seriousness of thought to the consequences of invading Iraq that they have to evaluating the pros and cons of the controversial computerized ranking system of college football teams, we would not be on the road to "preemptive" war on the other side of the world.

Sports -- stats, video replay, expert commentators -- are discussed with a blend of logic and fact that we don't get but should demand in discussions about Iraq. But the war debaters on talk radio and cable news shows manage to meld the mindless partisanship of fans with constant obfuscation, macho posturing and a rattling of credentials all designed to intimidate war skeptics.

Meanwhile, like a character in Alice's Wonderland, the president insists facts that challenge the administration's position don't matter. That U.N. inspectors have found nothing alarming during uninhibited visits to more than 200 suspected Iraqi weapons sites is simply spun by the White House as another example of Iraq lying. Never mind that polls show the majority of Americans want proof Iraq has weapons that actually threaten us before they will support war. Once the troops land, patriotism will trump our common sense.

With no draft and a completely dominant military, most Americans have come to view war as something akin to the dark twin of the Olympics: an international test of strength accompanied by big opening-night fireworks over the host city.

Despite the rampant use of war metaphors in sports, however, war is no game. The whistles are not blown in time, there are no penalties for unnecessary roughness and those risking their lives are never paid the big bucks.

Unfortunately, for those of us sitting safely in the good seats, it can be a heck of a show -- just like the Roman circus.

workingforchange.com



To: JohnM who wrote (65108)1/9/2003 6:23:50 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
~OT~...A general for president?

Wesley Clark could strengthen Democrats’ national-security hand

By Chris Suellentrop

SLATE.COM

msnbc.com

WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 — Tired of running as John McCain, the Democratic candidates and pre-candidates for president have settled on a new archetype to emulate: Bill Clinton. John Edwards — the young, glib, pretty, Southern moderate — is the front-runner for the “Most Likely To Be Like Clinton” award, but there’s a dark horse in the running, too: Wesley Clark. The former NATO commander, who led the 78-day bombing campaign in Kosovo, bears a superficial resemblance to the 42nd president. He’s a former Rhodes scholar from Arkansas who has long been tabbed as one of his generation’s brightest stars (in the military, not in politics).

BUT THE substantive parallel is the more important one. Just as Clinton restored the Democratic Party’s reputation on economic policy, there’s hope that Clark can lead the party out of its national-security wilderness.

Before he could do that, of course, Clark would actually have to run for president (and win the nomination, which is a long shot). But there’s mounting evidence that he is going to do just that. During the fall election cycle, he met with New Hampshire Democrats and spoke to the centrist Democratic Leadership Council. In November, Time reported that Clark met with prominent Democrats in New York City to discuss his potential candidacy. Since then, he’s been issuing carefully crafted non-denial denials about his White House ambitions, saying he has “no intention” to run, that he “hasn’t raised any money,” and that he doesn’t “really have any plans.” But according the Des Moines Register, he’s enlisted a member of the Gore 2000 team as his top aide, he’s sought advice from Donna Brazile (who’s publicly urging him to run), and he’s contacted top Iowa Democrats about a caucus campaign. He’s now on the Associated Press’ shortlist of possible candidates, and just this week he talked with Democratic National Committee chairman Terry McAuliffe about his prospects.

RISING THROUGH THE RANKS

Clark’s biography is impressive: first in his class at West Point, Rhodes scholar, wounded in Vietnam, recipient of both the Purple Heart and the Silver Star, NATO supreme commander.

Despite all that, a Clark candidacy isn’t necessarily going to happen. As a New Hampshire Democrat told PoliticsNH.com last year, “I’d say he is running, but I don’t know if he is running in 2004 or 2008 or beyond. I first met Clinton in 1979.” If it did happen, what would a Clark run look like? That’s an open question. He’s tall and good-looking, but is he warm? Can he connect with a room? Can he raise money? He’s a blank slate on Democratic litmus-test issues such as abortion, affirmative action, economic policy, and health care — without even getting into picayune but essential primary issues such as ethanol subsidies. He’s on the record as opposing the trade embargo with Cuba, for example, but that’s the sort of issue a presidential candidate can easily back off from if need be.

The centerpiece for the 58-year-old Clark’s campaign would obviously be his biography, and it’s an impressive one: first in his class at West Point, Rhodes scholar, wounded in Vietnam, recipient of both the Purple Heart and the Silver Star. In 1981, when Clark was a 36-year-old lieutenant colonel, the Washington Post magazine profiled him as “the ideal, the perfect modern officer.” Since then, he continued his career as an Army “water walker,” moving effortlessly up the ranks to four-star general. Just as Dr. Bill Frist gives the Republicans some moral authority on health care, a traditional GOP weakness, Gen. Clark could strengthen the Democrats’ national-security hand.

HAWKS AND DOVES

One of the most compelling things about Clark is his ability to articulate — better than other Democrats, who sometimes resort to tiresome calls of “chickenhawk” or “quagmire” — the intellectual justification for what many Democrats feel in their gut: skepticism about the need for immediate war with Iraq; concern about the status of the war against al-Qaida; a preference for working with allies over going it alone; and a respect for the institutions that make up the international order that the United States built upon the ashes of World War II.

Clark is no dove. But he argues that the biggest mistake the Bush administration made in the aftermath of Sept. 11 was its refusal to conduct the war under the auspices of NATO, despite the alliance’s declaration that an attack on the United States was an attack on all its member nations. As a result, Europe is not accountable for success in the war on terrorism, only the United States is. European leaders see it as George W. Bush’s war, according to Clark, because Bush has made it his war. “Not a single European election hinges on the success of the war on terrorism,” Clark wrote in the September Washington Monthly. Clark even went so far as to employ a classic Vietnam metaphor to describe Bush’s policies: “Because the Bush administration has thus far refused to engage our allies through NATO, we are fighting the war on terrorism with one hand tied behind our back.”

Clark calls this “the lesson of Kosovo”: If you bring allies into a war, they will want to win it as badly as you do. That’s counterintuitive: The lesson most Americans took from Kosovo was that war by committee was a disaster that allowed, for example, a British commander to refuse Clark’s order to take an airfield. But, as David Halberstam showed in War in a Time of Peace, the fact that so many leaders had staked their reputations on the Kosovo war meant that they had to win it, despite strong opposition at home: “What [losing] would do to NATO — effectively signal the end of it — and to their countries (and it was known but never said, to their own careers and place in history) was also unacceptable.”

CAMPAIGNING ON LEGACY

This obsession with Kosovo and the lessons that the military could learn from it call to mind another characteristic Clark shares with Clinton: He’s conducting a permanent campaign for his legacy. Practically the entire preface to the paperback edition of Clark’s memoir Waging Modern War advances the argument that the war in Afghanistan and the fight against al-Qaida more closely resemble Kosovo than they do the Gulf War. The first strikes against Afghanistan in October 2001 “seemed so familiar and predictable, it was as if we were refighting the Kosovo operation on different ground,” Clark writes. (He concedes, “Maybe I was almost alone in this feeling …”)

Like Clinton, Clark was the brightest boy in the class who finally got his shot at the biggest job of all, but it didn’t represent the historic opportunity he imagined. Clark didn’t return from Kosovo a war hero — instead he was dumped as supreme allied commander by the Pentagon (which never really liked him and suspected him of being too close to Clinton). As a candidate, he wouldn’t be Dwight Eisenhower or Ulysses S. Grant or Andrew Jackson or George Washington. He wouldn’t even be Zachary Taylor. As that 1981 Post profile of the young Clark concluded, “As any military man will tell you, it takes a great war to produce a great general.” Clark never got that war. Now’s his chance.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Chris Suellentrop is Slate’s deputy Washington bureau chief.