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War or resistance? Demos go for war
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: War or resistance? Demos go for war
- From: Dan Scanlan <dscanlan@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 30 Jul 2004 14:06:09 -0700
- Comments: RFC822 error: <W> Incorrect or incomplete address field found and ignored.
Title: War or resistance? Demos go for
war
The great
unmentionable at the Democratic convention: Kerry's antiwar past
By David Walsh
30 July
2004
One of the most striking and dishonest features of the Democratic
Party convention and nomination of Senator John Kerry this week in
Boston has been the concerted effort to excise the moral high point
of its presidential candidate's career: his outspoken repudiation
of and opposition to the Vietnam war in the early 1970s.
Other than a relatively fleeting reference in the video biography
presented Thursday night, which concentrated on his military career,
almost no mention was made during four days of the convention of
Kerry's antiwar activity.
There is a farcical element to this. Everyone in the Democratic Party
hierarchy, every delegate and every member of the media is aware of
Kerry's record, but no one can mention it-his career is being
"sanitized," in the eyes of the political and media
establishment. What does this falsification of history-that it must
deny past opposition to one of the greatest criminal enterprises of
the twentieth century-say about the Democratic Party as a whole?
The various glowing tributes paid him at the convention simply
skipped over the period during which Kerry actively opposed the
Vietnam War in the national political arena.
Headline speakers at the Democratic Party national convention have
referred repeatedly to Kerry's record of service in Vietnam,
including his various medals. Former Vice President Al Gore told his
audience that Kerry "showed uncommon heroism on the battlefield of
Vietnam." Former President Jimmy Carter observed, "When our
national security requires military action, John Kerry has already
proven in Vietnam that he will not hesitate to act." New York Sen.
Hillary Clinton declared that "we need to take care of our men and
women in uniform who, like John Kerry, risk their lives."
Her husband and former President Bill Clinton waxed pseudo-eloquent
on the subject of Kerry's record: "During the Vietnam War, many
young men, including the current president, the vice president and
me, could have gone to Vietnam and didn't. John Kerry came from a
privileged background. He could have avoided going too, but instead,
he said: Send me."
There was no let-up on the second day of the Democratic convention.
Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts referred to Kerry as "a war
hero"; Missouri Rep. Dick Gephardt asserted that "John Kerry
defended our freedom at the barrel of a gun"; Barack Obama,
Democratic candidate for the US Senate from Illinois, gushed about
Kerry's "heroic service in Vietnam." Teresa Heinz Kerry, the
candidate's wife, pointedly told the crowd that her husband had
"earned his medals the old-fashioned way, by putting his life on
the line for his country."
On July 28 Kerry made his entrance into downtown Boston by ferrying
across its harbor in the company of a dozen members of the US navy
swift boat he commanded during the Vietnam War. The stunt was
intended one more time to remind the public of Kerry's war record
and, more generally, to associate him with the military.
That evening the celebration of the military reached new heights with
the unprecedented appearance on the stage of the convention of twelve
retired generals and admirals, including two former chairmen of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff (Gen. John M. Shalikashvili and Admiral William
J. Crowe), a former NATO Supreme Allied Commander (Gen. Wesley Clark)
and a former director of the CIA (Admiral Stansfield Turner).
Shalikashvili was given a prominent time-slot for his remarks to the
convention.
The same night Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. John
Edwards of North Carolina began his acceptance speech by once again
paying tribute to Kerry's military record: "For those who want to
know what kind of leader he'll be, I want to take you back about 30
years. When John Kerry graduated college, he volunteered for military
service, volunteered to go to Vietnam, volunteered to captain a swift
boat, one of the most dangerous duties in Vietnam that you could
have. As a result, he was wounded, honored for his
valor."
In preparation for his address to the convention July 29, according
to the Bloomberg news service, Kerry was "surrounding himself"
with his former crewmates and veterans of the Vietnam War "to make
his case that he is qualified to lead the campaign against terrorism
and manage the war in Iraq."
There is an objective logic to politics and to the political
atmosphere the Democratic Party has created at its national
gathering. Many antiwar Democratic voters and "left" liberals may
be telling themselves that the flag-waving glorification of
militarism will be jettisoned when and if Kerry takes office, that it
is necessary as a campaign tactic to defuse Republican attacks, etc.,
but they are deluding themselves. The political physiognomy of the
next Democratic administration is being prepared at this convention:
pro-war, militarist and imperialist.
The Democrats have not openly repudiated Kerry's positions of three
decades ago. They still serve a political purpose on occasion. During
the primaries last winter, for example, when it was necessary to
derail Howard Dean's campaign, Kerry's antiwar credentials were
bruited about to improve his image.
In the virtual silence about Kerry's past at this week's
convention there is an apparent irony. Democratic officials
repeatedly told the press during the run-up to the event that it was
their desire to have the American people "get to know" John
Kerry, to "humanize" him. And yet for their own present-day
reactionary political purposes they have suppressed the most
honorable period in his life, the most "human." Shakespeare's
Mark Antony had it that the "evil that men do lives after them; the
good is oft interred with their bones." The Democrats have gone one
better-they have buried Kerry's "good" before his demise.
John Kerry served two tours as a lieutenant in the navy in Vietnam
between December 1967 and April 1969, when he returned to the US with
three Purple Hearts and a Silver Star. He was by this time a vocal
opponent of the war. "I was angry about what happened over there, I
had clearly concluded how wrong it was," he told one interviewer.
In 1970 Kerry began to participate in the activities of Vietnam
Veterans Against the War (VVAW). At a meeting in January 1971 he
proposed an antiwar rally by Vietnam veterans on the Mall in
Washington.
The protest, in which some 1,100 veterans participated, took place
the week of April 20 in Washington. Kerry, as a representative of the
group, testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
April 22, 1971.
There he reported on the findings of a recent VVAW conference on war
atrocities. In one of the most oft-quoted sections of his remarks,
Kerry told the Senate committee: "They [Vietnam veterans] told the
stories of times they had personally raped, cut off ears, cut off
heads, taped wires from portable telephones to human genitals and
turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly shot at
civilians, razed villages in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan,
shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally
ravaged the countryside of South Vietnam, in addition to the normal
ravage of war, and the normal and very particular ravaging which is
done by the applied bombing power of this country."
Kerry continued: "We rationalized destroying villages in order to
save them. We saw America lose her sense of morality as she accepted
very coolly a My Lai and refused to give up the image of American
soldiers who hand out chocolate bars and chewing gum. We learned the
meaning of free fire zones, shooting anything that moves, and we
watched while America placed a cheapness on the lives of
Orientals."
In concluding his remarks, Kerry declared: "We wish that a merciful
God could wipe away our own memories of that service as easily as
this administration has wiped their memories of us. But all that they
have done and all that they can do by this denial is to make more
clear than ever our own determination to undertake one last mission,
to search out and destroy the last vestige of this barbaric war, to
pacify our own hearts, to conquer the hate and the fear that have
driven this country these last 10 years and more, and so when, in 30
years from now, our brothers go down the street without a leg,
without an arm, or a face, and small boys ask why, we will be able to
say 'Vietnam' and not mean a desert, not a filthy obscene memory,
but mean instead the place where America finally turned and where
soldiers like us helped it in the turning."
On June 30, 1971 Kerry appeared on the Dick Cavett talk show to
debate another navy Vietnam veteran, John O'Neill, who was a Nixon
administration mouthpiece.
During the debate Kerry addressed the question of US war crimes in
Vietnam: "I don't think that any man comes back to this country
to say that he raped or to say that he burned a village or to say
that he wantonly destroyed crops or something for pleasure. I think
that he does it at the risk of certain kinds of punishment, at the
risks of injuring his own character which he has to live with, at the
risks of the loss of his family and friends as a result of it, and he
does it because he believes intensely that people have got to be
educated about the devastation of this war.
"We thought we were a moral country, yes, but we are now engaged in
the most rampant bombing in the history of mankind. Since President
Nixon has assumed office, we have dropped some 2,700,000 tons of
bombs on Laos. That is more than we dropped in the entire Pacific and
Atlantic theaters in the entire course of World War II."
On the Cavett show Kerry denounced the secret, illegal character of
the war conducted by the Nixon administration and its anti-democratic
implications: "But for the American people, who are supposedly the
people who count in this country, there was no knowledge, and for the
American people there was no opportunity to vote on going to this
war. The American people, there have repeatedly been few
opportunities to bring it to a vote, and only this year finally have
we had that kind of vote in congress, and still we cannot get
congress to respond to the little people in this country."
Kerry's opposition to the war never went beyond characterizing it
as a terrible and tragic policy "mistake" that needed to be
corrected, and even at the time the element of self-promotion in his
antiwar activities was recognized by critics, but there is no reason
to doubt the sincerity of his remarks.
If the Massachusetts senator has come full circle and now promises to
"stay the course" in a blatantly illegal and criminal war, it has
something more than personal implications.
In the first place, it expresses the evolution to the right of the
Democratic Party and the thorough putrefaction of American
liberalism. Kerry's "interment" of his opposition to the
Vietnam war is simply one of the most graphic illustrations of a
general tendency, the rightward lurch by an entire social milieu. The
Democratic Party in 2004 has consolidated itself as a pro-war,
pro-"national security" party, which accepts as a given all the
premises of the "war on terror," a cover for the drive by US
imperialism for global domination.
Moreover, by passing over Kerry's antiwar positions, the Democrats
are tacitly attempting to rehabilitate the Vietnam War in the
public's perception. An imperialist war that caused the deaths of
millions of Southeast Asians and tens of thousands of Americans, that
was recognized as a moral abomination and an affront to democratic
values by wide layers of the US population, is now being painted in
respectable and honorable colors.
But these are questions with the most burning contemporary
significance. By generating a super-patriotic climate at its
convention and whitewashing the crimes committed by American
imperialism in Vietnam, the Democratic Party leadership is
consciously aiming to de-legitimize criticism of and opposition to
all future US military interventions.
By openly embracing militarism, the Democrats are providing a warning
of what is to come. The present convention has revealed that on
fundamental strategic questions there are no principled differences
between the Democrats and Republicans; both parties advocate policies
of aggressive expansionism, militarism and the striving for US global
hegemony. The divisions, which are serious but tactical, relate to
the manner in which these policies should be conducted, with the
Democrats concerned about the preservation and shoring up of US
imperialism's postwar alliances.
A Kerry administration would carry on the war in Iraq and prepare new
interventions. Kerry's party represents a section of the American
plutocracy, which, whether it rules through a Republican or
Democratic administration, will stop at nothing to defend its social
position.
- Thread context:
- more nader to moore,
Dan Scanlan Fri 30 Jul 2004, 21:31 GMT
- Nader says why,
Dan Scanlan Fri 30 Jul 2004, 21:17 GMT
- War or resistance? Demos go for war,
Dan Scanlan Fri 30 Jul 2004, 21:12 GMT
- should the Dems WANT to win?,
Devine, James Fri 30 Jul 2004, 20:01 GMT
- Re: Failure of socialist revolution in the West fault of Kremlin/art and beauty,
Waistline2 Fri 30 Jul 2004, 18:35 GMT
- anybody?,
Devine, James Fri 30 Jul 2004, 17:53 GMT
- "I Had an Abortion",
Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 30 Jul 2004, 17:34 GMT
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