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A MESSAGE TO WEST POINT: THE MEANING OF
FREEDOM --
Address by Bill Moyers delivered to the
Academy on November 15, 2006.


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Message To West Point
Bill Moyers
This is an excerpt from the Sol Feinstone Lecture on The Meaning of
Freedom delivered by Bill Moyers at the United States Military Academy
on November 15, 2006.
Many of you will be heading for Iraq. I have never been a soldier
myself, never been tested under fire, never faced hard choices between
duty and feeling, or duty and conscience, under deadly circumstances. I
will never know if I have the courage to be shot at, or to shoot back,
or the discipline to do my duty knowing the people who dispatched me to
kill—or be killed—had no idea of the moral abyss into which they were
plunging me.
I have tried to learn about war from those who know it best: veterans,
the real experts. But they have been such reluctant reporters of the
experience. My father-in-law, Joe Davidson, was 37 years old with two
young daughters when war came in 1941; he enlisted and served in the
Pacific but I never succeeded in getting him to describe what it was
like to be in harm’s way. My uncle came home from the Pacific after his
ship had been sunk, taking many friends down with it, and he would look
away and change the subject when I asked him about it. One of my dearest
friends, who died this year at 90, returned from combat in Europe as if
he had taken a vow of silence about the dark and terrifying things that
came home with him, uninvited.
Curious about this, some years ago I produced for PBS a documentary
called “D-Day to the Rhine.” With a camera crew I accompanied several
veterans of World War II who for the first time were returning together
to the path of combat that carried them from the landing at Normandy in
1944 into the heart of Germany. Members of their families were along
this time—wives, grown sons and daughters—and they told me that until
now, on this trip—45 years after D-Day—their husbands and fathers rarely
talked about their combat experiences. They had come home, locked their
memories in their mind’s attic, and hung a “no trespassing” sign on it.
Even as they retraced their steps almost half a century later, I would
find these aging GIs, standing alone and silent on the very spot where a
buddy had been killed, or they themselves had killed, or where they had
been taken prisoner, a German soldier standing over them with a Mauser
pointed right between their eyes, saying: “For you, the war is over.” As
they tried to tell the story, the words choked in their throats. The
stench, the vomit, the blood, the fear: What outsider—journalist or
kin—could imagine the demons still at war in their heads?
What I remember most vividly from that trip is the opening scene of the
film: Jose Lopez— the father of two, who had lied about his age to get
into the Army (he was too old), went ashore at Normandy, fought his way
across France and Belgium with a water-cooled machine gun, rose to the
rank of sergeant, and received the Congressional Medal of Honor after
single-handedly killing 100 German troops in the Battle of the
Bulge—Jose Lopez, back on Omaha Beach at age 79, quietly saying to me:
“I was really very, very afraid. That I want to scream. I want to cry
and we see other people was laying wounded and screaming and everything
and it’s nothing you could do. We could see them groaning in the water
and we keep walking”—and then, moving away from the camera, dropping to
his knees, his hands clasped, his eyes wet, as it all came back,
memories so excruciating there were no words for them.
The Poetry Of War
Over the year I turned to the poets for help in understanding the
realities of war; it is from the poets we outsiders most often learn
what you soldiers experience. I admired your former superintendent,
General William Lennox, who held a doctorate in literature and taught
poetry classes here because, he said, “poetry is a great vehicle to
teach cadets as much as anyone can what combat is like.” So it is. From
the opening lines of the Iliad:
Rage, Goddess, sing the rage of Peleus’ Son Achilles…hurling down to the
House of Death so many souls, great fighters’ souls, but made their
bodies carrion for the dogs and birds….
to Wilfred Owen’s pained cry from the trenches of France:
I am the enemy you killed, my friend…
to W. D. Ehrhart’s staccato recitation of the
Barely tolerable conglomeration of mud, heat, sweat, dirt, rain, pain,
fear…we march grinding under the weight of heavy packs, feet dialed to
the ground…we wonder…
Poets with their empathy and evocation open to bystanders what lies
buried in the soldier’s soul. Those of you soon to be leading others in
combat may wish to take a metaphorical detour to the Hindenburg Line of
World War I, where the officer and poet Wilfred Owen, a man of
extraordinary courage who was killed a week before the Armistice, wrote:
“I came out in order to help these boys—directly by leading them as well
as an officer can; indirectly, by watching their sufferings that I may
speak of them as well as a pleader can.”
People in power should be required to take classes in the poetry of war.
As a presidential assistant during the early escalation of the war in
Vietnam, I remember how the President blanched when the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff said it would take one million fighting men and 10
years really to win in Vietnam, but even then the talk of war was about
policy, strategy, numbers and budgets, not severed limbs and eviscerated
bodies.
That experience, and the experience 40 years later of watching another
White House go to war, also relying on inadequate intelligence,
exaggerated claims and premature judgments, keeping Congress in the dark
while wooing a gullible press, cheered on by partisans, pundits, and
editorial writers safely divorced from realities on the ground, ended
any tolerance I might have had for those who advocate war from the
loftiness of the pulpit, the safety of a laptop, the comfort of a think
tank, or the glamour of a television studio. Watching one day on C-Span
as one member of Congress after another took to the floor to praise our
troops in Iraq, I was reminded that I could only name three members of
Congress who have a son or daughter in the military. How often we hear
the most vigorous argument for war from those who count on others of
valor to fight it. As General William Tecumseh Sherman said after the
Civil War: “It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the
shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more
vengeance, more desolation.”
Remembering Emily Perez
Rupert Murdoch comes to mind—only because he was in the news last week
talking about Iraq. In the months leading up to the invasion Murdoch
turned the dogs of war loose in the corridors of his media empire, and
they howled for blood, although not their own. Murdoch himself said,
just weeks before the invasion, that: “The greatest thing to come of
this to the world economy, if you could put it that way [as you can, if
you are a media mogul], would be $20 a barrel for oil.” Once the war is
behind us, Rupert Murdoch said: “The whole world will benefit from
cheaper oil which will be a bigger stimulus than anything else.”
Today Murdoch says he has no regrets, that he still believes it was
right “to go in there,” and that “from a historical perspective” the
U.S. death toll in Iraq was “minute.”
“Minute.”
The word richoted in my head when I heard it. I had just been reading
about Emily Perez. Your Emily Perez: Second Lieutenant Perez, the first
woman of color to become a command sergeant major in the history of the
Academy, and the first woman graduate to die in Iraq. I had been in
Washington when word of her death made the news, and because she had
lived there before coming to West Point, the Washington press told us a
lot about her. People remembered her as “a little superwoman”—straight
A’s, choir member, charismatic, optimistic, a friend to so many; she had
joined the medical service because she wanted to help people. The
obituary in the Washington Post said she had been a ball of fire at the
Peace Baptist Church, where she helped start an HIV-AIDS ministry after
some of her own family members contracted the virus. Now accounts of her
funeral here at West Point were reporting that some of you wept as you
contemplated the loss of so vibrant an officer.
“Minute?” I don’t think so. Historical perspective or no. So when I
arrived today I asked the Academy’s historian, Steve Grove, to take me
where Emily Perez is buried, in Section 36 of your cemetery, below Storm
King Mountain, overlooking the Hudson River. Standing there, on sacred
American soil hallowed all the more by the likes of Lieutenant Perez so
recently returned, I thought that to describe their loss as
“minute”—even from a historical perspective—is to underscore the great
divide that has opened in America between those who advocate war while
avoiding it and those who have the courage to fight it without ever
knowing what it’s all about.
We were warned of this by our founders. They had put themselves in
jeopardy by signing the Declaration of Independence; if they had lost,
that parchment could have been their death warrant, for they were
traitors to the Crown and likely to be hanged. In the fight for freedom
they had put themselves on the line—not just their fortunes and sacred
honor but their very persons, their lives. After the war, forming a
government and understanding both the nature of war and human nature,
they determined to make it hard to go to war except to defend freedom;
war for reasons save preserving the lives and liberty of your citizens
should be made difficult to achieve, they argued. Here is John Jay’s
passage in Federalist No. 4:
It is too true, however disgraceful it may be to human nature, that
nations in general will make war whenever they have a prospect of
getting anything by it; nay, absolute monarchs will often make war when
their nations are to get nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects
merely personal, such as thirst for military glory, revenge for personal
affronts, ambition, or private compacts to aggrandize or support their
particular families or partisans. These and a variety of other motives,
which affect only the mind of the sovereign, often lead him to engage in
wars not sanctified by justice or the voice and interests of his people.
And here, a few years later, is James Madison, perhaps the most
deliberative mind of that generation in assaying the dangers of an
unfettered executive prone to war:
In war, a physical force is to be created, and it is the executive will
which is to direct it. In war, the public treasures are to be unlocked,
and it is the executive hand which is to dispense them. In war, the
honors and emoluments of office are to be multiplied; and it is the
executive patronage under which they are to be enjoyed. It is in war,
finally, that laurels are to be gathered; and it is the executive brow
they are to encircle. The strongest passions and most dangerous
weaknesses of the human breast; ambition, avarice, vanity, the honorable
or venial love of fame, are all in conspiracy against the desire and
duty of peace.
I want to be clear on this: Vietnam did not make me a dove. Nor has
Iraq; I am no pacifist. But they have made me study the Constitution
more rigorously, both as journalist and citizen. Again, James Madison:
In no part of the Constitution is more wisdom to be found, than in the
clause which confides the question of war and peace to the legislature,
and not to the executive department. Beside the objection to such a
mixture to heterogeneous powers, the trust and the temptation would be
too great for any one man.
Twice in 40 years we have now gone to war paying only lip service to
those warnings; the first war we lost, the second is a bloody debacle,
and both rank among the great blunders in our history. It is impossible
for soldiers to sustain in the field what cannot be justified in the
Constitution; asking them to do so puts America at war with itself. So
when the Vice President of the United States says it doesn’t matter what
the people think, he and the President intend to prosecute the war
anyway, he is committing heresy against the fundamental tenets of the
American political order.
An Army Born In Revolution
This is a tough subject to address when so many of you may be heading
for Iraq. I would prefer to speak of sweeter things. But I also know
that 20 or 30 years from now any one of you may be the Chief of Staff or
the National Security Adviser or even the President—after all, two of
your boys, Grant and Eisenhower, did make it from West Point to the
White House. And that being the case, it’s more important than ever that
citizens and soldiers—and citizen-soldiers—honestly discuss and frankly
consider the kind of country you are serving and the kind of
organization to which you are dedicating your lives. You are, after all,
the heirs of an army born in the American Revolution, whose radicalism
we consistently underestimate.
No one understood this radicalism—no one in uniform did more to help us
define freedom in a profoundly American way—than the man whose monument
here at West Point I also asked to visit today—Thaddeus Kosciuszko. I
first became intrigued by him over 40 years ago when I arrived in
Washington. Lafayette Park, on Pennsylvania Avenue, across from the
White House, hosts several statues of military heroes who came to fight
for our independence in the American Revolution. For seven years, either
looking down on these figures from my office at the Peace Corps, or
walking across Lafayette Park to my office in the White House, I was
reminded of these men who came voluntarily to fight for American
independence from the monarchy. The most compelling, for me, was the
depiction of Kosciuszko. On one side of the statue he is directing a
soldier back to the battlefield, and on the other side, wearing an
American uniform, he is freeing a bound soldier, representing America’s
revolutionaries.
Kosciuszko had been born in Lithuania-Poland, where he was trained as an
engineer and artillery officer. Arriving in the 13 colonies in 1776, he
broke down in tears when he read the Declaration of Independence. The
next year, he helped engineer the Battle of Saratoga, organizing the
river and land fortifications that put Americans in the stronger
position. George Washington then commissioned him to build the original
fortifications for West Point. Since his monument dominates the point
here at the Academy, this part of the story you must know well.
But what many don’t realize about Kosciuszko is the depth of his
commitment to republican ideals and human equality. One historian called
him “a mystical visionary of human rights.” Thomas Jefferson wrote that
Kosciuszko was “as pure a son of liberty as I have ever known.” That
phrase of Jefferson’s is often quoted, but if you read the actual
letter, Jefferson goes on to say: “And of that liberty which is to go to
all, and not to the few and the rich alone.”
There is the clue to the meaning of freedom as Thaddeus Kosciuszko saw
it.
After the American Revolution, he returned to his homeland, what was
then the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. In 1791 the Poles adopted their
celebrated May Constitution—Europe’s first codified national
constitution (and the second oldest in the world, after our own.) The
May Constitution established political equality between the middle class
and the nobility and also partially abolished serfdom by giving civil
rights to the peasants, including the right to state protection from
landlord abuses. The autocrats and nobles of Russia feared such reforms,
and in 1794, when the Russians sought to prevent their spread by
partitioning the Commonwealth, Kosciuszko led an insurrection. His
untrained peasant forces were armed mostly with single-blade sickles,
but they won several early battles in fierce hand-to-hand fighting,
until they were finally overwhelmed. Badly injured, Kosciuszko was taken
prisoner and held for two years in St. Petersburg, and that was the end
of the Polish Commonwealth, which had stood, by the way, as one of
Europe’s leading centers of religious liberty.
Upon his release from prison, Kosciuszko came back to the United States
and began a lasting friendship with Jefferson, who called him his “most
intimate and beloved friend.” In 1798, he wrote a will leaving his
American estate to Jefferson, urging him to use it to purchase the
freedom and education of his [Jefferson’s] own slaves, or, as Jefferson
interpreted it, of “as many of the children as bondage in this country
as it should be adequate to.” For this émigré, as for so many who would
come later, the meaning of freedom included a passion for universal
justice. In his Act of Insurrection at the outset of the 1794 uprising,
Kosciuszko wrote of the people’s “sacred rights to liberty, personal
security and property.” Note the term property here. For Jefferson’s
“pursuit of happiness” Kosciuszko substituted Locke’s notion of property
rights. But it’s not what you think: The goal was not simply to protect
“private property” from public interference (as it is taught today), but
rather to secure productive property for all as a right to citizenship.
It’s easy to forget the difference when huge agglomerations of personal
wealth are defended as a sacred right of liberty, as they are today with
the gap between the rich and poor in America greater than it’s been in
almost one hundred years. Kosciuszko—General Kosciuszko, from tip to toe
a military man—was talking about investing the people with productive
resources. Yes, freedom had to be won on the battlefield, but if freedom
did not lead to political, social and economic opportunity for all
citizens, freedom’s meaning could not be truly realized.
Think about it: A Polish general from the old world, infusing the new
nation with what would become the marrow of the American Dream. Small
wonder that Kosciuszko was often called a “hero of two worlds” or that
just 25 years ago, in 1981, when Polish farmers, supported by the Roman
Catholic Church, won the right to form an independent union, sending
shockwaves across the Communist empire, Kosciuszko’s name was heard in
the victory speeches—his egalitarian soul present at yet another
revolution for human freedom and equal rights.
After Jefferson won the presidency in l800, Kosciuszko wrote him a
touching letter advising him to be true to his principles: “do not
forget in your post be always a virtuous Republican with justice and
probity, without pomp and ambition—in a word be Jefferson and my
friend.” Two years later, Jefferson signed into being this professional
officers school, on the site first laid out as a fortress by his friend,
the general from Poland.
A Paradox Of Liberty
Every turn in American history confronts us with paradox, and this one
is no exception. Here was Jefferson, known for his vigorous and eloquent
opposition to professional armies, presiding over the establishment of
West Point. It’s a paradox that suits you cadets to a T, because you
yourselves represent a paradox of liberty. You are free men and women
who of your own free choice have joined an institution dedicated to
protecting a free nation, but in the process you have voluntarily agreed
to give up, for a specific time, a part of your own liberty. An army is
not a debating society and neither in the field or in headquarters does
it ask for a show of hands on whether orders should be obeyed. That is
undoubtedly a necessary idea, but for you it complicates the already
tricky question of “the meaning of freedom.”
I said earlier that our founders did not want the power of war to reside
in a single man. Many were also dubious about having any kind of
regular, or as they called it, “standing” army at all. Standing armies
were hired supporters of absolute monarchs and imperial tyrants. The men
drafting the Constitution were steeped in classical and historical
learning. They recalled how Caesar in ancient times and Oliver Cromwell
in more recent times had used the conquering armies they had led to make
themselves dictators. They knew how the Roman legions had made and
unmade emperors, and how Ottoman rulers of the Turkish Empire had
supported their tyrannies on the shoulders of formidable elite warriors.
Wherever they looked in history, they saw an alliance between enemies of
freedom in palaces and in officer corps drawn from the ranks of
nobility, bound by a warrior code that stressed honor and bravery—but
also dedication to the sovereign and the sovereign’s god, and distrust
amounting to contempt for the ordinary run of the sovereign’s subjects.
The colonial experience with British regulars, first as allies in the
French and Indian Wars, and then as enemies, did not increase American
respect for the old system of military leadership. Officers were chosen
and promoted on the basis of aristocratic connections, commissions were
bought, and ineptitude was too often tolerated. The lower ranks were
often rootless alumni of jails and workhouses, lured or coerced into
service by the paltry pay and chance of adventure—brutally hard types,
kept in line by brutally harsh discipline.
Not exactly your model for the army of a republic of free citizens.
What the framers came up with was another novelty. The first battles of
the Revolution were fought mainly by volunteer militia from the states,
such as Vermont’s Green Mountain Boys, the most famous militia then.
They were gung-ho for revolution and flushed with a fighting spirit. But
in the end they were no substitute for the better-trained regiments of
the Continental line and the French regulars sent over by France’s king
after the alliance of 1778. The view nonetheless persisted that in times
of peace, only a small permanent army would be needed to repel
invasions—unlikely except from Canada—and deal with the frontier
Indians. When and if a real crisis came, it was believed, volunteers
would flock to the colors like the armed men of Greek mythology who
sprang from dragon’s teeth planted in the ground by a divinely approved
hero. The real safety of the nation in any hour of crisis would rest
with men who spent most of their working lives behind the plow or in the
workshop. And this was long before the huge conscript armies of the 19th
and 20th centuries made that a commonplace fact.
And who would be in the top command of both that regular force and of
volunteer forces when actually called into federal service? None other
than the top elected civil official of the government, the President.
Think about that for a moment. The professional army fought hard and
long to create a system of selecting and keeping officers on the basis
of proven competence, not popularity. But the highest commander of all
served strictly at the pleasure of the people and had to submit his
contract for renewal every four years.
And what of the need for trained and expert leadership at all the levels
of command which quickly became apparent as the tools and tactics of
warfare grew more sophisticated in a modernizing world? That’s where
West Point came in, filling a need that could no longer be ignored. But
what a special military academy it was! We tend to forget that the West
Point curriculum was heavily tilted toward engineering; in fact, it was
one of the nation’s first engineering colleges and it was publicly
supported and free. That’s what made it attractive to young men like
Hiram Ulysses Grant, familiarly known as “Sam,” who wasn’t anxious to be
a soldier but wanted to get somewhere more promising than his father’s
Ohio farm. Hundreds like Grant came to West Point and left to use their
civil engineering skills in a country badly needing them, some in civil
life after serving out an enlistment, but many right there in uniform.
It was the army that explored, mapped and surveyed the wagon and
railroad routes to the west, starting with the Corps of Exploration
under Lewis and Clark sent out by the protean Mr. Jefferson. It was the
army that had a hand in clearing rivers of snags and brush and building
dams that allowed steamboats to avoid rapids. It was the army that put
up lighthouses in the harbors and whose exhaustive geologic and
topographic surveys were important contributions to publicly supported
scientific research—AND to economic development—in the young republic.
All of this would surely have pleased General Kosciuszko, who believed
in a society that leaves no one out. Indeed, add all these facts
together and what you come up with is a portrait of something new under
the sun—a peacetime army working directly with and for the civil society
in improving the nation so as to guarantee the greater opportunities for
individual success inherent in the promise of democracy. And a wartime
army in which temporary citizen-solders were and still are led by
long-term professional citizen-soldiers who were molded out of the same
clay as those they command. And all of them led from the top by the one
political figure chosen by the entire national electorate. This
arrangement—this bargain between the men with the guns and the citizens
who provide the guns—is the heritage passed on to you by the
revolutionaries who fought and won America’s independence and then swore
fidelity to a civil compact that survives today, despite tumultuous
moments and perilous passages.
West Point's Importance
Once again we encounter a paradox: Not all our wars were on the side of
freedom. The first that seriously engaged the alumni of West Point was
the Mexican War, which was not a war to protect our freedoms but to grab
land—facts are facts—and was not only bitterly criticized by part of the
civilian population, but even looked on with skepticism by some
graduates like Grant himself. Still, he not only fought well in it, but
it was for him, as well as for most of the generals on both sides in the
impending Civil War, an unequalled training school and rehearsal stage.
When the Civil War itself came, it offered an illustration of how the
meaning of freedom isn’t always easy to pin down. From the point of view
of the North, the hundreds of Southern West Pointers who resigned to
fight for the Confederacy—Robert E. Lee included—were turning against
the people’s government that had educated and supported them. They were
traitors. But from the Southern point of view, they were fighting for
the freedom of their local governments to leave the Union when, as they
saw it, it threatened their way of life. Their way of life tragically
included the right to hold other men in slavery.
The Civil War, nonetheless, confirmed the importance of West Point
training. European military observers were amazed at the skill with
which the better generals on both sides, meaning for the most part West
Pointers and not political appointees, maneuvered huge armies of men
over vast areas of difficult terrain, used modern technologies like the
railroad and the telegraph to coordinate movements and accumulate
supplies, and made the best use of newly developed weapons. The North
had more of these advantages, and when the final victory came, adulation
and admiration were showered on Grant and Sherman, who had come to a
realistic and unromantic understanding of modern war, precisely because
they had not been steeped in the mythologies of a warrior caste. Their
triumph was seen as vindication of how well the army of a democracy
could work. Just as Lincoln, the self-educated rail-splitter, had
provided a civilian leadership that also proved him the equal of any
potentate on the globe.
After 1865 the army shrank as its chief engagement was now in wiping out
the last vestiges of Indian resistance to their dispossession and
subjugation: One people’s advance became another’s annihilation and one
of the most shameful episodes of our history. In 1898 the army was
briefly used for the first effort in exporting democracy—an idea that
does not travel well in military transports—when it warred with Spain to
help the Cubans complete a war for independence that had been in
progress for three years. The Cubans found their liberation somewhat
illusory, however, when the United States made the island a virtual
protectorate and allowed it to be ruled by a corrupt dictator.
Americans also lifted the yoke of Spain from the Filipinos, only to
learn that they did not want to exchange it for one stamped ‘Made in the
USA.’ It took a three-year war, during which the army killed several
thousand so-called “insurgents” before their leader was captured and the
Filipinos were cured of the illusion that independence meant…well,
independence. I bring up these reminders not to defame the troops. Their
actions were supported by a majority of the American people even in a
progressive phase of our political history (though there was some
principled and stiff opposition.) Nonetheless, we have to remind
ourselves that the armed forces can’t be expected to be morally much
better than the people who send them into action, and that when
honorable behavior comes into conflict with racism, honor is usually the
loser unless people such as yourself fight to maintain it.
Our brief participation in the First World War temporarily expanded the
army, helped by a draft that had also proven necessary in the Civil War.
But rapid demobilization was followed by a long period of ever-shrinking
military budgets, especially for the land forces.
Not until World War II did the Army again take part in such a long,
bloody, and fateful conflict as the Civil War had been, and like the
Civil War it opened an entirely new period in American history. The
incredibly gigantic mobilization of the entire nation, the victory it
produced, and the ensuing 60 years of wars, quasi-wars, mini-wars,
secret wars, and a virtually permanent crisis created a superpower and
forever changed the nation’s relationship to its armed forces,
confronting us with problems we have to address, no matter how
unsettling it may be to do so in the midst of yet another war.
The Bargain
The Armed Services are no longer stepchildren in budgetary terms.
Appropriations for defense and defense-related activities (like
veterans’ care, pensions, and debt service) remind us that the costs of
war continue long after the fighting ends. Objections to ever-swelling
defensive expenditures are, except in rare cases, a greased slide to
political suicide. It should be troublesome to you as professional
soldiers that elevation to the pantheon of untouchable icons —right
there alongside motherhood, apple pie and the flag—permits a great deal
of political lip service to replace genuine efforts to improve the lives
and working conditions—in combat and out—of those who serve.
Let me cut closer to the bone. The chickenhawks in Washington, who at
this very moment are busily defending you against supposed “insults” or
betrayals by the opponents of the war in Iraq, are likewise those who
have cut budgets for medical and psychiatric care; who have been so
skimpy and late with pay and with provision of necessities that military
families in the United States have had to apply for food stamps; who
sent the men and women whom you may soon be commanding into Iraq
understrength, underequipped, and unprepared for dealing with a kind of
war fought in streets and homes full of civilians against enemies
undistinguishable from non-combatants; who have time and again broken
promises to the civilian National Guardsmen bearing much of the burden
by canceling their redeployment orders and extending their tours.
You may or may not agree on the justice and necessity of the war itself,
but I hope that you will agree that flattery and adulation are no
substitute for genuine support. Much of the money that could be directed
to that support has gone into high-tech weapons systems that were
supposed to produce a new, mobile, compact “professional” army that
could easily defeat the armies of any other two nations combined, but is
useless in a war against nationalist or religious guerrilla uprisings
that, like it or not, have some support, coerced or otherwise, among the
local population. We learned this lesson in Vietnam, only to see it
forgotten or ignored by the time this administration invaded Iraq,
creating the conditions for a savage sectarian and civil war with our
soldiers trapped in the middle, unable to discern civilian from
combatant, where it is impossible to kill your enemy faster than rage
makes new ones.
And who has been the real beneficiary of creating this high-tech army
called to fight a war conceived and commissioned and cheered on by
politicians and pundits not one of whom ever entered a combat zone? One
of your boys answered that: Dwight Eisenhower, class of 1915, who told
us that the real winners of the anything at any price philosophy would
be “the military-industrial complex.”
I want to contend that the American military systems that evolved in the
early days of this republic rested on a bargain between the civilian
authorities and the armed services, and that the army has, for the most
part, kept its part of the bargain and that, at this moment, the
civilian authorities whom you loyally obey, are shirking theirs. And
before you assume that I am calling for an insurrection against the
civilian deciders of your destinies, hear me out, for that is the last
thing on my mind.
You have kept your end of the bargain by fighting well when called upon,
by refusing to become a praetorian guard for a reigning administration
at any time, and for respecting civil control at all times. For the most
part, our military leaders have made no serious efforts to meddle in
politics. The two most notable cases were General George McClellan, who
endorsed a pro-Southern and pro-slavery policy in the first year of the
war and was openly contemptuous of Lincoln. But Lincoln fired him in
1862, and when McClellan ran for President two years later, the voting
public handed him his hat. Douglas MacArthur’s attempt to dictate his
own China policy in 1951 ran head-on into the resolve of Harry Truman,
who, surviving a firestorm of hostility, happily watched a MacArthur
boomlet for the Republican nomination for the Presidency fizzle out in
1952.
On the other side of the ledger, however, I believe that the bargain has
not been kept. The last time Congress declared war was in 1941. Since
then presidents of the United States, including the one I served, have
gotten Congress, occasionally under demonstrably false pretenses, to
suspend Constitutional provisions that required them to get the consent
of the people’s representatives in order to conduct a war. They have
been handed a blank check to send the armed forces into action at their
personal discretion and on dubious Constitutional grounds.
Furthermore, the current President has made extra-Constitutional claims
of authority by repeatedly acting as if he were Commander-in-Chief of
the entire nation and not merely of the armed forces. Most dangerously
to our moral honor and to your own welfare in the event of capture, he
has likewise ordered the armed forces to violate clear mandates of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice and the Geneva Conventions by claiming
a right to interpret them at his pleasure, so as to allow indefinite and
secret detentions and torture. These claims contravene a basic principle
usually made clear to recruits from their first day in service—that they
may not obey an unlawful order. The President is attempting to have them
violate that longstanding rule by personal definitions of what the law
says and means.
There is yet another way the chickenhawks are failing you. In the
October issue of the magazine of the California Nurses Association, you
can read a long report on “The Battle at Home.” In veterans’ hospitals
across the country—and in a growing number of ill-prepared, under-funded
psych and primary care clinics as well—the report says that nurses “have
witnessed the guilt, rage, emotional numbness, and tormented flashbacks
of GIs just back from Iraq.” Yet “a returning vet must wait an average
of 165 days for a VA decision on initial disability benefits,” and an
appeal can take up to three years. Just in the first quarter of this
year, the VA treated 20,638 Iraq veterans for post-traumatic stress
disorder, and faces a backlog of 400,000 cases. This is reprehensible.
I repeat: These are not palatable topics for soldiers about to go to
war; I would like to speak of sweeter things. But freedom means we must
face reality: “You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you
free.” Free enough, surely, to think for yourselves about these breaches
of contract that crudely undercut the traditions of an army of free men
and women who have bound themselves voluntarily to serve the nation even
unto death.
The Voice Of Conscience
What, then, can you do about it if disobedience to the chain of command
is ruled out?
For one, you didn’t give up your freedom to vote, nor did you totally
quit your membership in civil society, when you put on the uniform, even
though, as Eisenhower said, you did accept “certain inhibitions” at the
time. He said that when questioned about MacArthur’s dismissal, and he
made sure his own uniform was back in the trunk before his campaign in
1952. It has been most encouraging, by the way, to see veterans of Iraq
on the campaign trail in our recent elections.
Second, remember that there are limitations to what military power can
do. Despite the valor and skills of our fighting forces, some objectives
are not obtainable at a human, diplomatic, and financial cost that is
acceptable. Our casualties in Iraq are not “minute” and the cost of the
war has been projected by some sources to reach $2 trillion dollars.
Sometimes, in the real world, a truce is the most honorable solution to
conflict. Dwight Eisenhower—who is a candidate for my favorite West
Point graduate of the 20th century—knew that when, in 1953, he went to
Korea and accepted a stalemate rather than carrying out his bluff of
using nuclear weapons. That was the best that could be done and it saved
more years of stalemate and casualties. Douglas MacArthur announced in
1951 that “there was no substitute for victory.” But in the wars of the
21st century there are alternative meanings to victory and alternative
ways to achieve them. Especially in tracking down and eliminating
terrorists, we need to change our metaphor from a “war on terror”—what,
pray tell, exactly is that?—to the mindset of Interpol tracking down
master criminals through intense global cooperation among nations, or
the FBI stalking the Mafia, or local police determined to quell street
gangs without leveling the entire neighborhood in the process. Help us
to think beyond a “war on terror”—which politicians could wage without
end, with no measurable way to judge its effectiveness, against
stateless enemies who hope we will destroy the neighborhood, creating
recruits for their side—to counter-terrorism modeled on extraordinary
police work.
Third, don’t let your natural and commendable loyalty to
comrades-in-arms lead you into thinking that criticism of the mission
you are on spells lack of patriotism. Not every politician who flatters
you is your ally. Not every one who believes that war is the wrong
choice to some problems is your enemy. Blind faith in bad leadership is
not patriotism. In the words of G.K. Chesterton: “To say my country
right or wrong is something no patriot would utter except in dire
circumstance; it is like saying my mother drunk or sober.” Patriotism
means insisting on our political leaders being sober, strong, and
certain about what they are doing when they put you in harm’s way.
Fourth, be more prepared to accept the credibility and integrity of
those who disagree about the war even if you do not agree with their
positions. I say this as a journalist, knowing it is tempting in the
field to denounce or despise reporters who ask nosy questions or file
critical reports. But their first duty as reporters is to get as close
as possible to the verifiable truth and report it to the American
people—for your sake. If there is mismanagement and incompetence,
exposing it is more helpful to you than paeans to candy given to the
locals. I trust you are familiar with the study done for the Army in
1989 by the historian, William Hammond. He examined press coverage in
Korea and Vietnam and found that it was not the cause of disaffection at
home; what disturbed people at home was the death toll; when casualties
jumped, public support dropped. Over time, he said, the reporting was
vindicated. In fact, “the press reports were often more accurate than
the public statements of the administration in portraying the situation
in Vietnam.” Take note: The American people want the truth about how
their sons and daughters are doing in Iraq and what they’re up against,
and that is a good thing.
Finally, and this above all—a lesson I wish I had learned earlier. If
you rise in the ranks to important positions—or even if you don’t—speak
the truth as you see it, even if the questioner is a higher authority
with a clear preference for one and only one answer. It may not be the
way to promote your career; it can in fact harm it. Among my military
heroes of this war are the generals who frankly told the President and
his advisers that their information and their plans were both incomplete
and misleading—and who paid the price of being ignored and bypassed and
possibly frozen forever in their existing ranks: men like General Eric
K. Shinseki, another son of West Point. It is not easy to be honest—and
fair—in a bureaucratic system. But it is what free men and women have to
do. Be true to your principles, General Kosciuszko reminded Thomas
Jefferson. If doing so exposes the ignorance and arrogance of power, you
may be doing more to save the nation than exploits in combat can
achieve.
I know the final rule of the military Code of Conduct is already written
in your hearts: “I am an American, fighting for freedom, responsible for
my actions, and dedicated to the principles which made my country
free...” The meaning of freedom begins with the still, small voice of
conscience, when each of us decides what we will live, or die, for.
I salute your dedication to America and I wish all of you good luck.
Bill Moyers is deeply grateful to his colleagues Bernard A Weisberger,
Professor Emeritus of History at The University of Chicago, and Lew
Daly, Senior Fellow of the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, for
their contributions to this speech.
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Larry Scott