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05/29/03: ( Seattle
Times
) Many Americans today feel a sense of personal vulnerability they
have never felt before, even during the Second World War.
Terrorism, undeterred and very likely intensified by our victory
in Iraq, has given a new and scary dimension to war.
The vast majority of us agree on the objective
of eradicating terrorism, but we sometimes disagree on the best
means of attaining that objective. The idea is spreading that,
when mortal danger threatens, we must suspend discussion and
debate, rally 'round the flag, and allow the president to be the
unquestioned single voice of a nation.
This belief raises a couple of questions I
believe history might help us answer. First: Do a democratic
people have a moral obligation to cease debate and dissent in
times of war? Second: Did our ancestors abstain from debate and
dissent when their government took them to war? These two
questions presuppose a third: What is the true nature of
patriotism anyway?
The answer to the first question is that going
to war does not abrogate freedom of conscience, thought and
speech. In the midst of World War II, the Supreme Court held that
compelling kids in public schools to salute the flag and recite
the Pledge of Allegiance violated the First Amendment and was
therefore unconstitutional. This decision, handed down on Flag Day
1943, was considered then to be a pretty good statement of why we
were fighting.
The role of dissent in the run-up to war is
crucial. Before sending young Americans to kill and die in foreign
lands, a democracy has a sacred obligation to permit full and
searching discussion of the issues. There is no obligation to bow
down before a reloaded imperial presidency.
Nor does the actuality of war change the
situation. As Theodore Roosevelt said in 1918 during the First
World War, "To announce that there must be no criticism of
the president... is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is
morally treasonable to the American public."
Sen. Robert A. Taft, a much revered Republican
leader, went a step further when he declared after Pearl Harbor
that, "Too many people desire to suppress criticism simply
because they think it will give some comfort to the enemy... . If
that comfort makes the enemy feel better for a few moments, they
are welcome to it ... because the maintenance of the right to
criticism in the long run will do the country maintaining it a
great deal more good than it will do the enemy."
There is little more insolent or despicable than
public officials, like the attorney general of the United States,
who cry that those who dare question their acts are giving aid and
comfort to the terrorists.
As for the second question, the historical
record shows that Americans have never refrained from dissent or
criticism in wartime. Even in the American Revolution, a third of
the colonists opposed the drive toward independence. From the War
of 1812 through the Mexican War and the Civil War to the wars in
Korea and Vietnam, criticism of the White House has thrived.
Historically, there is nothing sacrosanct about
presidents in wartime. Indeed, no president has any right to send
young Americans to kill and die in foreign lands without the most
frank and uninhibited discussion and debate. This is all the more
the case when a fundamental transformation in the strategy of
national security promises a vista of presidential wars stretching
far into the future, and this very transformation has taken place
recently in our country.
For more than 40 years after the Second World
War, our national strategy was based on containment and
deterrence. This strategy enabled the democracies to win the Cold
War peacefully. Had the occasional voices calling for preventive
war against the Soviet Union been heeded, few of us would be here
today.
Now our president has proclaimed a new doctrine
of "anticipatory self-defense," which is simply a fancy
term for preventive war. In fact, the policy of anticipatory
self-defense is the same policy that imperial Japan employed in
its attack on Pearl Harbor on a date that still lives in infamy.
Today, it is we Americans who live in infamy. The global wave of
sympathy that engulfed the United States after 9/11 has given way
to a global wave of fear and hatred of American arrogance.
Should America serve as the world's initiator of
preventive war, its self-appointed judge, jury and executioner? As
we struggle to make this decision, I would ask Americans to
reflect on the words uttered by a president whom I had the honor
and good luck to serve in the White House.
"We must face the fact," President
John F. Kennedy said 42 years ago at the University of Washington,
"that the United States is neither omnipotent nor
omniscient... that we cannot right every wrong or reverse each
adversity — and that therefore there cannot be an American
solution to every world problem."
As to my third question: What is the nature of
patriotism anyway?
True patriotism, I propose, consists of living
up to the nation's highest ideals. Carl Schurz, a German emigrant
who became an influential figure in 19th-century America, defined
the true meaning of patriotism when he said: "Our country,
right or wrong. When right, to be kept right; when wrong, to be
put right."
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and social
critic Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. was special assistant to
President John F. Kennedy. This commentary was adapted from
Schlesinger's 2003 commencement address Sunday at Whitman College,
where he received an honorary doctorate of human letters. The
entire text can be found at www.whitman.edu
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