We know that there is only one hot-button
issue left for this administration (short of a massive new terrorist
attack on "the homeland") -- the American troops already in or going to
Iraq or those who have already died there. We know that Senators Obama
and McCain had to immediately backtrack and express "regrets" for in
any way indicating that American deaths in Iraq might represent a
"waste" of young lives; that, for their statements, Obama was promptly
attacked by Fox News
and right-wing bloggers, while McCain was set upon by the Democratic
National Committee. So we also know that there is some kind of
agreement across the board politically when it comes to those troops,
which goes under the rubric of "supporting" them.
We know that
both Senators' statements about a profligate invasion, a disastrous
occupation, and a catastrophic pacification campaign, all based on a
web of lies and false (or cleverly cherry-picked) intelligence, turning
Iraq into a charnel house -- far more Iraqis have now died than were
ever killed by Saddam Hussein -- and a center for extremist activity,
were promptly pegged in the media as "slips" or "gaffes" that hurt each
of the politicians involved. We also know that the American people in
poll after poll now say that the Iraq War was not worth fighting and
the invasion not worth launching; that similar majorities want the war
to end quickly, preferably within a six-month to one-year time-frame
for the withdrawal of all troops with no garrisons left in Iraq.
We
know that congressional representatives are generally terrified of not
seeming to "support the troops"; that somehow those troops themselves
have been separated from the actual fighting in Iraq, even though, for
better or worse, you can't separate the military from the mission;
that, to some extent, you are (and are affected by) what you do; and
that when the mission is a "waste" -- or, in this case, even worse than
that because it has created conditions more dangerous than those it
wiped away -- then any life lost in the process is, by definition, a
waste of some sort as well. No matter what your brand of politics might
be, this should be an obvious, if painful, fact -- that the loss of
young people, who might have accomplished and experienced so much, in
the pursuit of such waste is the definition of wasting a life. That
this can hardly be said today is one of the stranger aspects of our
moment and it has a strange little history to go with it.
How Our Soldiers Became Hostages
You
would have to start any brief "support our troops" history with the
dismal end of the Vietnam War and a consensus that the antiwar movement
had been particularly self-destructive in not supporting the soldiers
in Vietnam. (In fact, this is a far more complex subject, but we'll
save that for another day.) In any war to come, it was clear that the
charge of not supporting the troops was going to be met by an antiwar
opposition determined to proclaim their support for the soldiers, no
matter what. In fact, nowhere on the political spectrum was anyone
going to be caught dead not supporting-the-troops-more-than-thou. This
was one simplified lesson everyone seemed to carry away from defeat in
Vietnam (despite the fact that in the latter years of the war, the
heart of the antiwar movement was antiwar Vietnam veterans and that the
Army in Vietnam itself was, until withdrawn, in a state of near revolt
and collapse).
Add into this the history of the yellow ribbon. The
yellow ribbon
had long been a symbol of military men gone to war (and the women they
left behind them), while captivity narratives had been among the
earliest thrillers, you might say, of American history (though the
captives were usually women). In 1973, Tony Orlando and Dawn released
"Tie a Yellow Ribbon ‘Round the Ole Oak Tree," a song about a convict
returning from prison and wondering whether his wife or lover would
welcome him home. It was a massive success as were a postwar spate of
films about MIAs and imprisoned American soldiers in Vietnam. In the
wake of defeat, the theme of the heroic soldier as mistreated captive
and victim came front and center in the culture.
Now jump to
1979 and the Khomeini Revolution against the Shah of Iran. On November
4 of that year, Iranian students broke into the U.S. embassy in Tehran
and took the Americans inside hostage, holding them in captivity for
444 days. "In December 1979, Penelope Laingen, wife of the most senior
foreign service officer being held hostage, tied a yellow ribbon around
a tree on the lawn of her Maryland home. The ribbon primarily
symbolized the resolve of the American people to win the hostages' safe
release, and it featured prominently in the celebrations of their
return home in January 1981."
Throughout the 1980s, the yellow
ribbon remained a symbol of support for unarmed Americans kidnapped in
the Middle East. In 1990, however, at the time of the First Gulf War,
something truly strange, if largely forgotten, happened. The yellow
ribbon as a symbol migrated from captive American civilians to American
volunteer troops simply sent into action. This was quite new. From the
beginning of the First Gulf War, the administration of George H. W.
Bush dealt with its troops in the Persian Gulf as if they were
potential MIAs. Their situation was framed in a language previously
reserved for hostagedom: They were an army of "kids" (as the President
called them), essentially awaiting rescue (in victory, of course) and a
quick return to American shores.
During that brief war --
which was largely a slaughter of Iraqi conscripts from the army Saddam
Hussein had sent into Kuwait -- the most omnipresent patriotic symbol,
along with the flag, was the yellow ribbon, tied to everything in sight
and now a visible pledge to support our troops re-imagined as potential
hostages. The yellow ribbon certainly emphasized the role of those
troops as victims. (Because they were already imagined as captives,
there was confusion about how to portray the small number of American
military personnel actually captured by the Iraqis during hostilities,
a few of whom were shown, battered-looking on Iraqi TV.)
The
yellow ribbon reappeared for the invasion of Iraq in 2003, largely
miniaturized as removable car magnets. It was by now the norm not just
to imagine supporting our troops without regard to their mission, but
to think of them, however unconsciously, as mass victims, captives of
whatever situation they happened to be in once things went bad.
A Policy Built on the Backs of the Dead
With
our soldiers transformed into warrior-victims and the objects of all
sympathy, the stage was set for the President's latest explanation for
his ongoing policy in Iraq. For some time now, he has implied, or
simply stated, that his war must go on, if for no other reason than to
make sure those Americans who already died in Iraq have not died in
vain. This bizarre, self-sustaining formula has by now come to replace
just about every other explanation of the administration's stake in
Iraq. We are there and must remain there because we must support our
soldiers, not just the living ones but the dead ones as well -- and
this is the single emotional valence upon which everyone now seems to
agree (or at least fears to disagree).
In January of last
year, for instance, Bush said typically, "And, I, as the
Commander-in-Chief, I am resolved to make sure that those who have died
in combats' sacrifice are not in vain.…"; in October 2006, he commented
that "[r]etreating from Iraq would dishonor the men and women who have
given their lives in that country, and mean their sacrifice has been in
vain."
In a strange way, this is but another version of the
"waste" explanation set on its head. Now that "supporting the troops"
has become not only the gold standard, but essentially the only
standard, by which this administration can rally support for Bush's
war, such presidential statements have become commonplace. No longer is
Congress to fund the war in Iraq; it is to fund the troops, whatever
any particular representative might think of administration policy.
Here,
for instance, is how a White House response to the House of
Representatives resolution criticizing the President's Iraq surge plan
put it on February 16th: "Soon, Congress will have the opportunity to
show its support for the troops in Iraq by funding the supplemental
appropriations request the President has submitted, and which our men
and women in combat are counting on." Or as the President stated the
previous day: "Our troops are risking their lives. As they carry out
the new strategy, they need our patience, and they need our support…
Our men and women in uniform are counting on their elected leaders to
provide them with the support they need to accomplish their mission. We
have a responsibility, Republicans and Democrats have a responsibility
to give our troops the resources they need to do their job and the
flexibility they need to prevail." Or in a press conference the day
before that: "Soon Congress is going to be able to vote on a piece of
legislation that is binding, a bill providing emergency funding for our
troops. Our troops are counting on their elected leaders in Washington,
D.C. to provide them with the support they need to do their mission."
Put
another way, American troops in Iraq, or heading for Iraq, and the
American dead from the Iraq War are now hostage to, and the only
effective excuse for, Bush administration policy; and American
politicians and the public are being held hostage by the idea that the
troops must be supported (and funded) above all else, no matter how
wasteful or repugnant or counterproductive or destructive or dangerous
you may consider the war in Iraq.
The President expressed this particularly vividly in response to the following question at his recent news conference:
"[i]f
you're one of those Americans that thinks you've made a terrible
mistake [in Iraq], that it's destined to end badly, what do you do? If
they speak out, are they by definition undermining the troops?"
Bush replied, in part:
"I
said early in my comment… somebody who doesn't agree with my policy is
just as patriotic a person as I am. Your question is valid. Can
somebody say, we disagree with your tactics or strategy, but we support
the military -- absolutely, sure. But what's going to be interesting is
if they don't provide the flexibility and support for our troops that
are there to enforce the strategy that David Petraeus, the general on
the ground, thinks is necessary to accomplish the mission."
This
is hot-button blackmail. Little could be more painful than a parent,
any parent, outliving a child, or believing that a child had his or her
life cut off at a young age and in vain. To use such natural parental
emotions, as well as those that come from having your children (or
siblings or wife or husband) away at war and in constant danger of
injury or death, is the last refuge of a political scoundrel. It
amounts to mobilizing the prestige of anxious or grieving parents in a
program of national emotional blackmail. It effectively musters support
for the President's ongoing Iraq policy by separating the military from
the war it is fighting and by declaring non-support for the war taboo,
if you act on it.
It indeed does turn the troops in a wasteful
and wasted invasion and war, ordered by a wasteful, thoughtless
administration of gamblers and schemers who had no hesitation about
spilling other people's blood, into hostages. Realistically, for an
administration that was, until now, unfazed by the crisis at Walter
Reed, this is nothing but building your politics on the backs of the
dead, the maimed, and the psychologically distraught or destroyed.
As
the Iranians in 1979 took American diplomats hostage, so in 2007 the
top officials of the Bush administration, including the President and
Vice President, have taken our troops hostage and made them stand-ins
and convenient excuses for failed policies for which they must continue
to die. Someone should break out those yellow ribbons. Our troops need
to be released, without a further cent of ransom being paid, and
brought home as soon as possible.