Published on Thursday, January 18, 2007 by The Nation
An Impartial Interrogation of George W. Bush
by George McGovern
http://www.commondreams.org/views07/0118-26.htm
Senator George McGovern delivered these remarks at the National
Press Club January 12. They are published here as part of Moral
Compass, a series focusing on the spoken word.
I'm glad to be back at the National Press Club. Indeed, at the
age of eighty-four, I'm glad to be anywhere. In my younger years
when the subject of aging came up, trying to sound worldly wise,
I would say, "It doesn't matter so much the number of years you
have, but what you do with those years." I don't say that
anymore. I now want to reach a hundred. Why? Because I
thoroughly enjoy life and there are so many things I must still
do before entering the mystery beyond. The most urgent of these
is to get American soldiers out of the Iraqi hellhole
Bush-Cheney and their neoconservative theorists have created in
what was once called the cradle of civilization. It is believed
to be the location of the Garden of Eden. I mention the
neoconservative theorists to recall Walter Lippman's observance,
"There is nothing so dangerous as a belligerent professor."
One of the things I miss about my eighteen years in the US
Senate are the stories of the old Southern Democrats. I didn't
always vote with them, but I loved their technique of responding
to an opponent's questions with a humorous story. Once when
Senator Sam Ervin of North Carolina had to handle a tough
question from Mike Mansfield, he said, "You know, Mr. Leader,
that question reminds me of the old Baptist preacher who was
telling a class of Sunday school boys the creation story. 'God
created Adam and Eve and from this union came two sons, Cain and
Abel and thus the human race developed.' A boy in the class then
asked, 'Reverend, where did Cain and Abel get their wives?'
After frowning for a moment, the preacher replied, 'Young
man--it's impertinent questions like that that's hurtin'
religion.'"
Well, Mr. Bush, Jr. I have some impertinent questions for you.
Mr. President, Sir, when reporter Bob Woodward asked you if you
had consulted with your father before ordering our army into
Iraq you said, "No, he's not the father you call on a decision
like this. I talked to my heavenly Father above." My question,
Mr. President: If God asked you to bombard, invade and occupy
Iraq for four years, why did he send an opposite message to the
Pope? Did you not know that your father, George Bush, Sr., his
Secretary of State James Baker and his National Security Advisor
General Scowcroft were all opposed to your invasion? Wouldn't
you, our troops, the American people and the Iraqis all be much
better off if you had listened to your more experienced elders
including your earthly father? Instead of blaming God for the
awful catastrophe you have unleashed in Iraq, wouldn't it have
been less self-righteous if you had fallen back on the
oft-quoted explanation of wrongdoing, "The devil made me do it?"
And Mr. President, after the 9/11 hit against the Twin Towers in
New York, which gained us the sympathy and support of the entire
world, why did you then order the invasion of Iraq, which had
nothing to do with 9/11? Are you aware that your actions
destroyed the international reservoir of good will towards the
United States? What is the cost to America of shattering the
standing and influence of our country in the eyes of the world?
Why, Mr. President did you pressure the CIA to report falsely
that Iraq was building weapons of mass destruction including
nuclear weapons? And when you ordered your Secretary of State,
Colin Powell, to go to New York and present to the UN the
Administration's "evidence" that Iraq was an imminent nuclear
threat to the United States, were you aware that after reading
this deceitful statement to the UN, Mr. Powell told an aid that
the so-called evidence was "bullshit"?
Is it reasonable to you, President Bush, that Colin Powell told
you near the end of your first term that he would not be in your
Administration if you were to receive a second term? What decent
person could survive two full terms of forced lying and deceit?
And Mr. President, how do you enjoy your leisure time, and how
can you sleep at night knowing that 3,014 young Americans have
died in a war you mistakenly ordered? What do you say to the
48,000 young Americans who have been crippled for life in mind
or body? What is your reaction to the conclusion of the leading
British medical journal (Lancet) that since you ordered the
bombardment and occupation of Iraq four years ago, 600,000 Iraqi
men, women and children have been killed? What do you think of
the destruction of the Iraqi's homes, their electrical and water
systems, their public buildings?
And Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney, while neither of you has ever been
in combat (Mr. Cheney asking and receiving five deferments from
the Vietnam War), have you not at least read or been briefed on
the terrible costs of that ill-advised and seemingly endless
American war in tiny Vietnam? Do you realize that another Texas
President, Lyndon Baines Johnson, declined to seek a second term
in part because he had lost his credibility over the disastrous
war in Vietnam? Are you aware that one of the chief architects
of that war, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, resigned his
office and years later published a book declaring that the war
was all a tragic mistake? Do you know this recent history in
which 58,000 young Americans died in the process of killing 2
million Vietnamese men, women and children? If you do not know
about this terrible blunder in Vietnam, are you not ignoring the
conclusion of one of our great philosophers: "Those who are
ignorant of history are condemned to repeat it." And, Mr.
President, in your ignorance of the lessons of Vietnam, are you
not condemning our troops and our people to repeat the same
tragedy in Iraq?
During the long years between 1963 and 1975 when I fought to end
the American war in Vietnam, first as a US Senator from South
Dakota and then as my party's nominee for President, my four
daughters ganged up on my one night. "Dad, why don't you give up
this battle? You've been speaking out against this crazy war
since we were little kids. When you won the Democratic
presidential nomination, you got snowed under by President
Nixon." In reply I said, "Just remember that sometimes in
history even a tragic mistake produces something good. The good
about Vietnam is that it is such a terrible blunder, we'll never
go down that road again." Mr. President, we're going down that
road again. So, what do I tell my daughters? And what do you
tell your daughters?
Mr. President, I do not speak either as a pacifist or a draft
dodger. I speak as one who after the attack on Pearl Harbor,
volunteered at the age of nineteen for the Army Air Corps and
flew thirty-five missions as a B-24 bomber. I believed in that
war then and I still do sixty-five years later. And so did the
rest of America. Mr. President, are you missing the intellectual
and moral capacity to know the difference between a justified
war and a war of folly in Vietnam or Iraq?
Public opinion polls indicate that two-thirds of the American
people think that the war in Iraq has been a mistake on your
part. It is widely believed that this war was the central reason
Democrats captured control of both houses of Congress. Polls
among the people of Iraq indicate that nearly all Iraqis want
our military presence in their country for the last four years
to end now. Why do you persist in defying public opinion in both
the United States and Iraq and throughout the other countries
around the globe? Do you see yourself as omniscient? What is
your view of the doctrine of self-determination, which we
Americans hold dear?
And wonder of wonders, Mr. President, after such needless death
and destruction, first in the Vietnamese jungle and now in the
Arabian desert, how can you order 21,500 more American troops to
Iraq? Are you aware that as the war in Vietnam went from bad to
worse, our leaders sent in more troops and wasted more billions
of dollars until we had 550,000 US troops in that little
country? It makes me shudder as an aging bomber pilot to
remember that we dropped more bombs on the Vietnamese and their
country than the total of all the bombs dropped by all the air
forces around the world in World War II. Do you, Mr. President,
honestly believe that we need tens of thousands of additional
troops plus a supplemental military appropriation of $200
billion before we can bring our troops home from this nightmare
in ancient Baghdad?
In your initial campaign for the Presidency, Mr. Bush, you
described yourself as a "compassionate conservative". What is
compassionate about consigning America's youth to a needless and
seemingly endless war that has now lasted longer than World War
II? And what is conservative about reducing the taxes needed to
finance this war and instead running our national debt to nine
trillion dollars with money borrowed from China, Japan, Germany
and Britain? Is this wild deficit financing your idea of
conservatism? Mr. President, how can a true conservative be
indifferent to the steadily rising cost of a war that claims
over $7 billion a month, $237 million every day? Are you
troubled to know as a conservative that just the interest on our
skyrocketing national debt is $760,000 every day. Mr. President,
our Nobel Prize-winning economist, Joseph Stiglitz, estimates
that if the war were to continue until 2010 as you have
indicated it might, the cost would be over a trillion dollars.
Perhaps, Mr. President, you should ponder the words of a genuine
conservative - England's nineteenth-century member of
Parliament, Edmund Burke: "A conscientious man would be cautious
how he dealt in blood".
And, Mr. President at a time when your most respected generals
have concluded that the chaos and conflict in Iraq cannot be
resolved by more American dollars and more American young
bodies, do you ever consider the needs here at home of our own
anxious and troubled society? What about the words of another
true conservative, General and President Dwight Eisenhower who
said that, "Every gun that is made, every warship launched,
every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from
those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not
clothed."
And, Mr. President, would not you and all the rest of us do well
to ponder the farewell words of President Eisenhower: "In the
councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of
the unwarranted influence of the military-industrial complex.
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists
and will persist."
Finally, Mr. President, I ask have you kept your oath of office
to uphold the Constitution when you use what you call the war on
terrorism to undermine the Bill of Rights? On what
constitutional theory do you seize and imprison suspects without
charge, sometimes torturing them in foreign jails? On what
constitutional or legal basis have you tapped the phones of
Americans without approval of the courts as required by law? Are
you above the Constitution, above the law, and above the Geneva
accords? If we are fighting for freedom in Iraq as you say, why
are you so indifferent to protecting liberty here in America?
Many Americans are now saying in effect, "The American war in
Iraq has created a horrible mess but how can we now walk away
from it?" William Polk, a former Harvard and University of
Chicago professor of Middle East Studies and a former State
Department expert on the Middle East, has teamed up with me on a
recent book requested by Simon and Schuster. It is entitled, Out
of Iraq: A Practical Plan for Withdrawal Now. I feel awkward
praising it, so I give you the respected journalist of the New
York Times, and now of Newsweek, Anna Quindlen who told Charlie
Rose on his excellent TV program: "There is a wonderful book I
am recommending to everyone. It's a very small, readable book by
George McGovern and William Polk called Out of Iraq. And it just
very quickly runs you through the history of the country, the
makeup of the country, how we got in, the arguments for getting
in--many of which don't withstand scrutiny--and how we can get
out. It's like a little primer. I think the entire nation should
read it and then we will be united."
If you need a second for the judgment of Anna Quindlen, I give
you the esteemed Library Journal: "In this crisp and cogently
argued book, former Senator McGovern and scholar Polk offer a
trenchant and straightforward critique of the war in Iraq. What
makes their highly readable book unique is that it not only
argues why the United States needs to disengage militarily from
Iraq now...but also clearly delineates practical steps for troop
withdrawal...Essential reading for anybody who wants to cut
through the maze of confusion that surrounds current US policy
in Iraq, this book is highly recommended for public and academic
libraries."
Professor Polk is a descendant of President Polk and the brother
of the noted George Polk, is here today from his home in
southern France and he will join me at the podium as I conclude
this impartial interrogation of President Bush. And now, members
of the National Press Club and your guests, it's your turn to
cross-examine Bill Polk and me in, of course, an equally
impartial manner.
George McGovern, senator from South Dakota from 1962 to 1980 and
Democratic candidate for President in 1972, is the author of The
Third Freedom: Ending Hunger in Our Time.
Copyright © 2007 The Nation
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