I knew that Jay Rockefeller was a U.S. senator from West Virginia, but
before now I had no idea what a seer the man is.
Not only can Rockefeller peer into the future and confidently tell us how it
turns out, but he can turn the clock back to the past, specifically March of
2003, and, like a projectionist putting on an alternate reel, show us the
better future that might have been.
If only the United States and its allies had not invaded Iraq, Swami
Rockefeller explains, the world would be a better place today - even if
Saddam Hussein were still in power.
How's he figure that? Well, Saddam "wasn't going to attack us. He would've
been isolated there. He would have been in control of that country but we
wouldn't have depleted our resources. ..." It's all right there, in the
senator's crystal ball.
But two can play at this purely speculative game. Let's turn the clock back
to 1936 and ask what would have happened if the West, instead of appeasing
Hitler when he started his campaign of aggression by seizing the Rhineland,
had stood up to him.
Suppose an Allied expeditionary force had crossed the Rhine early on and
deposed Der Feuhrer in a blitzkrieg of its own ... but then found itself
bogged down in a guerrilla war, having to fend off suicide bombings,
improvised explosive devices, and attacks on the freely elected government
that had replaced the brownshirts. Who knows what would have happened?
But surely this much is certain: Some isolationist senator with
Rockefeller's gift for second-guessing would have risen to explain how much
safer the world would have been if only we had let Hitler stay in power,
obnoxious little irritant that he might be. After all, "he wasn't going to
attack us. He would've been isolated there. He would have been in control of
that country but we wouldn't have depleted our resources. ..."
But as it happens, the free world did appease Herr Hitler. Again and again,
until it was almost too late. And we all know the result: the most
disastrous war in the history of the world.
Back in the present, the president of the United States continues to speak
out for his strategy in this war on terror, or whatever History in its
wisdom/hindsight, will call it.
Was the president's address from the Oval Office this week political? He
was accorded the airtime on the major networks because it wasn't supposed to
be political-and in the narrow, partisan sense, it may not have been. PB
But it was certainly a political speech in the broader sense, laying out the
president's grand strategy in this contentious conflict. In particular, his
address to the nation emphasized his faith in freedom as the best defense
against a fanatical enemy, one as devoted to violence and tyranny over
others as the fascist movements of the last century.
Reasonable men may agree or disagree with the president's policy, but
fair-minded Americans will recognize his sincerity. For there is no reason
other than honest belief for this president to pursue a course that has
imperiled his popularity and divided the country.
George W. Bush could have laid back, temporized just as his immediate
predecessors did, and allowed Saddam Hussein to remain in power in Iraq and
the Taliban in Afghanistan. He could have treated terrorism, even on a 9/11
scale, as a matter of law enforcement rather than war. Instead, he has moved
boldly against a great and growing threat.
The presidency of George W. Bush could turn out as tragically as Lyndon
Johnson's or Woodrow Wilson's, other presidential idealists. Much depends on
the patience and perseverance of the American people. Or he may yet prove as
far-sighted as Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan in understanding the
threat to the free world in their time.
But this president's continuing to plead his case, and his refusal to swerve
from its basic justification, even in difficult times and as the leader of
an increasingly divided nation, testifies to his honest convictions. One
need not share those convictions to recognize that the man has some. And
will fight for them.