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----- Original Message ----- 
From: NY Transfer News 
Sent: Sunday, September 16, 2001 9:51 AM
Subject: The Conflict Over War


Via NY Transfer News * All the News That Doesn't Fit

Washington Post September 16, 2001
<www.washingtonpost.com>

The Conflict Over War

Patriotic Fervor Has Swelled -- and With It a Wave of Vexing Questions

By Richard Leiby and David Montgomery

On Capitol Hill, a bevy of congressmen wearing somber suits and
steely demeanors stand before TV cameras and demand a declaration of
war. Against ...  somebody.

Who?

"The spawn of evil" is how Rep. Virgil Goode of Virginia describes
the faceless Them. He has joined Robert Barr of Georgia -- sponsor of
the war resolution -- and four other colleagues who say they're tired
of mere words. So they hold a news conference Thursday to marshal
support for their proposed declaration of war against any "entities"
that foment terrorism.

"Whatever it takes," says a sunburned tourist from Ohio, recording
the moment with his Japanese-made camcorder. Jeff Shiray, 45, calls
himself a "totally average American." He has a comfortable belly and
is vacationing with his wife and two kids.

Ready for war? "Absolutely," he says.

"That's what needs to be done to make the world a better place for
the future generations to grow up in," agrees a 21-year-old American
University student, Andrew Good. He's slender, dressed like a surfer
in sandals and a shell necklace, sporting a goatee and hair that's
been highlighted blond. Good never wanted to be a soldier before. Now
he's ready to sign up and kill people.

"Let's Drop the Big One," reads the hand-scrawled sign of a guy
walking in the twilight in front of the White House. "What's that
mean?" 10-year-old Robert Moore Jr. asks his mother, Margaret.

"Nothing, baby, you don't need to know," she says.

In polls and interviews, the vast majority of Americans support war
against the terrorists whose airborne attacks devastated New York
City and Washington, killing thousands of civilians and military
personnel. But as the week wore on, as the shock subsided and the
talk of war materialized into certainty, another reality set in:
Tuesday's mayhem, which seemed at first so much like a flying-glass
and fireball-filled Bruce Willis flick, would not, like a bad movie,
be over in two hours. It would prompt self-examination and an
engagement with the brutality and length of actual war.

"In the past we looked at wars as video games, which had restart
buttons on them, but now people have seen what happened in New York
City and Washington," says Danny O. Coulson, a former FBI commander
who founded the bureau's counter-terrorism squad. "We have to
understand that war is a dirty business -- that's why it's called
war."

Did our foe select "United" and "American" planes in perverse
mockery? In a continuing war, may we expect fanatics to strap on
dynamite and detonate themselves at, say, Space Mountain?

The purpose of terrorism, as Lenin once observed, is to terrify.
Fortitude and sacrifice are required to carry out what Secretary of
State Colin Powell called "a long-term campaign, which is why we are
characterizing it as a war." President Bush himself said, "This will
be a monumental struggle of good versus evil." Yesterday, the
president was even more emphatic. "My message is for everybody who
wears a uniform to get ready," he said. " ...  We're at war."

Americans have embraced the kind of flag-unfurling patriotism that
recalls the fervor of the Greatest Generation, those stoic folk
heroes who beat back fascism in World War II. But now a people
unified in recent years by their love of high stock market returns,
SUVs and certain sitcoms about nothing will face challenges beyond
flying the colors. Time for a national gut check. Time for lessons in
patriotism. 

No More Safe Remove

Before a polished granite wall inscribed with 58,226 names, James
Durbin finally finds him: one of his best friends from Little Rock,
the one who went off to West Point and died in Vietnam. His name was
Donald W. Dietz; they played football together in high school.

"It's obviously the price you have to pay," says Durbin, an Air Force
Academy graduate. He spent the war overseeing missile production --
"about as far from the action as you could have been." A lawyer in
civilian life, he is already retired at 56.

A group of German tourists pass by, chattering. It's a reminder of
how lucky Americans have been for decades, to have largely known war
at a safe remove. No longer.

"Certainly during my lifetime, I think this is the most threatening
thing to our way of life," Durbin says of the terrorists' attack on
America. "If ever we have the endurance and the ability to focus more
than 20 minutes on any given thing, I would hope this would be it."

Do we have what it takes?

"I would hope we do," he says solemnly. "I don't know if we do." 

The Rally

"Americans are pretty lazy until there is a time of significant
adversity," says Coulson, whose memoir, "No Heroes," details FBI
cases involving both homegrown and foreign fanatics. "We haven't been
tested."

Since retiring from his rough-and-tumble career, Coulson has become a
security consultant for celebrities. He spoke by cell phone from a
Florida golf course. "We have become spoiled," he says of his fellow
Americans.

We have lived for decades without knowing true fear. The Cold War was
over, crime has been down, we enjoyed the illusion that our borders
were secure.

"I don't want to sound corny, but you don't temper a sword by putting
it in a bed of cotton, you temper it by putting it in a fire and
beating it with a hammer," Coulson says. "What we'll have to see is
if we're willing to sacrifice and undergo inconvenience."

Last week patriotism was well represented in blood drives, flag
sales, donations to relief efforts. There are calls to award medals
to the American heroes on those hijacked planes and those who risked
their lives to rush to the rescue. People have rallied to pray, mourn
and offer support. Sure, we noticed the Hueys overhead and Humvees in
the streets, but this is no state of siege. Yet.

Yesterday scores of union members knocked on hundreds of doors in
Washington, passing out fliers suggesting ways for people to help.

"The question here is whether two weeks from now, when the television
networks return to their regular programming, will this feeling fall
out of the American psyche," Joslyn Williams, president of the
Metropolitan Washington Labor Council, said as he panted up stoops in
Mount Pleasant. "Time will tell if this bonding we have, this instant
patriotism, will fade."

Other questions that loom: How many more American casualties is the
public willing to accept? Beyond delays at airports, what sacrifices
are we, personally, willing to make? What phrases in the Bill of
Rights would we be willing to discard in the name of national
security?

"We can't sacrifice with blood in our eye our core values, or think
that we can put them aside for a while and pick them up again after
we take care of these awful people," says George Mason University
history professor Roger Wilkins. The author of a nuanced book on
patriotism, "Jefferson's Pillow," Wilkins says the enemy wins once we
subvert our democratic principles.

"It forces a much greater maturity on the American people. We like to
hit back. We have to deal with much more complexity in this fight. It
requires people to think and discuss. It doesn't give off to
beer-hall fulminations." 

A Dove's Cry

Mary Haas, 51, fights back tears after she climbs a grassy hillock in
Arlington to glimpse the Pentagon, with its blackened gash, from a
half-mile away. "This was uncivilized, obviously," she says. "We want
to rise above it, yet we want to punish those who did it."

Haas calls herself a dove and worries: Can we eradicate the enemy
without becoming like him? After all, hating and dehumanizing are a
necessary part of war.

Scores of people hike to this well-trampled patch of earth at the end
of Arlington Ridge Road to contemplate such questions as they survey
the aftermath of a direct hit on freedom. The small park contains an
historical plaque commemorating the Civil War-era Fort Albany, which
used to stand here. The place has become a shrine: candles, flowers,
American flags; people weeping alone, people on their knees praying,
people urging reason and restraint, others urging missile strikes.

Haas, from Centreville, has a camera with her, as do many others, but
she wonders whether it would be unseemly to take a picture. Then she
regards the totality of what's in her viewfinder: The Washington
Monument rises directly beyond the nation's war headquarters, the
Lincoln Memorial is to the left, and the rest of the capital spreads
into the distance.

"It's like, You didn't get us," she says. "It's horrible, lives were
lost, but ...  Everything is still there. We were attacked but we're
still strong, still viable, and probably made stronger by it.

"That's why it's a good picture," she says, after snapping a frame.

Brothers Eschewing Arms

Under a pine tree on the hill, a young man wearing a camouflage
bandanna on his head lights a cigarette. Then he lights a candle.

"I've been wearing this to show we're not afraid," Luis Santiago, 21,
of Arlington, says of his bandanna. He and his 18-year-old brother,
Jayson Arvelo, came to the Pentagon overlook out of a feeling of
helplessness.

"I can't do nothing, man. I'm not there working," Arvelo says,
pointing to the crane operators, firefighters and rescuers below. "I
feel like I need to do something. That's what everybody's thinking.
They just want to do something."

But the brothers' patriotic zeal is complicated. They are no blind
followers of U.S. policy. They were born in Puerto Rico, and say the
U.S. Navy must stop its practice bombing on the island of Vieques.

And they oppose calls for war to avenge terrorism. It will only bring
death to more innocent people in other countries, they say, if we
reflexively bomb the nations that harbor terrorists.

"More civilian casualties -- it would be like what they did to us,"
Santiago says. 

The Price of Freedom

"Freedom Is Not Free," declare the words carved on the Korean War
Veterans Memorial on the Mall. Ron Neal, 58, a semi-retired flight
instructor from Reston, contemplates that message amid the awful
tallies.

Wounded: U.S. troops, 103,284, U.N. troops, 1,064,453. Dead: U.S.
troops, 54,246, U.N. 628,833.

Disqualified by asthma and fatherhood, Neal never fought a war. But
his brothers did. He often has felt guilty about that.

Are we really ready to fight this new war?

"I don't think we're ever ready for it," Neal says. His voice is
pained. "Maybe this is unwinnable." He pauses for a long time,
staring silently at the memorial from behind tinted aviator glasses.
Then says slowly: "Yes, I do believe that whether we're ready or not,
we should go to war."

He also recalls a line from the movie "Patton": "No bastard ever won
a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor,
dumb bastard die for his country."

At Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 350 in Takoma Park yesterday,
members vote to donate $2,500 to the burn unit at Washington Hospital
Center to help Pentagon victims. Post commander John Davis, 58,
recalls his service aboard an Air Force gunship firing at tanks in
the Vietnam War. He lost a lot of friends. War, he says, is not
pretty, but necessary -- never more so than now.

"If we don't do something, it will only get worse for our people
here," he says. "Vietnam was a halfhearted effort, Korea was a
halfhearted effort, the Persian Gulf was a halfhearted effort. To
solve this problem you have to go the whole nine yards. We've got to
go all the way to the root of it, and eradicate it."

He adds: "A small thing to do for your children, isn't it?" 

Tiny Fires

A narrative of this scale demands a villain. We need to put a face on
our foe. And an evil smirk that we can wipe right off. Payback. It's
ingrained in our cinematic imaginations.

Last week, our anxiety seemed to grow because we could not pinpoint
the perpetrator, and confront him. The formula demands catharsis. In
the third act, the bad guy dies. (Starring in the role of secretary
of defense: Rambo.)

"The American society does not enjoy nonresolution," Rich Stetson
says. "We're impatient." He is 38, muscular, standing in shorts and a
T-shirt on the great terrace of the U.S. Capitol, taking in the view
of the reflecting pool below.

Around the water's edge thousands of small flames flicker. The cool
evening air is perfumed by floral candle smoke. Fragments of songs
spiral upward, spontaneously, drowning out the thrum of crickets:
"God Bless America," "The Star-Spangled Banner," "Amazing Grace."

"I felt a little tension in my blood," Stetson says, by way of
explaining why he came from Arlington to witness the vigil. He had to
process events and images. Needed to uncoil. "And, I don't know, be
part of the patriotism."

After working in shipping overseas, he recently earned a master's
degree in international affairs and has been trying to get a State
Department job. His generation wasn't much for political engagement
-- too young to protest the Vietnam War -- but he thinks all
Americans have a "fighting spirit" now.

Down in the crowd, though, you don't hear any angry speeches against
Islamic radicalism. A teenager with his hair tinted green is waving a
large Stars and Stripes. It's an indie rock concert crowd: The
T-shirts say "Help the Homeless," "One Love" and "Ecampus.com." The
most bellicose message is: "Don't Mess With Texas." At one point the
scent of burning cannabis overpowers the candles.

People are finding ways to support America, on their own terms. An
e-mail circulated nationwide, urging citizens, "This Friday night,
September 14, 2001, at 7:00 p.m. step out of your door, stop your
car, or step out of your establishment and light a candle."

By week's end, Rambo still has not unleashed his grenade launcher. So
at 7, Rich Stetson and his family go outside and ignite their own
tiny fire against terrorism. 

Only God

All week long the airwaves throb with hot rhetoric about retribution;
about ridding the world of evil. But Wednesday night under the ornate
Capitol rotunda, as politicians and clergy pray for the victims of
the atrocities, one senator seeks a blessing for America's worst
enemies.

"Let's ask for God's forgiveness upon those who did this terrible
deed and that they might repent and turn to a different life," says
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) "And let us then try to find what is
the good and righteous thing to do."

Afterward, the Rev. Daniel Coughlin, the House of Representatives'
chaplain, put her prayer in context: "She's a Catholic, I'm
Catholic," he says, as the television klieg lights fade. "Sometimes
we can't forgive, so we turn to the Lord to give us the power to
forgive because it's the only way of moving on and getting over some
of the negativity."

Coughlin had considered reading a selection from the Koran, but
decided against it. He chose a comforting passage from the otherwise
fearsomely apocalyptic Book of Revelation:

"I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, 'Behold. God's dwelling
is with the human race...  . He will wipe every tear from their eyes
and there will be no more death or mourning, wailing or pain, for the
old order has passed away.' "

The message, says the priest, is that God can bring good out of evil.
But only God. Love, American-Style

"My subject tonight is patriotism," the speechwriter Peggy Noonan
said in a Heritage Foundation lecture a few years ago. "Our society
does not teach patriotism to the young. The media do not teach it or
suggest it or encourage it. When they refer to it at all, it's to
show patriotism as vulgar or naive or aggressive."

It particularly bothered Noonan that many schools no longer taught
the Pledge of Allegiance. "Nobody is really teaching our children to
love their country," she said.

How about now? Noonan, who wrote speeches for Ronald Reagan, a
president who could inspire a swell of patriotism with a cock of his
head, was glad to be asked. She was quick to offer this response:

"Incidents like [Tuesday's] terrible terrorism -- which arouse the
protectiveness of the young, which lead people on TV to articulate
what America is, which the young hear and absorb -- tend to have a
wholly unanticipated benefit: and that is they rouse us, remind us
what is at stake when we talk of our future, remind us who we are."

War. What is it good for? Something. 

Civics Lesson

The Moore family, visiting from Connecticut, saw dogs sniffing for
bombs along the White House perimeter. "Yeah, it was really neat to
watch," says Margaret Moore, outside 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. with her
10-year-old son, 4-year-old daughter and husband.

"You can't live in fear," says Bob Moore Sr., a hospital
administrator who brought his family with him for a conference here
and couldn't leave.

The Moores feel safe in front of the White House and want their kids
to know it. True, the building could have been leveled by a hijacked
jetliner just a day earlier. For this family it's all part of an
unfolding civics lesson: "If we felt really insecure, we wouldn't be
standing here," the father says, draping an arm around his boy.

But here comes that patriot with the disturbing sign about dropping
the big one. On the other side he has scrawled in blue marker,
"Legalize State-Sanctioned Assassination."

The parents scramble to try to explain why this is bad. Just because
someone really hurt you, and you know it was wrong, it doesn't mean
you can hurt that person back in the same way. Because that would be
wrong, they say. It would be ...  un-American. 

A Different Long-Term Campaign

Kristen Arps, 24, a teacher from Hyattsville, stands in Dupont Circle
with two dozen other demonstrators whose signs declare, "The U.S. Is
the Greatest Purveyor of Violence in the World" and "You Shall Reap
What You Sow." Many of these people had planned to demonstrate
against the World Bank and International Monetary Fund at the end of
the month. Now they have a more immediate concern.

"I'm shocked to hear that instantly it's been 'War, war, war!' " says
Arps, whose sign says "Resist All Violence." The drumbeat for
vengeance, on top of the grief and rage over the murderous attacks,
is whipping everyone into a frenzy, she fears. "Our country has been
turned into one big lynch mob. We're going to hang somebody."

But if not war, then what?

Standing next to her is Ruth Cohen, 27, from Adams Morgan, who
advocates a different kind of "long-term campaign" from the one
proposed by Bush administration officials. "War will not make our
country safe," Cohen insists, because it does not address the
underlying problem. She thinks hatred for America, embodied in the
suicide attacks Tuesday morning, stems from global inequities that
keep the United States fat and happy while other populations scrape
along and starve.

"What's going to help stop attacks against the U.S. is if we help
create a fairer world," Cohen says. Idealistic words -- but perhaps a
kind of long-range realpolitik, if you accept the difficulty of
eradicating religiously motivated terrorism through force.

But do we have what it takes to pursue this alternative to war? Does
America have the resolve to spread wealth and justice, even if it
might mean less for us to spend on minivans with built-in TVs and
bottled Starbucks Frappuccino?

"Our country has done amazing things and I know we can do this,"
Cohen says, proudly. "People pulled together in New York ...  The
American people are resourceful ...  We are amazing."

Only a week ago, she might have been startled to hear herself
sounding so, well, patriotic.

(c) 2001 The Washington Post Company

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