-Caveat Lector-

DefenseWatch "The Voice of the Grunt"
06-01-2004

Consequence Day
By David H. Hackworth

This past Memorial Day week - our nation's date for remembering and honoring the
fallen and those who served - saw more than the usual laying of wreaths,
flag-waving and patriotic speeches, including the president using the
prestigious Army War College as a bully pulpit from which to inform us that he
finally has a plan to put Iraq on a stable track.

But few Americans paused in between their barbecues and other Memorial Day
events to ask whether all of our country's conflicts have been worth the pain.
Few questioned whether the war in Iraq truly impacts al Qaeda - the real authors
of 9/11 and this country's clear and present primary danger - or is critical to
our national defense.



And fewer still challenged our political leaders on why, after 14 months of
bloodshed, we're still taking hits in Iraq. After all, once upon a time these
same cheerleaders were relentlessly proclaiming that the liberation would be
quick and easy, and our forces would be welcomed with open arms.



Perhaps we don't demand accountability anymore because we're afraid of being
labeled unpatriotic for not supporting the troops or our war leaders - who keep
promising they're close to winning what appears to be an unwinnable war.



Maybe changing Memorial Day to Consequence Day would foster deeper, more
reality-based thinking and more public debate before we ever again allow the
dogs of war to be unleashed over a phony Gulf of Tonkin attack - which Lyndon
Johnson used to get us stuck in Vietnam - or the similarly trumped-up weapons of
mass destruction/Sept. 11 terrorist connection that George W. Bush used to make
his case against Saddam and sink our nation into the treacherous Iraqi
quicksand.



>From the Revolutionary War to the present nightmare in Iraq, 1,200,000 American
soldiers and sailors have been killed. Tens of millions more have been marked
with the indelible scars of war - physical and psychological - they've been
doomed to carry to their graves. Veterans who've seen action and want to go back
for seconds are rare birds, and it's hard to find a vet who's a hawk. Those who'
ve faced down the dragon know too well the waste, the stupidity and the
unmitigated horror of war.



The United States has fought 11 major wars. The vast majority of these conflicts
wouldn't have occurred had our politicians done their due diligence, employed
moral courage and not bought into spurious rationales for bloodletting.
Certainly our history demonstrates the extreme caution we should exercise before
employing the always-ugly, always-costly military solution.



"The art of war is of vital importance to the state," wrote Sun Tzu 2,500 years
ago. "It is a matter of life and death, a road either to safety or to ruin.
Hence under no circumstances can it be neglected." This wise man also stated,
"In all history, there is no instance of a country having benefited from a
prolonged war."



The majority of our wars have been pricey and prolonged. Many have bitterly
divided the nation. And predictably, few of the war-pushers in the White House
or Congress have fought or at least served on active duty. This is particularly
true with the chicken hawks responsible for our latest and possibly most
catastrophic military misadventure - and just try to name any of their kids
currently in Iraq sweating a bullet or a mine explosion.



When Deputy SecDef Paul Wolfowitz, one of the prime architects of the Iraq War,
was recently asked to cite the number of Americans killed so far, he was so
clueless that he was off by several hundred - even though back before D-Day he
could give dozens of precisely calibrated neoconservative reasons about why
regime change in Iraq was an absolute necessity.



But to Celeste Zappala, the death of her boy, Sgt. Sherwood Baker, is no such
easily forgettable abstraction: "The explosion that killed my son in Baghdad
will go on in our lives forever. Sherwood gave the full measure of his
responsibility as an American citizen doing his duty for an administration that
betrayed him."



Perhaps the mothers of America should form a Consequence Committee to pass on
issues of war and peace. Clearly the decision to go to war is far too important
to be left to our shortsighted, agenda-driven politicians and Pentagon eager
beavers.



--Eilhys England also contributed to this column.



Http://www.hackworth.com is the address of Col. David H. Hackworth's home page.
Sign in for the free weekly Defending America column at his Web site. Send mail
to P.O. Box 11179, Greenwich, CT 06831. © 2003 David H. Hackworth. Please send
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