In his wonderful book "The Nightingale's Song," author Robert Timberg, himself a decorated Marine combat veteran of Vietnam, wrote of the fault line within his own generation of 27 million American men who came of military draft age between 1964 and 1973 (when the draft was ended at the urging of President Richard Nixon). More than 16 million of those American males avoided military service by means honorable or dishonorable, legal or extra-legal.
Timberg made no effort to conceal his personal contempt for the "chicken-hawks" — men whose testosterone glands miraculously began pumping after the age of 26, when their own exposure to the draft passed. Swaggering tough talk was their style, as they often adopted the jargon of the combat they, themselves, had gone to great lengths to avoid.
Military service has mattered. In every presidential election since World War II, one or both presidential nominees has worn his country's uniform. This year, 2012, breaks that streak. Neither Barack Obama nor Mitt Romney has ever served in the United States military.
President Obama was just 12 years old when the military draft was terminated. But he apparently never considered volunteering to serve.
Former Gov. Romney was one of the 27 million American men who came of draft age during the Vietnam War. Born in 1947, Romney left Stanford after his freshman year for a demanding two-year Mormon mission in France about which he has said: "There surely were times on my mission when I was having a particularly difficult time accomplishing very little when I would have longed for the chance to be serving in the military, but that was not to be."
Easy there, Mitt. Nobody is arguing that seeking converts by knocking on unwelcoming strangers' doors for 12 hours every day in a foreign country is any day at the beach. But if you, a self-described strong supporter of the U.S.
war in Vietnam, "longed" in 1968 as you returned from your mission to serve in the military, all you had to do was walk into your corner recruiting station and take the oath.
From personal experience, I can testify that in the 1960s if you could see lightning and hear thunder, the American military was thrilled to have you.
Now we are, sadly, a nation of chicken-hawks loudly beating the drums of war. Today's fashion is a perverse strain of "patriotism-lite," which prominently features American flags in our lapels and on our gas-guzzlers, but with our all-out opposition to paying as much as another dime in taxes to cover the costs of the war or the care of our fellow Americans who fight it.
In the last decade, this nation, under two presidents of different parties, has for the first time in 166 years waged war without a military draft to provide manpower and without tax increases to pay for it. All the sacrifice and all the suffering have been done by fewer than 1 percent of Americans, while our leaders have asked us to pay no price, to bear no burden, to endure no hardship.
The strength of a nation, we know through the pain of history, is determined by that nation's resolve to stand together for the common good through individual and universal sacrifice.
The conservative author Michael Barone has written, "War demands equality of sacrifice." Our generation has now repealed that great American value.
The dedication and the excellence of the American volunteer military is unarguable. What is clear is an all-volunteer military is bad public policy for the nation. In the words of respected military journalist George Wilson's combat veteran: "An army doesn't fight a war, a country fights a war. ... And if a country is not willing to fight a war, it should never send an army."
Will either of our non-veteran nominees have the courage to tell us that war is not a spectator sport and that citizenship includes responsibilities as well as rights? I hope so.
To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
Lots of great points. Is there something specific that he is calling out the candidates to do? I think the time has come that America is not willing to fight these overseas wars and its time to withdraw the military. It is unnerving that both these non-veteran candidates are huge war-wongers, however Ron Paul, who actually served, wants these wars to end?
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Fri Jun 1, 2012 9:34 AM
Well Mark,
Thanks for stating so well what i have thought but could'nt put into words since returning from Viet Nam myself in 1968. Service of some sort to America should be a prerequist to citizenship. The kind of service the Morman church demands of its members is not unlike what we should expect in America from Americans, like they do in Switzerland. Short of that happening in the near future, Romney fits the discriptions chicken hawk and draft dodger. He has availed himself of wevery privelege his wealth can buy.
i would appreciate your entertaining the possibility that the Republican party is perfectly satisfied with the status quo, is deliberately contributing to our nations demise and essentially holding America hostage until we give everything to the rich and powerful. I know that you in your insulated enviornment probably don't get that sense, but for me where I come from and in the communirty where I live, this is factual. The oposition to Obama is pure and simple racism, the" R" word. Because it has become the R word it is in a catogory of untouchable topics, thus protecting those who are the holders of this belief, generally Republicans or Tea Party proponents. I don't need to tell you what the cost is for the 99% of us on the outside who are held hostage.
I am happy to talk more on this if you will consider the possibility.
Rich
Sir;... I did not serve, and may have run if called, and not out of cowardice since my courage has often been tested... And yet, I do not advocate war as any effective tool of policy, nor do I accept practice in foreign lands that is offensive, and will demand at some point military defense...
I do note, that the very jackasses that get us into war without consensus demand equality of sacrifice, -when the beneifits of war are enjoyed by a select few...If it is worth doing it is worth doing for free... And that stuff about the greatest patriots being profiteers is true, but wrong...The money ought to get out of the job, and not into it...
What do they ever do but ask the common people to sacrifice for them???... Do they ever tell working people to stay in bed while they serve breakfast, and rub our feet??? It is all for them and all about them, our wars our peace, our trade, our loss of jobs, our defense of capital in foreign lands or our want of defense to save them from taxation... I am sick of living a life that is all about them...I am ready for a life that is all about me...Me, Me, me, me, and what can the wee people do for Me...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Jun 2, 2012 4:59 AM
The words, "Thank you for your service," seem to ring hollow these days, sort of like "Have a nice day" from someone who really does not give a damn how the rest of your day goes. We have horribly abused our soldiers by sending them to occupy Iraq every other year. We even sent them without proper armor (they had to buy or improvise their own) when we first started the occupation. We have bled our treasury to pay big bucks to contractors like Halliburton and Blackwater while an enlisted man with a non-working wife qualifies for food stamps with the first child.
Now we are still in Afghanistan, which couldn't be held by the British or the Russians. What makes us think we can do any better? We got rid of Bin Laden, so why are we still there? What is there that we want? If we spend our treasure on improving Afghanistan, what makes us think they will appreciate it or that things won't go back to the same after we leave?
Americans need to get educated and learn history. We should nnever again let the chicken hawks like Cheny profit from the sacrifice of our servicemen.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Paul M. Petkovsek
Sat Jun 2, 2012 5:28 AM
Re: Paul M. Petkovsek...Sir, the reason primitive democracies brought all people to the point of civilization is that the were so successful at defense, which was their only purpose other than justice for all... Today, our parties which have together made a token of democracy has proved how much democracy we lack by engaging in wars without consensus... Speed is not the essence of democracy...Consensus is the essence of democracy, and some action of such moment as war that is likely to affect every houshold, and threaten everybody's property for little tangible gain should be considered long and hard, and not be engaged in except for defense, and out of necessity... Wars of adventure engaged in with little prospect of long term gain, and primarily for the profit of a few are social poison that no society can long enjoy...As far as I can tell, every military mistake was made in these two wars, and only the trust in good fortune or God or high technology would allow anyone to accept them...War is too important for generals, and we have no one else in a position to stand up to nut case presidents and tell them what our limits are, what the limits of any adventure are...The civilians in government are too inclined to be militaristic, and the military is too inclined to over rate the ability of their men and machines, and war ends up being a burden for a few, when most do not know nor appreciate their sacrifice...We ask too much of our soldiers for too little in return.....Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #5
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Jun 2, 2012 10:43 AM
An 8th grade American History lesson about WW11 could teach the masses about shared sacrifice. We are about to enter a generation of history in which our leaders will not have served in the military. I do not think that is a healthy situation for our democracy, but that is the reality we face. Future leaders should be obligated to reach out to veterans and their support groups and be required to sign this pledge..."I support Veterans and to show my support I will push to have the VA fully funded every year, no questions asked. Let's see who has the courage to do it.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Jeff Beall
Sun Jun 3, 2012 9:37 AM
Re: Jeff Beall;... I think it would be cool to elect people who have been in harms way on the orders of people too aloof to have ever slept in the mud or smelled death... Idiots who forget to think of war as of necessity, and as the low point of failure for diplomacy are all too casual in putting friends and enemies alike at death's door for political gain... Nothing really justifies it...Psychopathology explains it... Blind ambition without regard for consequences explains it... Nothing in this life will ever make war right...It is the terrible result we feel of our own injustice to each other in this country that makes so many howl for war who will never suffer it... That political brand- that encourages such talk and thought, knowing it springs from our own pain that people are loathe to admit out of the necessity of then seeking justice and honor, which they are not moral enough to demand in all their affairs -is the tattoo of criminals..... .Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #7
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Jun 5, 2012 8:21 AM
Re: All. If parents are willing to sacrifice their kids to fight a war, then perhaps that war is worth fighting. If there is a draft, as there was in my day, parents will fight it, if they don't believe in the war. That is Mark's point.
That contrasts mightily with this modern-day business of using sales pitches to entice the desperate and unemployed into the great deal of subjecting themselves to military service in exchange for a good salary, some educational benefits, and overall a great benefits package if they happen to survive in one piece with all of their limbs attached and their brains functional.
They get to roll the dice and the rest of the nation gets to forget about the whole thing most of the time. War just becomes another business. This is not what we want to do.
Re: Masako;...Democracies are defensive forms of social organization because they are terrible at offense... At defense you want every man to look first to cover his own ess, and to think like a general for the effective and efficient use of the resources at hand... Democracies demand consensus, which is a slow process governed by necessity, because defense demands a hundred percent commitment to hold a line...
This nonsense we have gone through, of a rush to war, sold to a bare majority of angry and offended people, and driven through a congress more concerned about their political survival than the good of the nation is proof of our decline and demoraliztion as a people... We need a defense against our leaders... We need a defense against our rich who profit from war and put a price tag on death..
More and more our military is becoming mercenary, and that too is a sign of decline since unjust rulers always try to hold out against the will of the people by the use of a highly paid, usually foreign military... But then, the adage applies from back when the Swiss supplied trained soldiers to all sides without regard to the justice of the cause: Pas l'argent, pas le Swiss... No money, no Swiss...Perhaps 90 percent of what we spend for defense never leaves the banks of the rich, and yet we are supplied from all over the world... It is pure profit for which the actual killing done by an actual human being to a human being is the cheapest and least rewarding part of the process... At least the military learned something from the disaster of Vietnam... Now, instead of spreading the madness accross a whole generation where it was impossible to treat, they have localize the stress among a few forced to endure multiple tours...
With a friend who I would miss sorely to lose, a veteran of several tours in Iraq now training for the possible deployment to Afghanistan, I can testify that the experience of combat is like no other, and it is remarkable to find some one not damaged by it, though technically uninjured... We want people to be able to endure such hardships, but we also want to show them when all is said and done that it was not suffered in futility, and that every death and injury served to buy a better world for all people... Ultimately; only democracy can defend against such madness as we were made a party to, and we have less of it every day...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #11
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Jun 8, 2012 5:53 AM