|
Kerry: A Right
and
Responsibility to Speak Out
On 35th anniversary of
Senate testimony, Kerry says history repeating itself
John Kerry spoke in Boston’s
historic Faneuil Hall today about patriotism and dissent at a time of
war and the assault on free speech in America today. Below are
Kerry’s remarks as prepared for delivery.
Senator John Kerry
Faneuil Hall
April 22, 2006
As prepared for delivery
Thirty-five years ago today, I testified
before the Foreign Relations Committee of the United States Senate, and
called for an end to the war I had returned from fighting not long
before.
It was 1971 – twelve years after the
first American died in what was then South Vietnam, seven years after
Lyndon Johnson seized on a small and contrived incident in the Tonkin
Gulf to launch a full-scale war—and three years after Richard
Nixon was elected president on the promise of a secret plan for peace.
We didn’t know it at the time, but four more years of the War in Vietnam
still lay ahead. These were years in which the Nixon administration
lied and broke the law—and claimed it was prolonging war to
protect our troops as they withdrew—years that ultimately ended
only when politicians in Washington decided they would settle for a
“decent interval” between the departure of our forces and
the inevitable fall of Saigon.
I know that some active duty service members,
some veterans, and certainly some politicians scorned those of us who
spoke out, suggesting our actions failed to “support the
troops”—which to them meant continuing to support the war,
or at least keeping our mouths shut. Indeed, some of those critics said
the same thing just two years ago during the presidential campaign.
I have come here today to reaffirm that it
was right to dissent in 1971 from a war that was wrong. And to affirm
that it is both a right and an obligation for Americans today to
disagree with a President who is wrong, a policy that is wrong, and a
war in Iraq
that weakens the nation.
I believed then, just as I believe now, that
the best way to support the troops is to oppose a course that squanders
their lives, dishonors their sacrifice, and disserves our people and
our principles. When brave patriots suffer and die on the altar of
stubborn pride, because of the incompetence and self-deception of mere
politicians, then the only patriotic choice is to reclaim the moral
authority misused by those entrusted with high office.
I believed then, just as I believe now, that
it is profoundly wrong to think that fighting for your country overseas
and fighting for your country’s ideals at home are contradictory
or even separate duties. They are, in fact, two sides of the very same
patriotic coin. And that’s certainly what I felt when I came home
from Vietnam convinced that our political leaders were waging war
simply to avoid responsibility for the mistakes that doomed our mission
in the first place. Indeed, one of the architects of the war, Defense
Secretary Robert McNamara, confessed in a recent book that he knew
victory was no longer a possibility far earlier than 1971.
By then, it was clear to me that hundreds of
thousands of soldiers, sailors, Marines and
airmen—disproportionately poor and minority Americans—were
being sent into the valley of the shadow of death for an illusion
privately abandoned by the very men in Washington who kept sending them
there. All the horrors of a jungle war against an invisible enemy
indistinguishable from the people we were supposed to be
protecting—all the questions associated with quietly sanctioned
violence against entire villages and regions—all the confusion
and frustration that came from defending a corrupt regime in Saigon
that depended on Americans to do too much of the fighting—all
that cried out for dissent, demanded truth, and could not be denied by
easy slogans like “peace with honor”—or by the
politics of fear and smear. It was time for the truth, and time for it
all to end, and my only regret in joining the anti-war movement was
that it took so long to succeed—for the truth to prevail, and for
America to regain confidence in our own deepest values.
The fissures created by Vietnam have long been stubbornly resistant to closure. But I am proud it was
the dissenters—and it was our veterans’ movement—and
people like Judy Droz Keyes—who battled not just to end the war
but to combat government secrecy and the willful amnesia of a society
that did not want to remember its obligations to the soldiers who
fought. We fought the forgetting and pushed our nation to confront the
war’s surplus of sad legacies—Agent Orange, Amer-Asian
orphans, abandoned allies, exiled and imprisoned draft dodgers, doubts
about whether all our POWs had come home, and honor at last for those
who returned from Vietnam and those who did not. Because we spoke out, the truth was ultimately
understood that the faults in Vietnam were those of the
war, not the warriors.
Then, and even now, there were many alarmed
by dissent—many who thought that staying the course would
eventually produce victory—or that admitting the mistake and
ending it would embolden our enemies around the world. History
disproved them before another decade was gone: Fourteen years elapsed
between the first major American commitment of helicopters and pilots
to and the fall of Saigon. Fourteen years later,
the Berlin Wall fell, and with it the Communist threat. You cannot tell
me that withdrawing from Vietnam earlier would have
changed that outcome.
The lesson here is not that some of us were
right about Vietnam, and some of us were wrong. The lesson is that true patriots must defend
the right of dissent, and hear the voices of dissenters, especially
now, when our leaders have committed us to a pre-emptive “war of
choice” that does not involve the defense of our people or our
territory against aggressors. The patriotic obligation to speak out
becomes even more urgent when politicians refuse to debate their
policies or disclose the facts. And even more urgent when they seek,
perversely, to use their own military blunders to deflect opposition
and answer their own failures with more of the same. Presidents and
politicians may worry about losing face, or votes, or legacy; it is
time to think about young Americans and innocent civilians who are
losing their lives.
This is not the first time in American
history when patriotism has been distorted to deflect criticism and
mislead the nation.
In the infancy of the Republic, in 1798,
Congress enacted the Alien and Sedition Acts to smear Thomas Jefferson
and accuse him of treason. Newspapers were shut down, and their editors
arrested, including Benjamin Franklin’s grandson. No wonder
Thomas Jefferson himself said: “Dissent is the greatest form of
patriotism.”
In the Mexican War, a young Congressman named
Abraham Lincoln was driven from public life for raising doubts about
official claims. And in World War I, America’s values were
degraded, not defended, when dissenters were jailed and the teaching of
German was banned in public schools in some states. At that time it was
apparently sounding German, not looking French, that got you in
trouble. And it was panic and prejudice, not true patriotism, that
brought the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War
II—a measure upheld by Supreme Court Justices who did not uphold
their oaths to defend the Constitution. We are stronger today because
no less a rock-ribbed conservative than Robert Taft — “Mr.
Republican” himself — stood up and said at the height of
the second World War that, “the maintenance of the right of
criticism in the long run will do the country maintaining it a great
deal more good than it will do the enemy, and will prevent mistakes
which might otherwise occur.”
Even during the Cold War—an undeclared
war, and often more a war of nerves and diplomacy than of
arms—even the mildest dissenters from official policy were
sometimes silenced, blacklisted, or arrested, especially during the
McCarthy era of the early 1950s. Indeed, it was only when Joseph
McCarthy went through the gates of delirium and began accusing
distinguished U.S. diplomats and military leaders of treason that the two parties in Washington and
the news media realized the common stake they had in the right to
dissent. They stood up to a bully and brought down McCarthyism’s
ugly and contrived appeals to a phony form of 100% Americanism.
Dissenters are not always right, but it is
always a warning sign when they are accused of unpatriotic sentiments
by politicians seeking a safe harbor from debate, from accountability,
or from the simple truth.
Truth is the American bottom line. Truth
above all is fundamental to who we are. It is no accident that among
the first words of the first declaration of our national existence it
is proclaimed: “We hold these truths to be
self-evident…”.
This hall and this Commonwealth have always
been at the forefront of seeking out and living out the truth in the
conduct of public life. Here Massachusetts defined human rights by adopting our own Bill of Rights; here we took a
stand against slavery, for women’s suffrage and civil rights for
all Americans. The bedrock of America’s greatest
advances—the foundation of what we know today are defining
values—was formed not by cheering on things as they were, but by
taking them on and demanding change.
And here and now we must insist again that
fidelity, honor, and love of country demand untrammeled debate and open
dissent. At no time is that truer than in the midst of a war rooted in
deceit and justified by continuing deception. For what is at stake here
is nothing less than life itself. As the statesman Edmund Burke once
said: “A conscientious man should be cautious how he dealt in
blood.”
Think about that now—in a new era that
has brought old temptations and tested abiding principles.
America has always embraced the best traditions of civilized conduct toward
combatants and non-combatants in war. But today our leaders hold
themselves above the law—in the way they not only treat prisoners
in Abu Ghraib, but assert unchecked power to spy on American citizens.
America has always rejected war as an instrument of raw power or naked
self-interest. We fought when we had to in order to repel grave threats
or advance freedom and self-determination in concert with like-minded
people everywhere. But our current leadership, for all its rhetoric of
freedom and democracy, behaves as though might does make right,
enabling us to discard the alliances and institutions that served us so
well in the past as nothing more now than impediments to the exercise
of unilateral power.
America has always been stronger when we have not only proclaimed free speech,
but listened to it. Yes, in every war, there have been those who demand
suppression and silencing. And although no one is being jailed today
for speaking out against the war in Iraq, the spirit of
intolerance for dissent has risen steadily, and the habit of labeling
dissenters as unpatriotic has become the common currency of the
politicians currently running our country.
Dismissing dissent is not only wrong, but
dangerous when America’s
leadership is unwilling to admit mistakes, unwilling to engage in
honest discussion of the nation’s direction, and unwilling to
hold itself accountable for the consequences of decisions made without
genuine disclosure, or genuine debate.
In recent weeks, a number of retired
high-ranking military leaders, several of whom played key combat or
planning roles in Afghanistan
and Iraq,
have come forward publicly to call for the resignation of Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. And across the administration, from the
president on down, we’ve heard these calls dismissed or even
attacked as acts of disloyalty, or as threats to civilian control of
the armed forces. We have even heard accusations that this dissent
gives aid and comfort to the enemy. That is cheap and it is shameful.
And once again we have seen personal attacks on the character of those
who speak out. How dare those who never wore the uniform in battle
attack those who wore it all their lives—and who, retired or not,
did not resign their citizenship in order to serve their country.
The former top operating officer at the
Pentagon, a Marine Lieutenant General, said “the commitment of
our forces to this fight was done with a casualness and swagger that
are the special province of those who have never had to execute these
missions--or bury the results.” It is hard for a career military
officer to speak those words. But at a time when the administration
cannot let go of the myths and outright lies it broadcast in the rush
to war in Iraq, those who know better must speak out.
At a time when mistake after mistake is being
compounded by the very civilian leadership in the Pentagon that ignored
expert military advice in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, those who understand the price
being paid for each mistake by our troops, our country, and Iraq
itself must be heard.
Once again we are imprisoned in a failed
policy. And once again we are being told that admitting mistakes, not
the mistakes themselves, will provide our enemies with an intolerable
propaganda victory. Once again we are being told that we have no choice
but to stay the course of a failed policy. At a time like this, those
who seek to reclaim America’s
true character and strength must be respected.
The true defeatists today are not those who
call for recognizing the facts on the ground in Iraq.
The true defeatists are those who believe America is so weak that it
must sacrifice its principles to the pursuit of illusory power.
The true pessimists today are not those who
know that America can handle the truth about the Administration’s boastful claim of
“Mission Accomplished” in Iraq. The true pessimists
are those who cannot accept that America’s power and
prestige depend on our credibility at home and around the world. The
true pessimists are those who do not understand that fidelity to our
principles is as critical to national security as our military power
itself.
And the most dangerous defeatists, the most
dispiriting pessimists, are those who invoke September 11th to argue
that our traditional values are a luxury we can no longer afford.
Let’s call it the Bush-Cheney Doctrine.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine,
alliances and international institutions are now disposable—and
international institutions are dispensable or even despicable.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, we
cannot foreswear the fool’s gold of information secured by
torturing prisoners or creating a shadow justice system with no rules
and no transparency.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine,
unwarranted secrecy and illegal spying are now absolute imperatives of
our national security.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine, those
who question the abuse of power question America itself.
According to the Bush-Cheney doctrine, an
Administration should be willing to spend hundreds of billions of
dollars on the Iraq war, but unwilling to spend a few billion dollars
to secure the American ports through which nuclear materials could make
their way to terrorist cells.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine,
executive powers trump the constitutional doctrine of separation of
powers.
According to the Bush-Cheney Doctrine,
smearing administration critics is not only permissible, but
necessary—and revealing the identity of a CIA agent is an
acceptable means to hide the truth.
The raw justification for abandoning so many
American traditions exposes the real danger of the Bush-Cheney
Doctrine. We all understand we are in a long struggle against jihadist
extremism. It does represent a threat to our vital security interests
and our values. Even the Bush-Cheney Administration acknowledges this
is preeminently an ideological war, but that’s why the
Bush-Cheney Doctrine is so ill-equipped to fight and win it.
Our enemies argue that all our claims about
advancing universal principles of human rights and mutual respect
disguise a raw demand for American dominance. They gain every time we
tolerate or cover up abuses of human rights in Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo Bay,
or among sectarian militias in Iraq, and especially when
we defiantly disdain the rules of international law.
Our enemies argue that our invasion and
occupation of Iraq reflect an obsession with oil supplies and commercial opportunities.
They gain when our president and vice president, both former oil
company executives, continue to pursue an oil-based energy strategy,
and provide vast concessions in Iraq to their corporate
friends.
And so there’s the crowning irony: the
Bush-Cheney Doctrine holds that many of our great traditions cannot be
maintained; yet the Bush-Cheney policies, by abandoning those
traditions, give Osama bin Laden and his associates exactly what they
want and need to reinforce their hate-filled ideology of Islamic
solidarity against the western world.
I understand fully that Iraq is not Vietnam,
and the war on terrorism is not the Cold War. But in one very crucial
respect, we are in the same place now as we were thirty five years ago.
When I testified in 1971, I spoke out not just against the war itself,
but the blindness and cynicism of political leaders who were sending
brave young Americans to be killed or maimed for a mission the leaders
themselves no longer believed in.
The War in Vietnam and the War in Iraq are now converging in too many tragic respects.
As in Vietnam,
we engaged militarily in Iraq based on official
deception.
As in Vietnam, we went into Iraq
ostensibly to fight a larger global war under the misperception that
the particular theater was just a sideshow, but we soon learned that
the particular aspects of the place where we fought mattered more than
anything else. And as in Vietnam, we have stayed and
fought and died even though it is time for us to go.
We are now in the third war in Iraq
in as many years. The first was against Saddam Hussein and his supposed
weapons of mass destruction. The second was against terrorists whom,
the administration said, it was better to fight over there than here.
Now we find our troops in the middle of an escalating civil war.
Half of the service members listed on the
Vietnam Memorial Wall died after America’s leaders
knew our strategy would not work. It was immoral then and it would be
immoral now to engage in the same delusion. We want democracy in Iraq,
but Iraqis must want it as much as we do. Our valiant soldiers
can’t bring democracy to Iraq
if Iraq’s
leaders are unwilling themselves to make the compromises that democracy
requires.
As our generals have said, the war cannot be
won militarily. It must be won politically. No American soldier should
be sacrificed because Iraqi politicians refuse to resolve their ethnic
and political differences.
Our call to action is clear. Iraqi leaders
have responded only to deadlines—a deadline to transfer authority
to a provisional government, and a deadline to hold three elections. It
was the most intense 11th hour pressure that just pushed aside Prime
Minister Jaafari and brought forward a more acceptable candidate. And
it will demand deadline toughness to reign in Shiite militias Sunnis
say are committing horrific acts of torture every day in Baghdad.
So we must set another deadline to extricate
our troops and get Iraq
up on its own two feet.
Iraqi politicians should be told that they
have until May 15 to deal with these intransigent issues and at last
put together an effective unity government or we will immediately
withdraw our military. If Iraqis aren’t willing to build a unity
government in the five months since the election, they’re
probably not willing to build one at all. The civil war will only get
worse, and we will have no choice anyway but to leave.
If Iraq’s leaders
succeed in putting together a government, then we must agree on another
deadline: a schedule for withdrawing American combat forces by
year’s end. Doing so will actually empower the new Iraqi
leadership, put Iraqis in the position of running their own country and
undermine support for the insurgency, which is fueled in large measure
by the majority of Iraqis who want us to leave their country.
So now, as in 1971, we are engaged in another
fight to live the truth and make our own government accountable. As in
1971, this is another moment when American patriotism demands more
dissent and less complacency in the face of bland assurances from those
in power.
We must insist now that patriotism does not
belong to those who defend a President’s position—it
belongs to those who defend their country. Patriotism is not love of
power; it is love of country. And sometimes loving your country demands
you must tell the truth to power. This is one of those times.
Lives are on the line. Lives have been lost
to bad decisions – not decisions that could have gone either way,
but decisions that constitute basic negligence and incompetence. And
lives continue to be lost because of stubbornness and pride.
We support the troops—the brave men and
women who have always protected us and do so today—in part by
honoring their service, and in part by making sure they have everything
they need both in battle and after they have borne the burden of
battle.
But I believe now as strongly and proudly as
I did thirty-five years ago that the most important way to support the
troops is to tell the truth, and to ensure we do not ask young
Americans to die in a cause that falls short of the ideals of this
country.
When we protested the war in Vietnam, some would weigh in against us saying: “My country right or
wrong.” Our response was simple: “Yes, my country right or
wrong. When right, keep it right and when wrong, make it right.”
And that’s what we must do again today.
|