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The Kerry apology: Democrats cower before Bush and military
By Patrick Martin
3 November 2006
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John Kerry is guilty of the most fatal of blunders for an American
bourgeois politician: speaking the truth inadvertently. Worst
of all, his momentary lapse from conventional lying brought him
into conflict with the military, the most powerful institution
in contemporary America and the one that, above all others, cannot
be criticized.
Kerrys now-famous remark, at a Monday rally at Pasadena
City College in southern California, resembles nothing so much
as the mistaken truth-telling by Michigan Governor George Romney
in 1967, when he was gearing up for a campaign for the Republican
presidential nomination. Romney described a tour of Vietnam put
on for him by the Pentagon as an exercise in brainwashing,
a remark that, because it was so apt, destroyed his political
career.
It is now well established that Kerrys comments were
a somewhat labored attempt at a joke at the expense of President
Bush. According to the script prepared by his political handlers,
the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate was to tell the students,
I cant overstress the importance of a great education.
Do you know where you end up if you dont study, if you arent
smart, if youre intellectually lazy? You end up getting
us stuck in a war in Iraq. Just ask President Bush.
Instead, he mangled the line, omitting the word us
and the final reference to Bush. The comment emerged from Kerrys
mouth as a suggestion that soldiers in Iraq were recruited from
among those who did not perform well in school: Education,
if you make the most of it, you study hard, you do your homework
and you make an effort to be smart, you can do well. And if you
dont, you get stuck in Iraq.
What ensued was a predictable piling on by Republican spokesmen,
from the White House on down, with the bulk of the American media
joining in. White House Press Secretary Tony Snow took 31 questions
on the Kerry comment at his Wednesday press briefing, and both
Bush and Cheney rushed to denounce Kerry before friendly media
interviewers. Bush was interviewed on the Rush Limbaugh
Show Wednesday and endorsed the right-wing talk show hosts
assertion that Kerry viewed US troops as basically uneducated
rubes.
Republican Senator John McCain appeared on ABCs Good
Morning America program to demand an apology from Kerry
and defend the supposedly injured reputation of American soldiers.
They are not there because of academic deficiency, they
are there because of love for our country, McCain claimed.
Kerrys initial response to such diatribes was to declare
that he would not be Swift-boated again, a reference
to his passive response to Republican smear tactics during the
decisive weeks of the 2004 presidential campaign. Theyre
trying to change the subject, he declared at a press conference.
Its their campaign of smear and fear, he added,
This is Swift boat stuff all over again.
Within 24 hours, however, Kerry had changed his tune, making
a verbal apology on the Don Imus radio program Wednesday, then
issuing a written apology that declared: As a combat veteran,
I want to make it clear to anyone in uniform and to their loved
ones: my poorly stated joke at a rally was not about, and never
intended to refer to any troops. I sincerely regret that my words
were misinterpreted to wrongly imply anything negative about those
in uniform and I personally apologize to any service member, family
member or American who was offended.
Behind the apology was a near-universal disowning of Kerry
by his fellow Democrats, particularly those running in closely
contested Senate and House races. Three Democratic House candidates
canceled Kerry appearances on their behalf, and Kerry then canceled
his entire campaign schedule and returned home.
Congressman Harold Ford, the Democratic candidate for an open
US Senate seat in Tennessee, declared, Whatever the intent,
Senator Kerry was wrong to say what he said, adding, He
needs to apologize to our troops.
Senator Hillary Clinton, the early frontrunner for the 2008
Democratic presidential nomination, speaking at a Veteran of Foreign
Wars post, joined the criticism of the 2004 Democratic nominee.
What Senator Kerry said was inappropriate, she said.
Larry Grant, a Democratic congressional candidate in Idaho,
said Kerry shouldnt have tried to make a joke about
it in the first place. Scott Kleeb, a Democratic candidate
in Nebraska, said, Many of us have serious concerns over
the current situation in Iraq, but no one should question the
intelligence and dedication of our troops. Senator Kerrys
remark was disrespectful and insulting.
None of these sanctimonious preachments about the honor
of the troops addressed the real circumstances under which young
people, largely from the working class and with less access to
higher education and high-paying jobs, actually enlist in the
military. Study after study has shown that rural and small-town
America, and impoverished inner-city neighborhoods, account for
a disproportionate share of US military personnel.
As the casualty toll has mounted in Iraq and Afghanistan, and
the Bush administrations wars have become deeply unpopular,
the Army and Marines, which bear the brunt of the fighting, have
had ever-greater difficulty in meeting their recruitment targets.
The Army announced last month that it had met its targets for
recruiting in the 2006 fiscal year, which ended September 30,
but this was accomplished only by a distinct lowering of standards.
The Army raised the maximum acceptable age from 35 to 42 and decided
to double the percentage of applicants scoring towards the bottom
of its standardized aptitude examination, raising the limit from
2 percent to 4 percent. The Army also agreed to waive some disqualifications
for criminal records that would have barred enlistment in previous
years.
Particularly significant in meeting the recruiting target was
the offering of cash to new recruits, with large bonuses for those
accepting dangerous assignments$40,000 for soldiers enlisting
to drive convoy trucks in Iraq, for instance. Two thirds of the
80,000 new Army enlistees received some form of bonus, which one
press account described as the primary incentive for recruits.
The Army has also greatly beefed up its corps of recruiterslike
those whose efforts at recruiting minority youth in Flint, Michigan,
were recorded in Michael Moores film Fahrenheit 9/11.
The number of recruiters jumped from 5,500 to 6,500, while the
number of recruits remained the same, an indication of the far
greater effort required to pressure young people into enlisting.
The tactics employed by recruiters were documented in a report
issued in August by the Government Accountability Office, which
found that allegations of wrongdoing by recruiters rose by 50
percent in 2005, to 6,600 cases, compared to 4,400 in 2005. The
number of cases judged to be substantiated after investigation
rose by a slightly greater percentage, from 400 to 630, while
criminal violations by recruiters more than doubled, from 33 to
68. The violations included coercion, sexual harassment, falsifying
documents and concealing information that would otherwise disqualify
an enlistee. More than 80 military recruiters were disciplined
for sexual misconduct with potential recruits.
In an effort to step up the pressure on recruits, the Pentagon
has also contracted out recruiting in some areas to private companies,
rather than entrusting this task to uniformed personnel. These
civilian recruiters are little better than bounty-hunters, paid
nearly $6,000 per head, and accounting for more than 15,000 of
the new enlistees this yeara payoff approaching $100 million
in blood money.
Since the US invasion and occupation of Iraq, Pentagon officials
have repeatedly sounded the alarm over the difficulties confronting
recruiting and the consequent danger that the size of the US armed
forces remains too small to accomplish the ambitious goals set
out in the Bush administrations foreign policy.
Kerry is undoubtedly aware of these concerns, which have been
voiced especially by those retired military officers who endorsed
his 2004 campaign or are running as Democratic candidates in 2006.
It is quite possible that this awareness contributed to his verbal
slip in Pasadena.
The Democrats are incapable of acknowledging what is understood
by any politically honest observer: that many of those who enlist
in the US military, to be transformed into the oppressive occupation
forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, are themselves victims of injustice,
oppression and poverty within American society.
The abject prostration of his fellow Democrats to the howls
of feigned outrage about Kerrys insult to the
troops is a politically significant event. It demonstrates the
basic commitment of the Democratic Party, whatever minor differences
exist on tactics, to the Bush administrations program of
war and aggressiona commitment that will be quickly and
clearly manifested should the Democrats gain control of either
or both houses of Congress in next weeks midterm elections.
See Also:
Election campaign reveals Democrats'
lurch to the right
[1 November 2006]
Two parties of war and reaction:
Hillary Clinton, Dick Cheney champion torture on eve of election
[28 October 2006]
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