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This article originally provided by
The New York Times
January 18, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
Purple Heartbreakers
By JAMES WEBB
Arlington, Va.
IT should come as no surprise that an arch-conservative
Web site is questioning whether Representative John Murtha,
the Pennsylvania Democrat who has been critical of the war
in Iraq, deserved the combat awards he received in Vietnam.
After all, in recent years extremist Republican
operatives have inverted a longstanding principle: that our
combat veterans be accorded a place of honor in political
circles. This trend began with the ugly insinuations leveled
at Senator John McCain during the 2000 Republican primaries
and continued with the slurs against Senators Max Cleland
and John Kerry, and now Mr. Murtha.
Military people past and present have good reason to
wonder if the current administration truly values their
service beyond its immediate effect on its battlefield of
choice. The casting of suspicion and doubt about the actions
of veterans who have run against President Bush or opposed
his policies has been a constant theme of his career. This
pattern of denigrating the service of those with whom they
disagree risks cheapening the public's appreciation of what
it means to serve, and in the long term may hurt the
Republicans themselves.
Not unlike the Clinton "triangulation" strategy, the
approach has been to attack an opponent's greatest perceived
strength in order to diminish his overall credibility. To no
one's surprise, surrogates carry out the attacks, leaving
President Bush and other Republican leaders to benefit from
the results while publicly distancing themselves from the
actual remarks.
During the 2000 primary season, John McCain's
life-defining experiences as a prisoner of war in Vietnam
were diminished through whispers that he was too scarred by
those years to handle the emotional burdens of the
presidency. The wide admiration that Senator Max Cleland
gained from building a career despite losing three limbs in
Vietnam brought on the smug non sequitur from critics that
he had been injured in an accident and not by enemy fire.
John Kerry's voluntary combat duty was systematically
diminished by the well-financed Swift Boat Veterans for
Truth in a highly successful effort to insulate a president
who avoided having to go to war.
And now comes Jack Murtha. The administration tried a
number of times to derail the congressman's criticism of the
Iraq war, including a largely ineffective effort to get
senior military officials to publicly rebuke him (Gen. Peter
Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, was the only one to do
the administration's bidding there).
Now the Cybercast News Service, a supposedly independent
organization with deep ties to the Republican Party, has
dusted off the Swift Boat Veterans playbook, questioning
whether Mr. Murtha deserved his two Purple Hearts. The
article also implied that Mr. Murtha did not deserve the
Bronze Star he received, and that the combat-distinguishing
"V" on it was questionable. It then called on Mr. Murtha to
open up his military records.
Cybercast News Service is run by David Thibault, who
formerly worked as the senior producer for "Rising Tide,"
the televised weekly news magazine produced by the
Republican National Committee. One of the authors of the
Murtha article was Marc Morano, a long-time writer and
producer for Rush Limbaugh.
The accusations against Mr. Murtha were very old news,
principally coming from defeated political rivals. Aligned
against their charges are an official letter from Marine
Corps Headquarters written nearly 40 years ago affirming Mr.
Murtha's eligibility for his Purple Hearts - "you are
entitled to the Purple Heart and a Gold Star in lieu of a
second Purple Heart for wounds received in action" - and the
strict tradition of the Marine Corps regarding awards. While
in other services lower-level commanders have frequently had
authority to issue prestigious awards, in the Marines Mr.
Murtha's Vietnam Bronze Star would have required the
approval of four different awards boards.
The Bush administration's failure to support those who
have served goes beyond the smearing of these political
opponents. One of the most regrettable examples comes, oddly
enough, from modern-day Vietnam. The government-run War
Remnants Museum, a popular tourist site in downtown Ho Chi
Minh City, includes an extensive section on "American
atrocities." The largest display is devoted to Bob Kerrey, a
former United States senator and governor of Nebraska,
recipient of the Medal of Honor and member of the 9/11
commission.
In the display, Mr. Kerrey is flatly labeled a war
criminal by the Vietnamese government, and the accompanying
text gives a thoroughly propagandized version of an incident
that resulted in civilian deaths during his time in Vietnam.
This display has been up for more than two years. One finds
it hard to imagine another example in which a foreign
government has been allowed to so characterize the service
of a distinguished American with no hint of a diplomatic
protest.
The political tactic of playing up the soldiers on the
battlefield while tearing down the reputations of veterans
who oppose them could eventually cost the Republicans
dearly. It may be one reason that a preponderance of the
Iraq war veterans who thus far have decided to run for
office are doing so as Democrats.
A young American now serving in Iraq might rightly wonder
whether his or her service will be deliberately misconstrued
20 years from now, in the next rendition of politically
motivated spinmeisters who never had the courage to step
forward and put their own lives on the line.
Rudyard Kipling summed up this syndrome quite neatly more
than a century ago, writing about the frequent hypocrisy
directed at the British soldiers of his day:
An' it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' anything you
please;
An' Tommy ain't a bloomin' fool - you bet that Tommy
sees!
James Webb, a secretary of the Navy in the
Reagan administration, was a Marine platoon and company
commander in Vietnam.
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