The Party of Retreat and Defeat  
By Peter Collier and David Horowitz
FrontPageMagazine.com | June 19, 2006

As the fall elections approach, the Democrats have formally unveiled 
their platform for the war in Iraq: snatch defeat from the jaws of 
victory. 

At the very moment that documents captured from the Zarqawi death 
site indicate that Al Qaeda feels it is losing its war against the 
Iraqi future and has become so desperate that its only hope to 
prevail is by embroiling the U.S. in war with Iran; at the very 
moment Iraq's democratically elected government is establishing 
itself as a functioning regime, and its increasingly capable 
military becomes more successfully engaged against the insurgents —
at this critical moment for the future of Iraq and the Middle East,  
more than three quarters of the House Democrats have voted against a 
resolution to "complete the mission."   

For the first time in American history, a major political party 
wants America to run from a war we are winning.  

We have come to an historic juncture.  It is not mere perversity or 
jockeying for position before the fall elections that makes the 
Democrats refuse to take yes for an answer on this war to liberate a 
Muslim people, break the hold of bloodlust and authoritarianism in 
the most benighted region of the world, and defeat terror on its 
central front.  Nor is the Democrats' choice of capitulation simply 
a reflex— like so many other positions they hold—of their 
pathological hatred of George Bush.  In large part, in fact, their 
insensate hatred of Bush is hatred for what this war embodies: 
America taking up arms against a sea of troubles as turbulent as any 
it has faced before; America bringing freedom to the heartland of 
terror. 

That George Bush believes America can act unapologetically, without 
the quaking guilt his critics are convinced stains its history, is 
why the Democrats  hate Bush.

It is all the Democratic Party can do to keep from publicly 
embracing the assertion of the hard left as to why were are in 
Iraq: "Blood for Oil!"  And the Democrats most certainly agree, with 
the malicious  assertion of Michael Moore, although they are 
unwilling to repeat it in so many words, that the Iraqi insurgents 
are fighting an occupying power and are therefore the moral 
equivalent of America's Minutemen. 

Democrat leaders would have us believe that their present defeatism, 
which they labor cynically to present as statecraft, is a rueful 
acknowledgement of facts on the ground in Iraq.  They wanted the 
U.S. to succeed, but because of Bush's bellicose mendacity they were 
forced to reconsider their support.  Yet Nancy Pelosi, the Woman Who 
Would be Speaker, attacked the war on April 13, 2003, the day 
Americxan troops pulled down the statue to Saddam Hussein.  It was 
but two months before the entire Democratic leadership was attacking 
the President for "lying" about Saddam's effort to buy fissionable 
uranium in Niger.  The war against the war had begun even in the 
first flush of success. Within a few months, Ted Kennedy was 
claiming, "The president's war is revealed as mindless, needless, 
senseless and reckless."

Given such views as these—the Democrats' version of bedrock 
principles—the difficulties the U.S. has experienced in Iraq have 
been for them a wish fulfilling fantasy. Their present position—
America was foredoomed to fail—is just one short step away from Noam 
Chomsky's position—America had it coming. 

And the result of these attitudes can be seen in the way the 
Democrats and their media allies have conducted themselves 
throughout.  For the Bush administration and the coalition troops in 
Iraq the battles have been  for Baghdad, Fallujah, Mosul and Basra, 
all engagements with the enemy in the field. For the Democrats and 
their media allies it has been Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, Haditha and 
Niger, all behind-the-lines battles against our troops and their 
commander-in-chief. For the Bush administration the chief prize has 
been Zarqawi, the beheader himself. For the Democrats it has been 
Scooter Libby.  The Bush administration barely missed getting Osama 
bin Laden; the Democrats barely missed getting Karl Rove.  The Bush 
administration's strategy is to defeat the forces of terror.  The 
Democrats are conducting psychological warfare aimed at American 
morale – the decisive factor in war.

It is hard not to conclude that the Democrats want America to be 
defeated in Iraq and that it is not only their electoral opportunism 
but their worldview that demands it.  This shows how different the 
Democratic Party is from what it was a generation ago when its 
stalwarts assumed the moral leadership in the Cold War against the 
Soviet Union.  The current Democrats bear no kinship to the John F. 
Kennedys, Hubert Humphreys and Scoop Jacksons who saw this prior 
conflict in the same black and white terms as Bush does the present 
conflict, and whose disheartening moments were far bleaker than the 
setbacks the U.S. has experienced in Iraq.  Such men would be read 
out of the Democratic Party today and reviled as yahoos for their 
patriotism. 

The worldview of the current Democrats was created generation ago in 
the first war that America lost on the home front, and it hasn't 
changed since.  Notwithstanding the Democrats' timorous, and 
reluctant -- and quickly retracted -- support for the war in Iraq, 
and notwithstanding the disingenuous insistence that "anti-war" 
activists also "support our troops," the leaders of the Democratic 
Party left – Kennedy, Kerry, Carter, Gore, Pelosi, Murtha -- looked 
on the Iraq War from its onset as another Vietnam.  Whenever there 
is the possibility of the use of American power against an enemy 
that can fight back, it is always for the Democrats a quarter past 
Tet. 

>From the beginning of this war they have waited impatiently – if not 
eagerly -- for U.S. troops to sink in a desert "quagmire."  For them 
a government elected by some eighty percent of the people is as 
corrupt and ineffectual as the Diems were in Saigon some forty years 
ago.  An incident in Haditha for them is t another My Lai  even 
before the investigation of what actually happened is complete.  In 
their every act the Democrats echo the cry of the McGovern left from 
1972: "Come home, America."  Come home to the defeat and impotence 
that should always constrain American power to make the world a 
better place.  Come home to contemplate the sins of arrogance and 
empire that originate with the founding of the nation.  Come home 
even though it means inviting those who hate you to disrespect you 
as well and follow with their suicide bombs and subway poisons and 
hijacked deathcraft crashing into your national monuments and homes. 

Hanoi's General Nguyen Giap, the Democrats' Clausewtiz, famously 
said that his country could not win on the field of battle but would 
win in the streets of America.  Divide politically and conquer 
militarily. That is what happened then; that is what the Democrats' 
leaders are working to make happen now.  In the 1960s the Democratic 
Party elders watched the anti-war troops in the streets of America 
from the sidelines with melancholy resignation; today's Democrats 
have brought all the narcissistic passion and moral heedlessness of 
the antiwar movement into the center of their party and the chambers 
of government where they try to implement Giap's strategy a second 
time. How different are the incantations of Pelosi, Reid, Murtha and 
Kennedy from those of Osama bin Laden's lieutenant, Ayman al 
Zawahiri: "Oh U.S. people, your government was defeated in Vietnam. 
… Your government is now leading you to a new losing war, where you 
will lose your sons and money."?

The precise shorthand for the Democrats' decline into retreat can be 
found in the descent to Teddy Kennedy from his brother John.  No 
president during the generation long  Cold War sounded the call to 
arms more eloquently than he did,  warning the enemies of freedom 
that America would "pay any price, bear any burden, meet any 
hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the 
survival and success of liberty." But that was before the anti-war 
movement launched by Amerian radicals had gotten under way, before 
Teddy and his colleagues had buffoonishly capitulated to its moral 
authority and acted out its agendas by terminating America's aid to 
the anti-communist regimes in Cambodia and Vietnam.  

What the Republicans "call cut and run" is right out of the playbook 
the Democrats adopted once they had left their Humphreys, Jacksons 
and Jack Kennedys behind: cut the commitment and run from the chaos 
this action causes. Then celebrate the disaster as a moral triumph.

The tide of radicalism swelled with the presidential candidacy of 
Democrat George McGovern in 1972 and his campaign slogan, "Bring 
America Home," which if it had been successful would have emboldened 
the enemies of freedom across the globe. McGovern lost the election 
in the biggest landslide in American history, but in the ashes of 
defeat he and his allies were able to redraw the rules that governed 
the Democratic party and empower the radical forces that had moved 
inside it.

The distance traversed by the Democrats in the last generation is 
epitomized by someone who has become their alpha and omega,  another 
J.F.K. who was first a soldier in the war in Vietnam and then an 
opponent, first a supporter of the war in Iraq and then an opponent. 
While strategically Democrats had moved far from the robust foreign 
policies of John F. Kennedy by 2004, they were mindful that a 
majority of the voting public had not moved with them. Therefore, 
they reached for a candidate who could project a "patriotic" and 
even military image. As a decorated veteran who had voted for the 
war in Iraq, but was sponsored by its most vociferous critic had 
begun to move away from it himself, John F. Kerry seemed to be the 
man for the job. 

On being introduced at the Democratic Convention, the candidate 
saluted the faithful and declared, "I'm John Kerry and I'm reporting 
for duty." No convention in recent memory had been the scene of 
greater military fanfares. Kerry arrived with a "Band of Brothers," 
fellow Swift Boat veterans who vouched for his heroism under fire in 
Vietnam, and Vietnam – a war fought thirty years before became the 
convention's most emotional theme. But the Kerry campaign seemed not 
to appreciate that Vietnam had ended in America's only lost war, and 
that the military career of Kerry had ended in promoting and 
celebrating that defeat. 

Other Vietnam veterans did not share the views of Kerry's retinue. 
Many despised a man whom they associated with Jane Fonda and other 
anti-war activists who had welcomed a Communist victory and 
America's defeat. They remembered Kerry not for his military 
service, but for his widely televised claims that his comrades-in-
arms were actually "war criminals" who deserved to be put on trial. 

In a moment that displayed the anti-war Kerry in all his glory, C-
Span re-ran the June 30, 1971 segment of the Dick Cavett Show, on 
which a young Kerry confronted another Swift Boat veteran named John 
O'Neill. The war was still raging in Vietnam as they spoke.  In an 
exchange that resonated with current events in Iraq, Kerry and 
O'Neill faced off: 

MR. CAVETT: No one has said that there'll be a bloodbath if we pull 
out, which is a cliché  we used to hear a lot…

MR. O'NEILL: I think if we pull out prematurely before a viable 
South Vietnamese government is established, that the record of the 
North Vietnamese in the past and the record of the Viet Cong in the 
area I served in at Operation [unintelligible] clearly indicates 
that's precisely what would happen in that country. …

MR. KERRY:  There is no interest on the part of the North Vietnamese 
to try to massacre the people once people have agreed to withdraw. … 
I realize that there would be certain political assassinations, and 
that might take place. And I think when you balance that against the 
fact that the United States has now accounted for some 18,600 people 
through its own Phoenix program, which is a program of 
assassination, and when you balance that off against the morality of 
the kind of bombing we've been doing in Laos and the kind of 
destruction wholesale of the country of Vietnam, which amounts to 
some 155,000 civilians a year killed, then I think to talk about 
four or five thousand people is lunacy in terms of the overall 
argument and what we're seeking in Southeast Asia.[i][xiv]

In other words -- in Kerry's view -- when compared to the Vietnamese 
enemy, Americans were the greater assassins and terrorists to be 
feared, while the Communists were only resisting a foreign 
occupation of their country, and were not interested in massacring 
anyone. History has now shown how wrong Kerry was (and how right 
John O'Neill and the Americans who opposed him were). The Kerry 
Democrats in Congress voted to cut off military and economic aid to 
the South Vietnamese and Cambodian regimes. Within four months of 
the cut-off, both regimes fell. The victorious Communists in Vietnam 
and their protégés in Cambodia then proceeded to massacre more than 
two-and-half million Indo-Chinese peasants, just as Nixon and others 
had warned they would. A hundred thousand were summarily executed in 
Vietnam – twenty times what Kerry had assured Americans they would --
 while a million fled, half of whom died attempting to escape.  

But these lessons are not part of the Democrats' current curriculum. 
This moral and human disaster they facilitated in Vietnam is 
remembered as a moral victory for "anti-war" sentiment instead. And 
so they intone "Come home, America" once again.  They draw tight the 
strings they hope will connect the false lessons Vietnam with Iraq --
  "in telling and very tragic ways [they] now are converging" John 
Kerry claimed to the Take Back America conference – a gathering of 
the very anti-war veterans who brought us Vietnam. 

Yes they are converging, but not yet on the field of battle where 
America is winning and the Zarqawi terror front is failing. They are 
converging here at home, where an anti-movement is hoping to win a 
majority in Congress this fall and cut off support for the freedom 
forces in Iraq. Let's hope the American people will not listen to 
them and make the same mistake twice.






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