The event on the House floor Wednesday afternoon was
monumental - the first major Congressional debate about US military
operations in Afghanistan since lawmakers authorized the invasion of
that country in autumn 2001. But, as Rep. Patrick Kennedy noted with
disgust on Wednesday, the House press gallery was nearly empty. He
aptly concluded, "It's despicable, the national press corps right now."
Sure enough, the Thursday edition of The New York
Times had no room for the historic debate on its front page, which did
have room for a large Starbucks ad across the bottom.
Despite the news media and the lopsided pro-war tilt
on Capitol Hill (reflected in the 356-65 vote Wednesday against
invoking the War Powers Act), antiwar organizing has a lot of
hospitable terrain at the grassroots. National polling shows widespread
opposition to the Afghanistan war effort - a far cry from the dominant
lockstep conformity in Congress.
"Apparently, as with many issues in Washington,"
Congressman John Conyers said in a written statement hours before the
vote, "those who are forced [to] bear the costs of war are the first to
recognize a flawed policy, while those who profit from perpetual war do
their best to blunt any change in course."
Yet, the three-hour debate was a step forward,
offering a basic clash of assumptions. Cogent eloquence came from many
who spoke in support of the antiwar resolution, introduced by Rep.
Dennis Kucinich. The 65 votes for it should serve as a floor on which
to build.
But among the obstacles are snappy wooden constructs
of language and attitude. Consider how a glib phrase now in vogue among
Pentagon boosters and journalists - "government in a box" - mirrors the
jaw-dropping arrogance of imperial power.
At the outset of its March 8 cover story, "Taking on
the Taliban," Time magazine recounts that Gen. Stanley McChrystal
developed a clever plan for the US-led counterinsurgency forces taking
Marjah: "He described how these troops would protect the town while a
'government in a box' - a corps of Afghan officials who had been
training for this moment for months - would start administering the
town."
Three pages and 19 paragraphs later, the article
gets around to a less uplifting fact: "It can hardly be reassuring to
the residents of Marjah that their newly appointed mayor, Haji Zahir,
has only recently returned from 15 years of living in Germany."
That's government in a box for you - akin to the
illusion that war can be sequestered in some kind of container - the
sort of feat that's possible only in fantasies.
Martin Luther King Jr. aptly likened the Vietnam War
to a "demonic suction tube." And demonic suction tubes can't be boxed.
In the real world, war's ripple effects lead to a kaleidoscope of
terrible consequences, near and far. You can't keep a war in a box any
more than you can deliver a government in a box.
With enthusiasm for war thriving on abstraction, its
facile backers are eager to cheer on activities that bring terror,
anguish and death as a matter of course.
That's what Congresswoman Barbara Lee was driving at
when she spoke for a minute on the House floor just before the blank
check for carnage in Afghanistan sailed through Congress with only her
vote dissenting. "As we act," she said, "let us not become the evil
that we deplore."
More than 100 months later, watching video of her prophetic statement may be enough to make you weep.
And it might strengthen your resolve to help end the military occupation that she tried to prevent.
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