Politics Of Patriotism

2008 July 6
by lobotero

Susan Estrich wrote an interesting article on patriotism:

Should John McCain have to “defend” his military record? Of course not. But the fact that he served in the military, with distinction, does not mean he’s qualified to be president.

Should Barack Obama have to explain why he didn’t serve in the military or somehow apologize for it? Of course not. Most people of his generation did not serve in the military. George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Condi Rice did not see any active duty, although all of them are older. So what?

Democrats learned four years ago that choosing a candidate with a record of service in combat is no guarantee of anything. John Kerry’s military record became one more piece of ammunition for the supposedly independent mud fight that defined the election. The defenders of the mud fight said it was Kerry’s own fault because he interjected his military record front and center into the campaign. (Remember that line at the convention about Lt. Kerry “reporting for duty”?) By that logic, Democrats have a right to question McCain, who makes Kerry look like a piker when it comes to playing the military card, but Republicans have no right to question Obama, who has hewn to the George W. Bush approach of talking about other things.

This week’s round of punching and counterpunching began with comments by retired Gen. Wesley Clark, an Obama supporter, that made the very same point I just did: Serving in the military, as honorable as it is, doesn’t mean that you’re more qualified to be president. “I don’t think riding in a fighter plane and getting shot down is a qualification to be president,” Clark said.

I think the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth said something very much like that about John Kerry captaining a Swift boat. Actually, what they said was much worse. They questioned John Kerry’s record and turned it into an issue of character. No one has done that to McCain, at least no one with any association to Obama. Can you imagine what McCain would say if someone did?

In politics, we always spend more time on the question of who started the fight and whether it’s actually an intentional fight than whether there is anything worth fighting about. So it is with the candidates’ patriotism. In other contexts, one might point out fairly that experience as a prisoner of war leaves scars that last for a lifetime. But if any Democrat within a mile of Barack Obama even suggests as much, that person will be thrown overboard faster than you can say Samantha Power (who was thrown overboard, you may remember, for telling a foreign newspaper that she thought Hillary Clinton was “a monster”). If Gen. Wesley Clark can’t make what should be the obvious point — that military service doesn’t qualify a person for the presidency — imagine the backlash if anyone actually raised questions about the impact of McCain’s stint as a POW?

No comments yet

Leave a Reply

Note: You can use basic XHTML in your comments. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS