Posted on 02/27/2007 3:06:20 PM PST by smoothsailing
Exclusive: Iraqs only Similarity to Vietnam: Its Dangerous Anti-War Movement
Author: Janet Levy
Source: The Family Security Foundation, Inc.
Date: February 27, 2007
Virulent anti-Americanism is rampant among the multi-faceted anti-war crowd, from Hollywoods useful idiots to state-funded, subversive terrorist sympathizers. FSM Contributing Editor Janet Levy outlines with great clarity the various elements of this movement and how their goals put the very survival of America in danger.
Iraqs only Similarity to Vietnam: Its Dangerous Anti-War Movement
Janet Levy
Contrary to media reports and the perception of a majority of Americans, the United States was winning the war in Vietnam following the successful watershed battle known as the Tet Offensive. Sadly, the Vietnam War was not lost on the battlefield. The carnage and repressive regimes that followed the U.S. exit may have been avoided had the truth been known by the American public. The United States was defeated by a carefully conceived, multi-pronged propaganda campaign that set the stage for Americas eventual failure in the region.
The ingredients for the U.S. defeat consisted of the funding and encouragement of the anti-war movement by Hanoi and Communist splinter groups, enlistment of useful idiots in Hollywood to publicize and popularize the movement, media complicity with negative portrayals of the war, anti-American proselytizing by professors and students on American university campuses, denigration and demonizing of the military and, ultimately, withdrawal of support and appropriations by the U.S. Congress. All these factors led to the perceptual reframing of the Vietnam War as an ignoble imperialistic atrocity, a far cry from its launch as a fight to extinguish communism in Southeast Asia.
Today, many of these same elements have reappeared as the United States struggles to defeat Islamic terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan and to apprehend a fifth column of jihadists at home.
Inherited from the Vietnam experience, they are now evident within the new conflict. This time, the risks to our countrys future are even greater should they succeed.
Anti-War Groups
As was true during the Vietnam War, todays anti-war groups hide their anti-Americanism behind the politics of peace. Recruiting others on a platform of peace, they ally themselves with radical Islamists, glorify the enemys goals and identify themselves as freedom fighters, battling an imperialistic world power.
In the lead up to the war against Iraq, anti-war activists effectively mobilized some of the largest protests and demonstrations since the Vietnam War. They attacked the war effort abroad and security measures at home, sympathized with Saddam Hussein as a victim of American war-mongering and even served as strategically-placed human shields.
Although Operation Iraqi Freedom was welcomed by the vast majority of Iraqis and succeeded in liberating 25 million people from the ravages of a murderous despot, anti-war protestors decried the U.S. occupation of Iraq and the alleged subjugation of the Iraqi people.
Their steadfast position was that any use of American military power was an attempt to establish American hegemony in the region and exploit Iraqs oil resources. The discovery of Saddams mass graves and torture chambers were ignored by the anti-war movement in the service of demonizing the actions of the evil, American empire.
Hollywood
Similarly, in the tradition of Hanoi Jane Fonda, Hollywood plays a highly visible role in opposing the Iraq war and in spearheading demonstrations. Fonda is back in the anti-war fray as Jihad Jane joined by actors Susan Sarandon, Tim Robbins, Sean Penn and others.
Before the invasion by coalition forces, Penn embarked on a fact finding mission in Iraq, where he met with Saddam Hussein. In a propaganda coup for the anti-war movement and the Baathists, Penn proclaimed to the media that the United States had initiated the war effort on false and illegitimate premises and declared that Iraq was free of weapons of mass destruction.
Since then, the Hollywood anti-war cabal has threatened the political future of elected representatives unwilling to support the recent, nonbinding resolution against the war. As Hollywood stars use their celebrity in their attempts to sabotage the U.S. war effort, they fail to mention Saddams rape rooms, gassing of Kurds and murder of children in front of their parents. These movie stars deny the valiant purpose of the U.S. mission and its committed and brave soldiers. Instead, they give aid, comfort and legitimacy to the enemy.
Mass Media
As in the Vietnam era, the media has become the propaganda machine for the anti-war movement, using the same tactics of the 1960s and 1970s. The overwhelmingly negative and biased reporting of the Vietnam War era is very much in evidence in todays Iraq coverage. The press continually advances the notion that life was better for the Iraqis under Saddam, minimizes the atrocities committed by Saddam and his henchman, and focuses instead on the U.S. role in destabilizing Iraq. The good news about economic recovery, business successes, progress made by the Iraqi government and improvements in public services are ignored in favor of stories of civil strife. Every attack on American soldiers and Iraqis is magnified and featured prominently, while successes are largely ignored or reported in passing.
Few news stories focus on the heroism and generosity of American troops. Any hint of malfeasance, allegations of combat errors or misconduct on the part of the U.S. military gets center stage. U.S. forces are portrayed as an enemy as dangerous or even more so, than the terrorist groups they fight. U.S. soldiers are portrayed as acting without regard to the rule of law and abusing the rights of captured insurgents.
Schools
Equally reminiscent of the 60s and 70s, university and high school campuses are hotbeds for anti-American and anti-war sentiments. Prior to the inception of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the Books Not Bombs strike was coordinated on campuses nationwide by the National Youth and Student Peace Coalition, whose members include the Young Communist League, USA, and the Muslim Students Association of the U.S. and Canada. This anti-war protest was endorsed by professors in a wide variety of disciplines, from economics to biology, who cancelled classes or assured anti-war students they would not be penalized for absences. Some professors even focused the days class material on the potential war. Thus, a majority of institutions of higher education appeared to expect conformity of anti-war opinion and, in some cases, actually imposed the strike on the student population.
This behavior continues today as literature and anthropology professors use classroom time to express their opinions against the war and pressure students to toe their ideological line. Often, students who agree with the Bush administrations policy in Iraq jeopardize their grades by coming forward. They are treated with disdain and even disrespect in the classroom. Returning Iraq war veterans have been insulted, harassed and called baby killers in university classrooms.
The Military
Finally, as was the case during the U.S. fight against communism in Southeast Asia, the mission of the military has been undermined by blatant hostility and blanket condemnations. Venomous slurs have been directed toward the dedicated servicemen and women who toppled a brutal dictator, struggled against radical Islamists, and fought for a better life for the Iraqi people. Politicians have been extremely negative. For example, Illinois senator Barrack Obama referred to the wasted lives of our soldiers. Massachusetts Senator John Kerry insulted the intelligence of our armed forces by proclaiming that people end up in the military if theyre not smart or studious.
Anti-military groups have tried to stop military recruitment drives and job fair participation in high schools and on college campuses. Even though all recruits today are committed volunteers who believe in the U.S. mission, anti-war activists portray them as victims, mercenaries or butchers.
Isolated military improprieties committed by a few soldiers, like the Haditha incident and the Abu Ghraib scandal, receive outsized attention and are portrayed as representative of all military conduct. The slightest hint of misconduct is used to characterize all recruits and to malign the entire military mission.
Anti-militarism has even been expressed by sweeping, local government measures. The city of San Francisco has engaged in various actions to rid itself of any relationship whatsoever to the military. Residents recently passed a symbolic measure demanding the withdrawal of troops from Iraq and prohibiting recruitment at high schools and colleges. City residents tried to stop Navy sponsorship of a summer concert, successfully blocked the docking of the USS Iowa at the Port of San Francisco and are trying to eliminate Fleet Week and the Blue Angels air shows.
Congress
In Congress, many Democrats and several Republicans are invoking the Vietnam quagmire descriptive to support demands to curtail the Iraq war and withdraw U.S. troops. The Democrat electorate has chosen to interpret recent election results as a sign that the public is opposed to the war, rather than opposed to the way the war is being fought. According to a recent national survey by Public Opinion Strategies, a majority of Americans (57%) wants to win the war in Iraq and makes the connection between Iraq and the global jihad. Fifty-three percent feel the Democrats are acting precipitously in pushing for immediate withdrawal and a majority (56%) also believes that Americans should stand behind the president in times of war. Most telling, 74% of those surveyed disagreed with the statement, I dont care what happens in Iraq after the U.S. leaves. I just want the troops brought home.
Last week, on the same day that Iraqi Prime Minister al-Maliki told Bush that the new security plan and heightened troop presence in Baghdad were a dazzling success, the House passed a non-binding resolution rejecting Bushs 21,500-troop surge in Iraq. In the Senate, the resolution was just four votes short of the sixty required for cloture, which would have limited debate on the resolution and ensured passage. As a consequence of this narrow defeat, Democrats have pledged to repeal a 2002 measure authorizing and defining the mission of U.S. troops in Iraq.
With no consideration of how this plays with the enemy, the morale of U.S. troops and the U.S. ground troops ability to build alliances with Iraqis, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid issued a statement that the invasion of Iraq was the worst foreign policy mistake in U.S. history. In further attempts to block the deployment of more troops, House Democrats hope to restrict parts of a $100 billion emergency military funding request by the President. Rep. John Murtha (D-PA) and other Democrats have joined forces with anti-war groups to limit the Presidents powers as Commander-In-Chief. Murtha and company plan to attach stipulations to any military appropriations; embark on a multi-million dollar, anti-war advertising campaign; and target vulnerable Republicans. Murtha is also seeking legislation as part of what he calls his slow bleed strategy. It would prevent military units from being deployed unless they meet certain standards and receive a break of at least one year between deployments.
This damaging action by politicians and their failure to support the U.S. government destroys morale, stymies success and emboldens the enemy, says Rep. Sam Johnson (R-TX), a former Vietnam prisoner of war.
Words cannot fully describe the horrendous damage of the anti-American efforts against the war back home to the guys on the ground, Johnson said. We must stick by the troops. We must support them all the way To our troops we must remain always faithful.
This inattention to the message being sent to our soldiers is part of the broader failure by Iraq war opponents to recognize the dire consequences of U.S. withdrawal. It completely escapes opponents of the war on all fronts anti-war activists, Hollywood, colleges and universities and politicians that the conflict is not regional and one from which we can walk away without harm. It is positively stunning that they fail to recognize that Iraq could fall to Islamic terrorists.
If this happened, Iraq would be a fertile base for Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups and a haven from which emboldened terrorists could attack U.S. allies and interests and threaten the very existence of our nation.
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FSM Contributing Editor Janet Levy is the founder of ESG Consulting, an organization that provides consulting services including project management and development, event planning and promotion, and fundraising for conservative political causes, especially projects related to national security and counterterrorism. Ms. Levy is a contributor to Front Page Magazine, American Thinker, ChronWatch and Family Security Matters and has been a guest on Pundit Review radio, the Center for Individual Freedom's Freedomcast, Stand Up America, and other radio programs.
© 2003-2007 FamilySecurityMatters.org All Rights Reserved
That and the traitorous MSM
ping
I will be in DC on March 17th to counter these hippy throwbacks. I wasn't old enough back in the 60's to even realize what was going on. But I do remember my dad taking me to the airport in 1972 and greeting the soldiers as they came home. God bless our troops and God bless America.
As will I.
Looking forward to meeting you. I'll be the middle aged lady with all the Navy attire on.
BUMP!
.
NEVER FORGET
The Vietnam War's dangerous anti-war movement =
Pictures of vietnamnese Re-Education Camp
http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1308949/posts
NEVER FORGET
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Unfortunately, she's wrong.
In this conflict, we again allow safe havens for our enemies in neighboring countries.
Both Syria and Iran must be made to pay the price for helping our enemies.
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