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WORD COUNT
602
JUNE 25, 2008
THESE GENERALS ARE
REAL HEROES – by Ashley Hoffman
This spring, “The New
York Times” exposed a six-year-long propaganda campaign by the Defense
Department to use retired military officers to disseminate pro-Iraq war
messages to the American public. These dozen or so retired military
officers -- officially called “message force multipliers,” which sounds
more like a 1983 Atari video game than a name for decorated soldiers --
were portrayed as independent analysts on major news networks. In
reality, however, they were far from it.
The majority of these
retired officers had ties to lobbying firms for defense contractors or
sat on the boards of companies on the receiving end of Defense
Department contracts. This tarnished any objectivity or independent
analysis they might have had about critical foreign policy issues –
especially the war in
Iraq. As “The New
York Times” put it, “To the public, these men
are members of a familiar fraternity, presented tens of thousands of
times on television and radio…to give authoritative and unfettered
judgments about the most pressing issues of the post-Sept. 11 world.”
The American people,
thinking that they were receiving the kind of straight talk you’d expect
from a general or colonel, were more often than not hearing talking
points regurgitated from the Pentagon’s public relations department.
Where was the stern candor that Americans have come to respect, and
expect, from their military officers?
You’ll be glad to
know that such candor exists. You just have to look a little harder to
find it.
Right now, in big
cities and small towns throughout the
United States, there
are retired military officers speaking out against the Bush
administration’s approach to the Iraq war and other foreign policy
issues. These men and women aren’t as front-and-center as the
pro-administration “analysts,” and they definitely didn’t make the cut
for the Pentagon’s list of “suggested” experts.
But they are out
there, working tirelessly to reach out to their fellow veterans and
community groups in hopes that another perspective outside of the
“message force multipliers” can be injected into the current American
conversation. As the Outreach Coordinator at the Center for Arms Control
and Non-Proliferation, I’ve had the opportunity to travel with these
brave retired officers as part of our nation-wide military outreach
program.
In a profession such
as the military – where soldiers, even in retirement, typically remain
apolitical and loyal to the commander-in-chief – dissent by retired
officers is the highest form of patriotism. But why, you may ask, do
these men and women subject themselves to the criticism they inevitably
face from people who think that it is not a soldier’s place to speak
out, even in retirement?
Let me assure you:
they don’t do it for the money. These trips are sponsored by non-profit
organizations (like mine) that operate on a shoestring budget. While
they do receive a small stipend, one retired general donates it to an
organization that helps families offset the costs of visiting their
loved ones at Walter Reed.
They also don’t do it
for the prestige. Visits to small-town Rotary clubs and local community
groups normally don’t make national headlines. Talking to a handful of
college students in a small classroom doesn’t attract the hot glare of
the television cameras.
They do it, as
they’ve told me, because they feel it is their duty to educate the
American public about a foreign policy that they feel endangers a
country they spent their entire lives fighting to protect. They believe
that in
light of the urgent and critical issues now confronting our nation,
those who have served in the armed forces have a special obligation to
make their voices heard.
Now that’s a message
worth multiplying.
--.
Ashley Hoffman is
the outreach coordinator at the Center for Arms Control and
Non-Proliferation. Find out more about the Center and its nation-wide
military outreach program at
www.armscontrolcenter.org.
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