February 06, 2007
The Left's Definition of a "Hero"
By
Michelle Malkin
Angry, left-wing Washington Post blogger
William Arkin considers American troops in Iraq who
believe in their mission "mercenaries" who are
"naive" and should be thankful they haven't been
spit upon yet. Curdled Democrat Sen. John Kerry thinks
those soldiers, who volunteer for service, didn't
"make an effort to be smart" and are "stuck in
Iraq" because of their intellectual deficiencies. At
the last anti-war spasm in Washington, liberal
peace-lovers vandalized a military recruitment
office—repeating an act of destruction taken by
rock-wielding thugs across college campuses and at ROTC
headquarters nationwide.
So, who inspires these troop-bashers? Whose courage
do they cheer? Whom do they call "hero"?
Not the American soldier on the battlefield,
willingly and freely putting his life on the line for
his beliefs, his family, our country, security and
freedom.
No, their idea of a military hero is Army Lt. Ehren
Watada. Did Watada take a bullet for his comrades?
Rescue innocent civilians from insurgent forces? Throw
himself on a grenade? Ambush a terrorist sniper nest?
No.
Watada's the soldier who went on trial this week for
defying orders to be deployed to Iraq—after volunteering
for duty. For those deficient in English, here's the
meaning of volunteer: "To perform or offer to perform
a service of one's own free will." Hundreds of
anti-war groupies,
including actor Sean Penn, showed up to cheer Watada.
Watada was scheduled to leave Fort Lewis, Wash., for
his first tour of duty in Iraq last summer. Instead of
getting on the bus with his fellow soldiers, he
announced he would not go and denounced the war as
"unjust" and "illegal." He was the only
military officer to refuse deployment to Iraq with Fort
Lewis' 4,000-member
Stryker Brigade. The anti-war propaganda machine
kicked into full gear for Watada, with coordinated press
conferences in Tacoma, Wash., and
Honolulu, where Watada grew up.
Some of Watada's hometown neighbors are sick of his
intellectual disingenuousness. Writing in Watada's
hometown newspaper, the Honolulu Advertiser,
retired Col. Thomas D. Farrell, who served as an Army
intelligence officer in Iraq in 2005-2006, retorted:
"How can anyone seriously
claim that our military involvement in Iraq is illegal
when both Congress and the U.N. have taken the steps to
authorize it, and allow it to continue to this day?
Lt. Watada argues that he
has the right to make his own personal assessment,
notwithstanding whatever Congress and the U.N. may do.
If he's right, why not make our personal assessments
about how fast is safe to drive, or how much tax is our
fair share? The answer is obvious:
Anarchy would prevail, and the rule of law—the basis
of all real freedom—would cease to exist." [Watada
wasn't asked to commit unlawful acts, February
6, 2007]
The only thing illegal here is Watada's willful
refusal to obey orders. Watada is just the latest in a
line of losers abandoning their men, their mission and
the rule of law. The left calls this "dissent."
The rest of us call it what it is:
Desertion.
Many military observers say they smelled a rat when
they first heard of Watada's story. Watada graduated
from Hawai'i Pacific University in 2003, joined the Army
shortly after, went to Officer Candidate School and
incurred a three-year obligation.
Wrote Navy Officer Robert Webster:
"This guy graduated from
college and then joined the Army, going to Officer
Candidate school, after we had already started the Iraq
campaign just to claim it was an 'illegal' war when his
unit is called to go. Smells funny to me. In my mind,
either the Army gave a commission to an idiot not aware
of current events or he planned this all along."
Soldiers making calculated political statements
against their own troops? Wouldn't be the first
time—cough, cough,
John Kerry. Idiot or schemer, Watada deserves a
stiff, strong penalty for his lawlessness. An excellent
proposal put forth at the military blog Op-For (op-for.com):
"Relieve him of
operational duties and send him to work at Walter Reed,
to handle the in- and out-processing of wounded
veterans."
Yes, where the real heroes are.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.