As prominent senators consider the wisdom of making
war on Iraq, truly independent thinking seems to stop at the water's
edge. But I keep recalling a very different scene: On Feb. 27, 1968, I
sat in a small room on Capitol Hill. Around a long table, the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee was in session, taking testimony from an
administration official. I remember a man with a push-broom mustache
and a voice like sandpaper, raspy and urgent.

Wayne Morse, the senior senator from Oregon, did not resort to
euphemism. He spoke of the "tyranny that American boys are being
killed in South Vietnam to maintain in power." Moments before the
hearing adjourned, Morse said he did not "intend to put the blood of
this war on my hands."
It's hard to imagine the late senator going along with claims today
that the U.S. government has a right to attack Iraq because of the
doctrine of "anticipatory self-defense."
A fierce advocate of international law, Morse had no patience for
double standards. In 1964 he told a national TV audience: "I don't
know why we think, just because we're mighty, that we have the right
to try to substitute might for right. And that's the American policy
in Southeast Asia--just as unsound when we do it as when Russia does
it."
Nor was Morse at all tolerant of pronouncements about the necessity
of saving face. He bristled at the kind of logic advanced the other
day by a top Pentagon advisor, James R. Schlesinger, who asserted that
"given all we have said as a leading world power about the necessity
of regime change in Iraq ... our credibility would be badly damaged if
that regime change did not take place."
Members of Congress are apt to focus on the efficacy of taking
military action, the hazards of getting bogged down, the need for a
clear exit strategy. But such discussions did not preoccupy Morse. He
directly challenged the morality--not just the "winnability"--of the
war in Vietnam. And from the outset he insisted that democracy
requires substantial public knowledge and real congressional oversight
rather than acquiescence to presidential manipulation.
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Appearing on the CBS program "Face the Nation," Morse objected when
journalist Peter Lisagor said, "Senator, the Constitution gives to the
president of the United States the sole responsibility for the conduct
of foreign policy." The senator responded sharply: "Couldn't be more
wrong. You couldn't make a more unsound legal statement than the one
you have just made. This is the promulgation of an old fallacy that
foreign policy belongs to the president of the United States. That's
nonsense."
When Lisagor prodded him ("To whom does it belong then, senator?"),
Morse did not miss a beat: "It belongs to the American people.... And
I am pleading that the American people be given the facts about
foreign policy."
When his questioner persisted--"You know, senator, that the
American people cannot formulate and execute foreign policy"--Morse
became indignant. "Why do you say that?" he demanded. "I have complete
faith in the ability of the American people to follow the facts if
you'll give them. And my charge against my government is, we're not
giving the American people the facts."
Today there are ample reasons for similar concerns.
During the early years of the Vietnam War, the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee functioned as a crucial venue for dissenting
perspectives, but in its current incarnation the panel is notably less
independent. The witness list for this week's hearings about Iraq
prompted Scott Ritter, an ex-Marine and former U.N. weapons inspector
in Iraq, to charge that Chairman Joseph Biden (D-Del.) and most of the
congressional leadership "have preordained a conclusion that seeks to
remove Saddam Hussein from power regardless of the facts and are using
these hearings to provide political cover for a massive military
attack on Iraq."
Transfixed with tactical issues, none of the senators on television
in recent days would dream of acknowledging the current relevance of a
statement made by Morse a third of a century ago: "We're going to
become guilty, in my judgment, of being the greatest threat to the
peace of the world. It's an ugly reality, and we Americans don't like
to face up to it."
With war and peace hanging in the balance, I miss Wayne Morse. He
insisted on asking tough questions. He fully utilized a keen
intellect. And he spoke fearlessly from the heart without worrying
about the political consequences.
Norman Solomon is executive director of the Institute for Public
Accuracy. Web site address:
www.accuracy.org.
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