Casualties of the Iraq War
[1] If truth is the first casualty of war, cynicism must be its
last-and most enduring. Sadly, we have seen both in the war in
Iraq. No one found WMDs, the stated reason for entering the war.
Nor were there any discovered links between Al Qaeda and Saddam
Hussein. The majority of Americans who believed otherwise had been
duped by an incantational rhetoric which substituted repetition for
truth. Despite the declaration almost three years ago that the
mission had been accomplished, our own Secretary of Defense warned
earlier this year that this "War on Terror" will be ongoing. I
remember Henry Kissinger's sober assessment of: "We lose by not
winning, and the guerrillas win by not losing."
[2] Yet I think we will recover our ability to tell the truth.
We may remember how to demand that it be told. Harder to challenge
will be the rising cynicism in public life. After all, lies are
told by liars. Good politicians in compromised circumstances at
least take responsibility for what they have concealed. Across the
board, in red states and blue states alike, a common consensus
emerges: there aren't many good politicians out there. I was struck
that a Democratic governor gave this year's response to the State
of the Union message: it was as if no blue politician within the
Beltway had any credibility left to do the job. Will cynicism be
the sole victor of this war?
[3] As Christians we cannot afford to let that happen. Our task
is not only to raise up the next generation of Christians for the
church of the 21st Century, but to encourage the next generation of
public servants for American public life. Our cynicism, however
well-documented and richly deserved, falls hard on youthful ears at
a time when talented, idealistic, and prophetic leadership is
needed desperately in public life.
[4] I do not counsel uncritical support of whomever is in power.
We Lutherans stand after the Garden and before the eschaton. We
possess that dangerous ability to value public life without turning
it into an idol. We can be calm and non-anxious in the public
realm: demanding the facts, deliberating respectfully, and acting
with bold humility. Our incarnational commitments demand nothing
less.
© March 2006
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 6, Issue 3