I’ve been a little tough on the WaPo’s David Broder lately. OK, more than a little. In column after column, the “dean” of the DC media establishment has been wildly off his game for months — with odd observations, silly predictions, and tired rehashes of far-right talking points.
Yesterday, Broder wrote a relatively inoffensive piece about Tony Blair and George Bush, appearing together in the White House Rose Garden, left with little more than their “shared convictions.” Broder concluded:
History will record that both of them saw the threat to the West posed by terrorism and responded courageously. The wisdom of their policy and the conduct of their governments are not likely to be judged as highly.
Now, in this case, Broder’s point is obviously a critical one — Bush and Blair, he concludes, made the wrong call. In the future, people will look back with scorn at their decision making.
I’m hesitant to blast Broder for an observation that’s largely correct, but I have to take issue with the notion that somehow Bush and Blair were “courageous.” That’s utter nonsense. There was nothing “courageous” about launching an invasion of a country under false pretenses. There was nothing “courageous” about doing so with absurd and overly-optimistic assumptions, without a strategy for success. There was nothing “courageous” about abject dishonesty about what the war was about, what it would cost, and what it would produce. There was nothing “courageous” about deemphasizing the fight against Afghanistan, only to make the terrorist threat worse by invading Iraq.
As Broder sees it, Bush and Blair were “courageous” because they rushed head-first into a disastrous conflict that never needed to be fought. But starting a fight, especially a reckless and irresponsible one, does not require courage. Just the opposite is true — it takes courage to be patient and prudent, taking the time to do what’s right.
As Churchill once said, “Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.”
Post Script: At the risk of being overly picky, there was one other point in Broder’s column that stood out. He wrote:
While the American president cannot be forced out of office against his will, he can be humiliated daily — not only by his political adversaries but also by the incompetence of his own appointees.
The relative merits of impeachment are certainly open to debate, but let’s not forget that an American president can be forced out of office against his will. Article II, Sec. 4 of the Constitution explains that a president “shall be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.”
Whether a president wills it or not is irrelevant.