From the ArcaMax Publishing, Mark Shields Newsletter:
http://www.arcamax.com/news/markshields/s-640295-304312
Former U.S. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, who as a Marine pilot had flown
59 combat missions during World War II and an additional 90 missions
in Korea -- where in air-to-air combat during that war's last nine
days, alone, he had shot down three Soviet MiG fighter planes -- knew
firsthand the suffering of war. So the plain words John Glenn spoke in
the Senate on Jan. 22, 1997, about what he called "the Dover test" are
worth recalling: "It's easy to see the flags flying and the people go
off to war, and the bands play and the flags fly. And it's not quite
so easy when the flag is draped over a coffin coming back through
Dover, Delaware."
Waiting until after midnight to leave the White House, President
Barack Obama traveled to Delaware, and there in the pre-dawn darkness
on Oct. 29, 2009, he personally took "the Dover test."
The most momentous of national decisions -- to send American citizens
into combat -- ought to first be subjected to the Dover test, which
according to former Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Hugh Shelton, begins
with whether "the American public (is) prepared for the sight of our
most precious resource coming home in flag-draped caskets."
The scene, so familiar to older generations, where the military
pallbearers in their white gloves so respectfully carry the caskets
bearing the human remains of the fallen -- and where the families and
loved ones mourned, but were also comforted by the ceremonial care --
had been banned from public view since 1991 until the Obama
administration changed the policy to allow families to decide whether
the solemn occasion could be covered.
The scene at Dover is no ordinary picture. No, Dover is truly the
portrait of sacrifice and of human loss. Statistics do not bleed. Real
sons and real fathers -- and, yes, real sisters -- bleed. And they
die. However any of us might feel about the wisdom of the decision to
go to war or of how that war has been waged, all of us need to
appreciate -- and to share -- the grief and pain of the human cost of
war.
The president of the United States is not just the commander in chief.
The president is also the comforter in chief. That is what President
Ronald Reagan was when, after 241 American servicemen, mostly U.S.
Marines, were killed by a terrorist attack on their Beirut barracks,
he went to Camp Lejeune in North Carolina to honor those killed, to
comfort those who survived and to give voice to the national grief.
War's endless expense in human suffering ought not to be shielded from
either public view or from public responsibility.
President Obama, during his winning campaign, promised to make
Washington more "transparent" and more "accountable." At 4 a.m. on
Oct. 29, as he stood silently by as six soldiers carried the remains
of Army Sgt. Dale R. Griffin of Terre Haute, Ind., back to American
soil and to those who mourned him, President Obama made both himself,
and the national government he leads, more responsible and made the
reality of war more transparent.
At Dover, he personally met with and consoled -- in their time of
profound sorrow -- the families of 18 fallen Americans. No form letter
or phone call. Just human being to human being.
As John Glenn said: "It's easy to see the flags flying and the people
go off to war, and the bands play and the flags fly. And it's not
quite so easy when the flag is draped over a coffin coming back
through Dover, Delaware." Barack Obama, by choosing the "not quite so
easy" path, has earned his nation's thanks.
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To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns,
visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. Distributed
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