I am about the same age
as Army Specialist Shoshana Johnson, who is at the upper end of the
age range of Americans fighting in Iraq. Johnson was taken prisoner
by Iraqis when she and her convoy took a wrong turn on the road to
Baghdad.
I don't pretend to speak for everybody my age but do know that
most of us are ambivalent about this war. Even the hard-core
Republicans I know are more fiercely supportive of President Bush
than they are coherent or persuasive in explaining why our soldiers
and Marines have been sent to fight and die thousands of miles
away.
Weapons of mass destruction? Haven't seen 'em. To stop Iraq from
getting nukes? Two words: forged documents. Two more: North Korea.
Preventing another Sept. 11? Go after Osama bin Laden. Avenging the
Kurds? 20 years too late. Liberating the Iraqi people? They are not
cooperating. Enforcing U.N. resolutions? Give me a break.
Many of us are still shaken from Sept. 11, but there is no proof
that Saddam Hussein was involved in it. Despite Bush's mantra --
''Saddam is an evil man who gassed his own people and who must be
disarmed for the sake of peace'' -- many of us don't think that it's
worth the lives of our soldiers to topple the Iraqi dictator.
Americans like me respect the military, because unlike those who
advocated this war, we tend to know people who joined up --
public-school kids who did ROTC in high school and who enlisted for
good jobs, pay for college or to get some direction and discipline
in life. Conquering the world was definitely not a reason. Even the
most anti-war people see our military as dedicated professionals who
aren't at all culpable for the political policies that they are
duty-bound to implement.
So what's the disconnect?
• Maybe it's the creepy,
neoconservative crowd whose decade-long determination to go to war
makes the whole exercise look suspect.
• Maybe it's time to bring back
the draft. Unless we all have a friend or family member in the Gulf,
Americans have surprisingly little at stake in this war. For many
young people, it's just another TV reality show -- great graphics,
banging soundtrack and ''embedded'' reporters becoming the next
superstars. But this reality show is full of real tragedy, real
dying and real suffering, on both sides. The question is: Without
the prospect of being whisked off to the front lines, how deeply
will the generation that grew up on Mortal Kombat feel it?
• Maybe it's the fact that while a
war with potentially dire consequences for the world is raging in
Iraq, the United States isn't on much of a war footing. We're told
to go about our business. We don't even sweat the orange alerts
anymore; they've become background noise.
When we get tired of watching the MOABs lighting up Baghdad, we
can watch undeployed soldier Scott Grayson belt one out for a chance
to get signed by Simon Cowell (the bad Brit to Tony Blair's good,
dutiful one). For all its great coverage at the beginning of the
war, MTV hasn't pre-empted The Real World, and BET is still
booty-shaking and bling-blinging for all but 30 minutes a day.
There are no calls for sacrifice, no war bonds or rations (in
fact, if we make enough dough, we're even getting a tax cut) and no
exhortations from our leaders to get involved. The people most
inclined to get involved -- on the anti-war side -- are being told
to quiet down. Meanwhile, the two major parties are busy dolling out
the post-Hussein spoils to their corporate friends -- and Specialist
Johnson and other young soldiers are still waiting to be
rescued.
America is about to produce a whole new generation of grizzled
war veterans in their 20s and 30s. This Greatest Generation might
turn into the Most Cynical Generation as well.
Joy-Ann L. Reid is news editor for NBC6.net.