Our military is a vital engine for society

Memorial Day provides the opportunity to recognize the military’s emphasis on merit and commitment to fairness. We need the sort of sensible realism that women and men who served bring to policy.

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Anthony Bingham III, representing Post 1932 of the Army, shows off his military pins at the Memorial Day Wreath Laying Ceremony at Daley Plaza on May 26, 2018.

An Army veteran shows off his military pins at a Memorial Day Wreath Laying Ceremony at Daley Plaza in 2018.

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Memorial Day, celebrated on May 30, is cause for contemplation as well as ceremonies. Parades featuring people in uniform — those currently serving, those who have served and others who protect us — should always be welcome. Military uniforms remind us of the roles of war in our history and our present.

From ancient times, parades have been vital to the reintegration of warriors into society. War is profoundly disruptive and disturbing as well as dangerous. Even the rare man who finds combat invigorating and rewarding is in severe need of returning home after the killing ends.

Homer, chronicler of the Trojan War, is extremely sensitive to this. His great classic is divided into two parts. “The Iliad” focuses on the fighting and related associations involving Greeks and Trojans; “The Odyssey” describes the very long voyage home of Greek leader Ulysses and his men. They traverse allegorical geography, struggling to put the horrors behind them.

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General George S. Patton Jr., a very great American combat leader, was extremely mindful of this dimension. A special ceremony in the Los Angeles Coliseum after the surrender of Nazi Germany featured Patton and General James Doolittle, who led the first air raid on Tokyo not long after Pearl Harbor.

Patton celebrated the accomplishments of his Third Army in the victorious drive across Europe. In honoring his troops, he stressed in particular the 40,000 who lost their lives. Patton made such statements regularly in the few months remaining in his own life.

In World War II, peoples liberated from Axis occupation welcomed Allied troops. Understandably, our media gave special emphasis to this dimension. Later, the Korean War created strong bonds between the U.S. and the people as well as very effective military of South Korea. The first Gulf War liberated an oppressed population.

The Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan wars were different. During Vietnam, the Pentagon urged, sometimes ordered, personnel to practice public anonymity. Opposition to the war became hostility to our own military.

There was no collective welcome home. Many aging veterans of that war suffer without a Ulysses, troubled — and troublesome, sometimes criminally.

Afghanistan and Iraq War controversy did not target our military. Visits to Washington, D.C., provide reminders of the visibility of the uniformed military, especially on public transportation. President Richard Nixon’s decisive end of the military draft has been crucial in the change.

However, the often-rapid rotation of personnel back to overseas missions is unfair as well as counterproductive. Enormous psychological strains join physical danger, and families suffer heavily.

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The all-professional military is segregated from wider society. This, in turn, facilitates frequent personnel rotation overseas, a problem that developed destructively during the Clinton administration.

The military remains a vital engine for equality and opportunity. General Colin Powell and many others demonstrate the point. Powell, from modest origins, achieved the most senior civilian and military posts in our government.

Powell noted that he experienced discrimination in the South but never on post. Our military emphasizes merit. Memorial Day provides the opportunity to recognize that commitment to fairness.

Encourage veterans to run for office. We won the Cold War in part because members of the World War II generation also served in government. Every U.S. president from Harry Truman through George H.W. Bush was a veteran. Today, things are starkly different.

What we need above all is the sort of sensible realism that women and men who served bring to policy.

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguished Professor of Political Economy and World Business at Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin and is the author of “After the Cold War.”


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