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From the Grave, a Senator Exposes Bloody Hands on Capitol Hill

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted July 19, 2007.


Listening to a video clip of the late Senator Morse speaking in the 1960s exposes the big media lie that members of Congress are doing all they can to impose a schedule for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq.
Normon Solomon

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It was a chilling moment on a split-screen of history. While the Senate debated the Iraq war on Tuesday night, a long-dead senator again renounced a chronic lie about congressional options and presidential power.

The Senate was in the final hours of another failure to impede the momentum of war. As the New York Times was to report, President Bush "essentially won the added time he said he needed to demonstrate that his troop buildup was succeeding."

Meanwhile, inside a movie theater on the opposite coast, the thunderous voice of Senator Wayne Morse spoke to 140 people at an event organized by the activist group Sacramento for Democracy. The extraordinary senator was speaking in May 1964 -- and in July 2007.

A typical dash of media conventional wisdom had set him off. The moderator of the CBS program "Face the Nation," journalist Peter Lisagor, told the guest: "Senator, the Constitution gives to the president of the United States the sole responsibility for the conduct of foreign policy."

"Couldn't be more wrong," Morse shot back. "You couldn't make a more unsound legal statement than the one you have just made. This is the promulgation of an old fallacy that foreign policy belongs to the president of the United States. That's nonsense."

Lisagor sounded a bit exasperated: "To whom does it belong, then, Senator?"

Again, Morse didn't hesitate. "It belongs to the American people," the senator fired back. And he added: "What I'm saying is -- under our Constitution all the president is, is the administrator of the people's foreign policy, those are his prerogatives, and I'm pleading that the American people be given the facts about foreign policy."

"You know, Senator, that the American people cannot formulate and execute foreign policy."

"Why do you say that? Why, you're a man of little faith in democracy if you make that kind of comment," Morse retorted. "I have complete faith in the ability of the American people to follow the facts if you'll give them. And my charge against my government is we're not giving the American people the facts."

As Wayne Morse spoke, applause pulsed through the theater. I've seen the same thing happen many times this summer -- whether in New York or D.C. or San Luis Obispo or Sacramento -- with audiences suddenly bursting into loud applause when they hear Morse near the end of the documentary film ("War Made Easy," based on my book of the same name).

Even most antiwar activists don't seem to know anything about Wayne Morse. Whited out of political memory and media history, he was long ago banished to an Orwellian vacuum tube.

Compared to Morse -- even today, more than four years into the horrendous Iraq war -- almost every "antiwar" member of the U.S. Senate is restrained and unduly deferential to presidential war-making power. If you doubt that, consider the Senate's 97-0 vote in mid-July that laid a flagstone on a path toward military confrontation with yet another country: warning Iran that it would be held accountable for an alleged role in attacks on U.S. soldiers in Iraq.

Morse's exchange with the "Face the Nation" host on May 24, 1964, occurred more than two months before the Gulf of Tonkin resolution sailed through Congress on the basis of presidential lies about a supposed unprovoked attack on U.S. ships in the Tonkin Gulf. Morse was one of only two members of the entire Congress to vote against that resolution, which served as a green light for massive escalation of the Vietnam War.

As the years of carnage went by, Senator Morse never let up. And so, when a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee neared a close on February 27, 1968, Morse said -- on the record -- that he did not "intend to put the blood of this war on my hands."

A big media lie is that members of Congress are doing all they can when they try and fail to pass measures that would impose a schedule for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. The Constitution gives Congress the power to pay for war -- and to stop a war by refusing to appropriate money for it. Every vote to pay for more war is soaked with blood.

Wayne Morse knew that truth -- and said it out loud. Today, few senators come close.

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See more stories tagged with: congress, vietnam war, iraq war

The new documentary film "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death," based on Norman Solomon's book of the same title, is now available on DVD. For information about the full-length movie, produced by the Media Education Foundation and narrated by Sean Penn, go to: www.WarMadeEasyTheMovie.org.

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Morse Knew
Posted by: Richard Dudgeon on Jul 19, 2007 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Don't forget that Morse's opposition to the war had a personal tinge to it.
He and Kenneth O'Donnell were the source of the rumor that Kennedy had planned to get us out of Vietnam. Morse claimed Kennedy told him in Sept of 1963 that he planned to withdraw us from Vietnam starting in Jan of 65 and have us out by the end of the year.
O'Donnell said Kennedy had told him the same thing. Right wing nut cakes, phony flag wavers, Nixon sycophants and various other JFK haters hit the roof when they heard this obvious attempt to salvage the reputation of that commie/pinko/liberal soft-on-communism sell out, Kennedy.
Except that the Kennedy library recently released a copy of that very contingency order by which he told them to formulate a plan to get us out starting in Jan of '65 and have us out by the end of the year.
Imagine a world without the baggage, not to mention the scars, that Vietnam left on us as a nation.
Morse did, and that's what made him so angry.

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I know who Wayne Morse is.
Posted by: Reporter on Jul 19, 2007 2:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know who Wayne Morse is. His home, or ranch, as he called it, is on a gentle hillside in the south hills of Eugene, Oregon. I drive past it nearly every day, often several times.

In several letters to my current Congressional Representative DeFazio and Senators Wyden and Smith I constantly remind them how the people of Oregon deserve to be represented in the same spirit in which Wayne Morse represented us. I like to think that Senator Smith's recent decision to begin supporting the initiative to bring US troops out of Iraq was somehow influence by my pleas to him which recalled Morse's brave, sensible path away from US Imperialism.

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We need more people like Morse.
Posted by: WhatNow? on Jul 19, 2007 5:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've got Mike Gravel but he gets little airtime especially in the MSM. If we had more true patriots like these men who believe in the ideals of the Declaration of Independece and the US Constitution the world would be a much more hospitable place for everyone.

Thanks Mr. Solomon, good job as always and I appreciate the little history lesson.

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Like Jack said:
Posted by: mizipi on Jul 20, 2007 6:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can't handle the truth.

Americans - on average, IMHO - do not want to hear the truth. Americans would rather hear a lie. As an example, when Bill Clinton said he did not inhale, now, every person who heard that knew Bill was not being exactly truthful, so, WALLAH, we elected him president. If Bush ever says anything truthful, well then, I guess hell would freeze over. And both of these men were elected twice, maybe not legally, but in reality, they were both elected twice.

It is a shame that our politicians are more concerned with getting re-elected than telling the people the truth about how the federal government works.

Neither of my senators, Lott & Cochran, nor my representative, Taylor will answer any of the questions I ask them. Yeh, right, open democracy -- it is working in Iraq just like the warmongers wanted.

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Remembering the past is our job
Posted by: hagwind on Jul 20, 2007 8:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What Santayana said was "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." The powers that be don't want to remember; repeating the same old same-old is fine by them. (Keep in mind that some of these people think evolution is a myth, so of course they're doing all they can to disprove the theory that people evolve.) Thanks so much for this story. I haven't seen the film, but I love knowing that Wayne Morse is still out there raising hell. Since I was a young college student, his name and that of Ernest Gruening (the other senator who voted against the Tonkin Gulf Resolution) have been part of my political pantheon -- my ongoing reminder that we really can do better than the current crop. How do they expect kids to "say no to drugs" if they don't have the guts to say no to war?

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Here is the clip
Posted by: apple72 on Jul 20, 2007 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wayne Morse on Face the Nation, circa 1964.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JiLV-Xeh8bA

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Senator Robert Byrd was shouting warnings before the invasion of Iraq.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 20, 2007 6:06 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had to protest to the LA Times that his warnings were buried on page 8 or 10, and then only piecemeal. So, yes, if you watch CSPAN, maybe you heard them. Or if you were reading the anti-war blogs.

But please don't ask politicians to withhold funds from troops in the field. That just compounds an already impossible situation. And don't hold Lisagore up as a model of information. Haven't you heard the parodies of rally round the flag? War is good for everyone, except those who have to fight it.

And Congress' leadership isn't "doing everything it can"? Who is? What precisely do you propose that they do? Yes, they already tried that, and it failed. Don't hold Congress responsible for the war. It was we, the American electorate, who put Bush/Cheney in charge. While you argue over whose responsibility is what, they have the power to decide--now.

So how about a bit more lucidity, please? For instance, give us an explanation for why the Senate cloture vote failed and may be some insight into how the next one can succeed.

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11/22/63
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Jul 24, 2007 2:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have said it before, I will say it again-this nation died on 11/22/63 with the assassination of JFK. What has followed is fear of statesmanship that will expose a proponent to elimination by the powerful elite that have a different view of governance and justice. Morse knew and struggled mightily in the Senate to alert us. Henry Gonzalez knew and uplifted us daily with is clarion calls on early c-span telecasts and floor fights in the House. Then what? Look at the array in the Senate, particularly, and name a dozen that are worthy of a vote by a thinking American. You may quibble and grumble, but mark it down-you damned sure won't find a majority of anything but thumb-sucking chicken-shits that are lapdogs for GOP racsim and bloodshed. Morse and Gonzalez cry out from their graves, we write laments, the rest are into meaningful pursuits such as reality TV, blackberry phones and erectile dysfuntion remedies. Iraq, who gives a shit? with the latest 97-0 Senate vote Iran is next and then what?

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Good to see...
Posted by: SteveB on Jul 24, 2007 7:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that the elitism of the Washington press corps was just as evident in 1964 as it is today. Peter Lisagor's "You know, Senator, that the American people cannot formulate and execute foreign policy" would qualify him for membership in any present-day panel of TV pundits.

Take any twelve random Americans off the street and ask them to put together a foreign policy, and you couldn't do worse than the 40 year clusterfuck we got from our so-called "wise men."

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