OK, I'll admit it: I'm a Don Rumsfeld fan, and I have been since
we first met, some 37 years ago. I've admired his willingness to
take risks. After all, why would a rising star in the Republican
congressional hierarchy leave a safe seat to run Richard Nixon's
poverty program, a move that would hardly endear him to his
conservative constituency?
And then, after successes in senior Cabinet positions, why would he
go back home to suburban Chicago and take over a failing company
for a family friend? He could have stayed in Washington and become
a superlobbyist like so many others have done.
And then, despite the comforts of a good life in Chicago, he again
answered the call to come back to Washington under President Ronald
Reagan as a volunteer to tell the world's governments why the Law
of the Sea Treaty was wrong and would be vigorously opposed by the
U.S. government. He then continued to serve his country in myriad
other positions during the next 15 years.
He didn't return to receive an award or a medal. He already has the
highest one his government can bestow on him, the Presidential
Medal of Freedom. And he didn't return for his own political
advancement; his political ambitions are over. No, he took the
position as President Bush's secretary of defense because he's a
patriot who believes his involvement can make a difference.
He answered the call because he knew the U.S. military needed to be
fundamentally restructured to fight the wars of the future, and
that the U.S. has to be able to defend itself from rogue nations
and stateless bands of terrorists.
He began that military transformation process, and he made some
enemies in the uniformed services along the way. But as author
Midge Decter said in her insightful biography "Rumsfeld: A Personal
Portrait," "He did not then--nor does he to this day--make use of
the press to further his interoffice opinions or ambitions, as
others have done so effectively and for so long."
Frankly, that has always been Don's problem. He calls it like he
sees it and doesn't spin, either for his own advantage or that of
his own team. So his critics, out to make political hay with
slogans and sound bites, play "pile on" and attack him for every
perceived misstep.
And there's the rub: Senators of his own party--John McCain, Chuck
Hagel, Susan Collins, even Trent Lott--who should be applauding
such a straight-talking, decisive leader--are taking shots at him
because he doesn't play the Washington game of appeasing the powers
on Capitol Hill and in the national news media.
So when, at a meeting with troops in Kuwait, an embedded reporter
from the Chattanooga Times-Free Press stages a question to Rumsfeld
through the mouth of Spec. Thomas Wilson about the shortage of
armor on Humvees in Iraq, the sergeant gets a straight and truthful
answer from Rumfeld: "As you know, you go to war with the Army you
have. They're not the Army you might want or wish to have at a
later time." And, for the umpteenth time since the Iraq war began,
Rumsfeld is pilloried. For what? For refusing to double-talk.
As Decter notes, the accounts of Rumsfeld's dangerous shortcomings
and high-handedness already were being circulated in the media by
the third day of the Iraq war, almost two years ago.
Are there problems in Iraq? Of course there are, and some of them
should be blamed on the Department of Defense. And these problems
are getting a complete airing.
Others problems have to do with the very nature of the war we're
in. We are dealing with terrorism, and terrorists are fundamentally
different from any other enemies we have ever faced. But every day
we're learning new tactics for dealing with this new enemy.
Meanwhile, Rumsfeld realizes that his role is getting on with the
job of protecting America.
President Bush, you made the right call in keeping Don Rumsfeld as
a key member of your team for your second term. We know you won't
be swayed by those in the media and on Capitol Hill who want him
out. So please keep him in place for as long as he's willing to
serve.
Ed Feulner, president of the Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a conservative think tank based in
Washington.
First Appeared in The Chicago Tribune