NATOSource
Featured Publications
The Trilateral Bond: Mapping a New Era for Latin America, the United States, and Europe
Egypt's Litigious Transition: Judicial Intervention and the Muddied Road to Democracy
A New Deal: Reforming US Defense Cooperation with Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership: Ambitious but Achievable
Time to Move from Tactics to Strategy on Iran
Lowering the Price of Russian Gas: A Challenge for European Energy Security
Does Beijing Have a Strategy? China's Alternative Futures
Council News
Mihaela Carstei on the US-Canada Keystone Pipeline Project (CTV)
On the heels of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s visit to the United States, Energy & Environment Program Associate Director Mihaela Carstei joins CTV to discuss the Keystone Pipeline project that would transport tar sands oil from Canada and the northern United States to refineries in the Gulf coast of Texas.
Frederic Hof on US Position in Syria Crisis (BBC World Service)
Hariri Middle East Center Senior Fellow Frederic Hof speaks with the BBC’s Tim Franks about the cautious US position with respect to resolving the Syria crisis.
Shuja Nawaz Response to Pakistan Election Results (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty)
South Asia Center Director Shuja Nawaz joins a live Google Hangout organized by RFE/RL to discuss Pakistan’s historic elections.
Shuja Nawaz Speaks About Pakistan Elections (CCTV America)
South Asia Center Director Shuja Nawaz joins CCTV America to discuss Pakistan’s historic elections.
Going Over the Decency Cliff
Harlan Ullman | December 27, 2012The looming fiscal cliff has received almost as much publicity as the Mayan prediction of the end of the world. This column has warned that the nation also faces a strategic cliff that could pose even greater jeopardy than from the fiscal woes. But there is a third and possibly more precipitous cliff.
This should be called the ‘decency cliff’. When a nation fails to live up to basic standards of decency, bad things happen. Revolutions, uprisings and repressions occur. America now teeters on this cliff. One of the symptoms is the explosion of what can be called ‘mini-McCarthys’, pint-sized versions of Tail Gunner Joe McCarthy, the disgraced and reprimanded former senator from Wisconsin.
For those not of an age or disinterested in politics, McCarthy was the most vile of politicians — a liar, drunk, and mentally unstable individual who, in the 1950s, made a career of ruining Americans merely by calling them communists. McCarthy even had the temerity to accuse General George Marshall of heinous behaviour before the Senate finally censured him and ended the reign of terror he so embraced.
Two examples of this decency cliff are self-evident. The first is what if anything will be done in the wake of the Newtown, Connecticut school massacre in which 20 young children were brazenly murdered. The second is how we treat potential appointees for high office.
The roots of this decency gap are decades old. Political correctness was an antecedent. Cultural censors attacked the use of any language that was not plain vanilla in content on the grounds of offending some group, somewhere. And the Supreme Court was not helpful.
In three of the worst cases of jurisprudence since Plessey Versus Ferguson — DC v Heller that changed the meaning of the Second Amendment about gun rights; Bush v Gore that elected a president; and United Citizens that permitted political action committees unlimited political spending — the forces of indecency have been multiplied. Hence, not only is it fair game to conjure up the most horrible misrepresentations and slanders about individuals, vast funding is available for those slurs and wrongful allegations.
Regarding gun control, it is inconceivable that this nation does not have stronger prohibitions beginning with mandatory licensing for all gun owners and users. Tragically, the 1986 Heller decision ignored the meaning of “a well regulated militia” as the basis for the right to keep and bear arms. And apologists for the broader interpretation of the Second Amendment duck this latest tragedy by arguing we need to focus on fixing mental health and a culture of media violence first.
Regarding the mini-McCarthys, Ambassador Susan Rice was the latest casualty. While this column opposed her nomination, the reasons had nothing to do with the Benghazi tragedy or alleged cover-up, a cover-up that the Accountability Panel headed by Ambassador Tom Pickering and Admiral Mike Mullen absolutely rejected. She was simply not the best qualified person for the job of the Secretary of State.
Now, former Sergeant and Senator Chuck Hagel is in the sights of the mini-McCarthys. Branded an anti-Semite and anti-gay, Hagel’s extraordinary service to his country in war and in peace is being tarnished for obscenely perverse and wrong reasons. In full disclosure, we are colleagues at the Atlantic Council and have been friends for a long time.
Make no mistake: Chuck Hagel would make a great secretary of anything. But his suitability for the position is not the issue. Decency is. Moreover, people who make slanderous and simply wrong accusations must be held accountable. Given the pernicious and septic nature of our political system and the overriding proposition that “you are either with us or against us”, decency is unlikely to win through without some help from the president and the public. So where is the outrage?
President Barack Obama can navigate the nation back to a course where common decency and civil dialogue are not automatically excluded from politics. First, the White House must craft a basic gun control bill. Then, this bill should be subjected to a national referendum. Surely, money for that referendum can be easily raised. No doubt, such a bill would secure a large majority in its favour. So armed, it will be difficult for Congress to bow to the NRA and other lobbies and reject this bill.
Second, the administration must be pro-active in defending people it is considering for high office. As Sergeant Hagel knows, ‘no-man’s land’ is the worst place to find oneself in war and in peace. Clearly, eminent Americans should stand up and correct the record, especially against overtly slanderous and deliberately misleading charges.
Finally, the public has a role. The issue is not politics. The issue is decency. And here we face a dangerous cliff unless we are prepared to change course.
Harlan Ullman, a senior advisor at the Atlantic Council, is chairman of the Killowen Group that advises leaders of government and business. This column was syndicated by UPI.
Trackback URL for this post:
New Atlanticist Navigation
The views expressed in the New Atlanticist are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Atlantic Council, its staff, or its supporters.
Recommended Blogs
International News
Think Tanks
Featured Videos











