Look at Our Yellow Ribbons

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Edith Shain was 91 years old when she died peacefully last week in her home in Los Angeles. You knew her as the woman in the iconic black and white photo of a jubilant soldier kissing a nurse in Times Square on V-J Day. The snapshot tells an American tale of a war ending and an entire generation of people coupling up – creating the suburbs, a solid middle-class and a stupendous baby boom.

Cartoon by Monte Wolverton - Cagle Cartoons (click to reprint)
Cartoon by Monte Wolverton – Cagle Cartoons (click to reprint)

What strikes me about the photo is that they really knew how to end wars back then. For example: they used to end wars…back then. There was a global conflict followed by a resolution. Beginning. Middle. End. Done. Birthrate skyrockets.

Now we have two never-ending wars and Cialis commercials on an eternal loop. How far we’ve come.

The U.S. decided to invade Afghanistan after September 11th in 2001. As troops were being mobilized, Americans preemptively bought yellow ribbons to show support for the mission and the troops. Yellow ribbons also appeared in 1979 during the Iran Hostage Crisis and again in 1991 for the troops in Operation Desert Storm. Then ten years later they were back, displayed for all to see: tied to trees, flagpoles, telephone poles and every pole in between. Our nation was awash in American flags and yellow ribbons. “These colors don’t run!”

The other day I saw a yellow ribbon stuck in a chain link fence. The ribbon was tattered, frayed and sun-faded. The war in Afghanistan is so long it has outlasted the material of the ribbons initially supporting the effort. An original ribbon from this current war is now an antique.

About five years into the conflict yellow ribbon car magnets became a big trend. During that time I was traveling all over the country, and in every pocket of the U.S. were cars, trucks and SUVs with magnets showing support for what had become not one, but two wars. Yellow ribbons were ubiquitous. And then gradually the magnets starting disappearing until they were gone. Individually – one by one ““ in private, with no fanfare and no media coverage – Americans removed their patriotic yellow ribbon magnets from their vehicles. You don’t see them anymore. Apparently something as temporary as a magnet shaped like a ribbon is not the proper symbol for the war we are actually waging.

With all the red-baiting and pundit-driven fear of the U.S. becoming a communist country because we no longer let health insurance companies deny coverage to sick children, we’ve lost sight of an important fact: the Soviet Union ““ communists ““ lost their collective red shirts in Afghanistan. The perils of fighting a determined local force whose idea of infrastructure is a bridge to the sixth century proved too enormous for the last super power that fought there.

In fact, Afghanistan is an empire graveyard. It has been for millennia. How about this for a foreign policy: don’t invade a place where the last successful incursion was led by Genghis Khan.

Last week a Rolling Stone article about the war in Afghanistan resulted in the retirement of General Stanley McChrystal, Commander of U.S. Forces Afghanistan. The media attention focused on the personnel issue in the chain of command. What was skipped over was the passage about the COIN (acronym for counter-insurgency) doctrine created by McChrystal’s replacement, General David Petraeus. “The COIN doctrine, bizarrely, draws inspiration from some of the biggest Western military embarrassments in recent memory: France’s nasty war in Algeria (lost in 1962) and the American misadventure in Vietnam (lost in 1975),” wrote reporter Michael Hastings.

That’s right. We are looking at past mistakes and incorporating them into our current conflict – which is like gathering a bunch of defective parts, putting them into your new car and being surprised by the outcome.

So far the war in Afghanistan has cost the U.S. $300 billion. It’s already the longest war America has ever fought. The date President Obama gave for the start of withdrawal is July 2011. The war hawks argue this is too soon.

As if.

You can say many things about the war in Afghanistan but “not long enough” is not one of them.

Maybe those worn-out ribbons are more of a symbol than we planned on.
“””“

Tina Dupuy is an award-winning writer, editor and columnist for Cagle Cartoons. Follow Tina on Twitter @TinaDupuy.

Want to run Tina’s column in your publication? Contact Cari Dawson Bartley. E-mail [email protected], (800) 696-7561.


Comments

9 responses to “Look at Our Yellow Ribbons”

  1. Good Life Avatar
    Good Life

    When I saw the second plane go into the tower my first words were, "This is war." What I didn't realize was we would not concentrate on those that attacked for another 7 years. After the citizens became war weary. The funds for a war against the attackers wasted on other targets.

    When the war started we put a candle (electronic light that flickers) in the front window. About a year ago I picked up the candle and the plastic barrel shattered into dust. It has been replaced with a higher quality model. My children, now in their 20's grew up with this light burning 24/7. They think of it as a part of their home.

    On the wall next to that window is a flag and certificate from 1st Squadron, 6th US Cavalry Regiment. A gift for out support of our Godson during one of his three tours.

    Yes, we are ready to bring peace to the nation. But, we are not ready for another 9/11. Before we can end the conflict we must ask the consequences of leaving. It is romantic to remember the end of "noble"' wars, but the reality is we live in a world of guerrilla fighting.

    The article said this is the nation's longest war. That simply isn't true. The Korean war has never ended. We are simply in a state of cease fire. The war is nearly 60 years old and continuing. And the costs continue. That is probably the fate of the current and all future conflicts.

  2. CaptEagleheart Avatar
    CaptEagleheart

    Good Life:

    “Yes, we are ready to bring peace to the nation. But, we are not ready for another 9/11. Before we can end the conflict we must ask the consequences of leaving. It is romantic to remember the end of “noble” wars, but the reality is we live in a world of guerrilla fighting. ”

    You are absolutely right! No need to expand.

  3. MoIorn Avatar
    MoIorn

    The thing I disliked the most about the Afghanistan and Iraq wars were the vagueness of the constantly changing objectives and goals. Not having a clear plan what you want to is a recipe for failure for any project.

    Also the Afghanistan war should have been "finished" before starting a big war in a completely non-911 related country that was no immediate threat at the moment.

  4. AV Avatar

    Tina,

    I appreciate your column but I must point out the obvious – it was a SAILOR, not a soldier, who embraced and kissed Edith Shain. There is a difference. FYI-

    USMC = Marine(s)

    USN = sailor(s)

    USA = soldier(s)

    USAF = airman(men)

  5. Rob Avatar
    Rob

    Elections are Coming!

    Take a look at this and just remember elections in November 2010.

    U..S. House & Senate have voted themselves $4,700 and $5,300 raises.

    They voted to NOT give you a S.S. Cost of living raise in 2010 and 2011.

    Your Medicare premiums will go up $285.60 for the 2-years

    You will not get the 3% COLA: $660/yr.

    Your total 2-yr loss and cost is -$1,600 or -$3,200 for husband and wife.

    Over these same 2-years each Congress person will get $10,000

    Will your cost of drugs – doctor fees – local taxes – food, etc., decrease? NO WAY!

    Congress received a raise and has better health and retirement benefits than you or I.

    You will have a chance to get rid of the sitting Congress: up to 1/3 of the Senate and 100% of the House!

    28th Amendment will be as follows:

    "Congress shall make no law that applies to the citizens of the United States that does not apply equally to the Senators or Representatives, and Congress shall make no law that applies to the Senators or Representatives that does not apply equally to the citizens of the United States ."

    AUTHOR UNKNOWN

  6. Good Life Avatar
    Good Life

    Cost of living raise——-Cost of living by definition means there was inflation. There has been no inflation. If there was no inflation how can there be a cost of living increase?

    How can there be a loss when there was no inflation to compensate for?

  7. TiJonChaos Avatar
    TiJonChaos

    ….hard to win a war went you have the 5th column in your own country supporting the enemy….

  8. geoff Avatar

    TiJonChaos: ah, the 5th column raises its ugly head yet again. I guess it wouldn't have anything to do with bad planning from the start, mistaken aims, the stupidity of diverting troops from Afghanistan to the stupidity that is Iraq, etc.? Then you could also add the "stab in the back" myth while you're at it (the generals didn't really want to win, etc.).

  9. ArtW Avatar
    ArtW

    Good Life: "Cost of living raise——-Cost of living by definition means there was inflation. There has been no inflation. If there was no inflation how can there be a cost of living increase? "

    You are correct. The SS COLA is based on the CPI.

    Congress received their increase for the great job they are doing.

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