Baltimore Sun

Trump’s parade

We respect those who served because they sacrificed to uphold America’s ideals; we don’t flaunt our military might like boys parading toy soldiers

-

Our view:

After a trip to France last summer when President Emmanuel Macron invited him to observe the Bastille Day Parade, President Donald Trump started musing about doing the same thing in the United States, only bigger and better.

But President Trump says a lot of stuff, and it’s hard to know which bad ideas to take seriously. This one, apparently, he actually intends to follow through on. The Washington Post reported Wednesday that in a meeting attended by the nation’s top military leaders, Mr. Trump made clear that he considers the parade idea a presidenti­al directive, and now both the White House and Pentagon acknowledg­e that they’re working on making it a reality. It would, of course, be a tremendous waste of money to ship tanks and armored personnel carriers and — who knows? — ballistic missile launchers to Washington, but that’s not our chief concern. It’s that such a display sends the wrong message to Americans and to the world about what the United States stands for. French President Emmanuel Macron and President Donald Trump attend the annual Bastille Day military parade. have unparallel­ed military might don’t have to put it on display.

On the contrary, those who make a show of military parades often believe the key to maintainin­g power is through fear, intimidati­on and shows of force. Such displays are often closely associated with uniformed strongmen like Fidel Castro, Moamar Gadhafi and Idi Amin.

It is not totally unpreceden­ted for the military to march through Washington, D.C.; such an event took place during George H.W. Bush’s presidency after the first Gulf War. And an American military parade has become mixed with presidenti­al politics from time to time. Troops have marched in a handful of inaugural parades in modern times — mainly during the early days of the Cold War, including in Dwight Eisenhower’s first inaugural parade in 1953. Army medium tanks move along Pennsylvan­ia Avenue between spectator-crowded sidewalks in President Dwight Eisenhower’s 1953 inaugural parade.

But Eisenhower, the supreme allied commander in World War II, was the president who warned America in his farewell address of the necessity for maintainin­g a strong military but also the dangers of allowing it to dominate the nation’s government, economic and spiritual life. “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisitio­n of unwarrante­d influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military–industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. Wemustneve­r let the weight of this combinatio­n endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgea­ble citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals so that security and liberty may prosper together.”

The idea that ours is a nation in which the military is subordinat­e is as old as the Republic itself. That principle was symbolical­ly sealed in Annapolis in 1783 when George Washington resigned his commission as head of the Continenta­l Army to return to private life. Not only did he do so voluntaril­y, but he did so in a way that reinforced where America’s true power lies — in the strength of its democratic institutio­ns, not in its army. It was he who stood to bow to Congress, meeting in the Old Senate Chamber of the State House, not the other way around. George Washington resigns his commission in the State House in Annapolis in a painting by John Trumbull.

The greatest former generals to serve as commander in chief understood that. But our current president, a draft dodger who claims it was treasonous for Democrats not to clap at whatever he said during a State of the Union address, clearly does not. We celebrate those who have served in the armed forces, no question. But it is not their strength we venerate but their willingnes­s to sacrifice to safeguard those principles we hold so dear.

Our national holiday is the Fourth of July, Independen­ce Day. It is not the day our war to free ourselves from England began nor the day of our victory. On the contrary, it is the day when we declared our belief in our inalienabl­e rights to freedom and self determinat­ion. That is what makes America a beacon to the world. Sending tanks down the streets of the capital to flaunt our might does not.

 ?? JOEL SAGET/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
JOEL SAGET/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? HANDOUT ??
HANDOUT
 ?? AP ??
AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States