Times Standard (Eureka)

‘Wartime’ presidents have one thing in common: courage

- By Robin Umberg and Thomas J. Umberg Special to CalMatters

Donald Trump often boasts that he is a “wartime” president. Our wartime presidents have had the courage to take personal responsibi­lity for their actions — and, equally courageous, for their inaction. The courage to admit error and learn from it. The Union sustained a long string of battlefiel­d defeats in the first years of the Civil War. Abraham Lincoln did not blame these losses on the generals, the Union governors or anyone else. Instead he made the hard and unpopular decision to pursue the war — fully expecting that it would cost him his reelection.

Franklin D. Roosevelt, facing a deeply divided America, called upon a fearful nation to become the “Arsenal of Democracy” — in an election year. Afterward, when we suffered devastatin­g defeat at Pearl Harbor, he did not blame Hawaii for ill preparedne­ss. He took responsibi­lity for the loss, as well as the huge sacrifices of blood and treasure yet to come.

Future president, then Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, the overall commander of forces for D-Day believed taking responsibi­lity the sine qua non — the essential condition — of leadership. In fact, he had already written his mea culpa should the June 6, 1944 invasion fail: “If any blame or fault attaches to the [failed] attempt it is mine alone.”

Donald Trump, the self-proclaimed “wartime” president, needs to show the courage of true “wartime” presidents — the courage to take responsibi­lity for the failure of the federal government to stop the bidding between the states that drives up the price and availabili­ty of face masks for health care workers; the courage to create and enforce a uniform national stayat-home order for an interconne­cted nation; the courage to use the Defense Production Act to produce the needed ammunition to fight this demon disease; the courage to admit he was wrong when he stated on March 6 that “Anybody that wants a test (for the coronaviru­s) can get a test.”

Today, nearly seven weeks later, testing is still, appallingl­y, lagging. In the face of the obvious lack of testing availabili­ty, the president cites misleading statistics and describes his administra­tion’s performanc­e as “perfect.” Contrast that with Gov. Gavin Newsom who confronted the issue directly. “And I have a responsibi­lity as your governor to do better and do more testing in the state of California.” Little wonder California­ns trust their governor by a huge margin over the president.

Trump does not take responsibi­lity. His cowardice was on full display when he declared himself as having “total authority” and then, after realizing that with “total authority” came “total responsibi­lity,” he “authorized” governors to make the tough decisions they were already making daily. He then attempted to hide his retreat by issuing a plan for a three-phrase return to normalcy that the governors would be required to follow before opening their states. Unable to withstand even the whispers of derision from his base, he quickly undermined his own guidance by inciting his followers on Twitter to “LIBERATE” their states and reopen.

Trump believes that the deteriorat­ing economy mirrors his reelection prospect. Asking his followers to pressure their governors is a perfectly cowardly course of action. If a state opens early and COVID-19 continues or increases its death grip — it’s the governors’ fault. If the state’s economy spirals into depression — that, too, is the governors’ fault. Meanwhile the president, ever the benevolent ruler, holds forth daily and recounts the “gifts” he personally bestows upon ungrateful supplicant­s.

Governors in several states already have begun to reopen everything from gyms to tattoo parlors in blatant contravent­ion of the president’s “plan.” The president claimed recently that he has “total” authority to override governors’ decisions. As the governors succumb to the loud mobs demanding the right to “LIBERATE” their state, is there any chance our “wartime” president will grow the courage to stand in their way to protect us from the enemy that has already killed over 76,000 Americans?

Trump does not take responsibi­lity.

Robin Umberg is a retired U.S. Army Brigadier General and former Undersecre­tary of the California Department of Veterans Affairs, Rbumberg@gmail.com. Thomas Umberg is a retired U.S. Army Colonel, currently serving in the California State Senate, a Democrat representi­ng the 34th Senate District, encompassi­ng parts of Orange County and Long Beach, tomumberg@aol.com. He served three overseas tours and is a Bronze Star recipient.

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