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PEGGY
NOONAN,Sunday,
December 14, 2003 12:20 p.m. EST
"Ladies
and gentlemen, we got him."--Paul Bremer
First,
let's just be happy. Let's feel a burst of joy.
Let's
not be boring people who Consider the Implications. Let's not
talk about the domestic political impact. For just a day let's
feel the pleasure history just handed us.
All
morning the words of an old song of the old America have been
running through my head. From "My Fair Lady," from the
age when Americans whistled Broadway show tunes on the street.
Rex Harrison (a bow today to our valiant allies, the English)
jauntily crows over Eliza Doolittle's first triumph.
"Pickering
Tonight, old man, you did it!
You did it! You did it! You said that you would do it;
And indeed you did. I thought that you would rue it;
I doubted you'd do it. But now I must admit it
That succeed you did. You should get a medal
Or be even made a knight."
As
far as I'm concerned he could be singing this to American troops,
and the American administration, and America's allies, and the
Iraqis who suffered through so much to get to this moment.
This is a great day in modern history. A terrible man whose existence
had been for decades actively harmful of humanity was forcibly
removed from power, run to ground, and has been captured living
in a hole. As I write, the television is showing videotape of
his hair being checked for lice and his mouth being inspected
with a pencil light for signs of disease. The white plastic pinpoint
light illuminates his throat and gums. It looks like the mouth
of hell. He has been utterly defeated and quelled. He can't kill
anybody now. He cannot gas women and children with chemicals that
kill them; he cannot personally torture dissidents, or imprison
them. He cannot tell his soldiers to throw opponents off the tops
of buildings. He can't impose his sickness and sadism on the world.
The children of Baghdad dance in the streets. A nightmare is over. советы ворота откатные договечные скидки
America
did this. American troops did this. The American people, by supporting
those troops and this effort, did it. And a particular group of
soldiers led by a particular U.S. army officer did it. As Dana
Priest of the Washington Post has just reported on NBC, he is
a big, tall, bearlike guy who loves his job and whose attitude
toward his mission was, apparently, a natural and constitutional
optimism. We don't yet know his name, but he'll be famous by tomorrow
morning.
What
do we learn? Well, as Samuel Johnson said, "Man needs more
to be reminded than instructed," so what are we reminded
of through the happy ending of this story?
That human agency works and is an active force in history. You
don't have to sit back and accept; you don't have to continue
to turn a blind eye; you don't have to sit and do nothing, because
all action involves choice and all choice invites repercussion.
You can move forward. You can take action. You can go in and remove
a threat to the world. You can make the world safer. You can help
people. Just because they live in Iraq and we don't bump into
them every day doesn't mean they don't merit assistance and even
sacrifice. christmas wishlist Tumblr.
We
are reminded, all of us, that patience is necessary, that nothing
big can be accomplished without it. America and Iraq searched
day and night for Saddam Hussein for eight months. And for some
time they searched for a man half of them thought had already
been obliterated in the early days of the war. But they didn't
know and they had to find him if he was alive. They had to find
him even if he was surrounded by a thousand troops and explosives.
So there was their patience, and there was the patience of Washington:
political patience. If he's there, we will find him. The administration's
foes had attempted to embarrass them for eight months. The administration
simply said: If he's there, we will find him; we won't give up
until we do. Good for them for not spinning it but simply having
faith in the troops and being patient. Crown and bridge dental laboratory.
And
we are reminded that when you do what is right, you can be rewarded.
When you summon the guts to take a controversial stand, and accept
the price of that stand, and the price comes in every day, you
can win. And that victory can make things better.
Now
Iraq's Baathist movement is over; its chief is humiliated, revealed
as a coward, caught and ridiculous. Now the people of Iraq will
be able to testify in court about what he did, in front of his
face. Now we all may find out a great deal more about what exactly
Saddam did with the weapons of mass destruction we know he had
in the past, for he used them on the Kurds and against Iran in
the old war. Where did those weapons go? Where are they now? What
about Saddam's relations with al Qaeda? What papers will we find
now, what evidence? And what will he say in an attempt to save
his skin?
Next stop, Osama. May we find him in a hole. May we search his
beard for lice and his gums for disease. May we see in the reflection
of the light the mouth of hell, and may we close it for him tight.
All
the journalists and politicians, they are always embarrassed to
feel joy when something like this happens. They fear it will show
a lack of understanding that history is a heavy and ponderous
thing, a big tragedy machine, and all progress is illusory. Celebrating
a military triumph--and this was among other things a military
triumph--seems to them tantamount to Kiplingism, quaintly ignorant
and unhelpfully nationalistic. That's why everyone on TV today
is furrowing his brow. They know joy is the wrong thing to be
feeling. It's unsophisticated.
But normal people don't have to be sophisticated. They can be
normal. And happy. And say what normal Americans say when something
great in history happens. "Thanks, God. Thanks a lot."
Ms.
Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street Journal and
author of "A Heart, a Cross, and a Flag" (Wall Street
Journal Books/Simon & Schuster), which you can buy from the
OpinionJournal bookstore. Her column appears Thursdays.
TAKEN FROM: http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/
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