Almost 37 years ago, long before Congress thought to
pass non-binding resolutions as a first step to cut off
funding in Iraq, the Senate passed an amendment sponsored by
Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R.-Ky.) and Sen. Frank Church
(D.-Idaho) to restrict funding for operations in Cambodia.
Senators Chuck Schumer (D.-N.Y) and House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D.-Calif.) have said again and again that passage of
a non-binding resolution against President Bush’s troop
surge would be the first step to withdrawing American
forces from Iraq.
How badly could this turn out?
The actions of their predecessors, who de-funded the Vietnam
War, give us a big clue.
On June 30, 1970 58 senators voted in favor of Cooper-Church
to handcuff President Nixon from sending more troops to
Vietnam. The amendment limited the President’s war powers
through the budgetary process with a trio of stipulations.
First, it ended funding for U.S. troops and advisers in
Cambodia and Laos after June 30. Secondly, it banned combat
operations over Cambodian airspace to support Cambodian
forces without prior congressional approval. Lastly, it cut
funding to support Southern Vietnamese forces stationed
outside of Vietnam.
In a July 11 editorial HUMAN EVENTS slammed the amendment.
It said, “The Cooper-Church proposal does a number of things
that can only cause exaltation and hand-clapping in Hanoi
and Communist capitals elsewhere….The amendment also tells
our Asian allies that they can go hang, for the U.S. Senate,
at any rate, has no intention of helping out Asian victims
of Red aggression.”
Today, liberals have drawn many comparisons between Vietnam
and the War in Iraq, but reliably omit the tragic killing
fields of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam that were produced
after American forces were forced by Congress to exit the
region.
After passing the Senate, the Cooper-Church amendment died
in the House because Nixon threatened to veto it. Then, the
measure was revised and passed both houses of Congress on
December 22, 1970. It was enacted on January 5, 1971.
In the fall of 1973 Church, who later lost the Democratic
nomination for President to Jimmy Carter, toured the country
to declare that “the Doves had won.”
In the 1974 election Republicans lost 48 House seats and
five Senate seats. The new Democrat Congress used their new
power to cut all aid to South Vietnam. Soon after, the
Communists took over Indochina and 4 million were killed by
the Khmer Rouge communist regime.
Without knowing the future horror that would unfold as a
result of this amendment HUMAN EVENTS said that June 30, the
day Cooper-Church first passed, was a “Shameful Day in the
Senate.”
Cooper-Church was the “first step” against Nixon’s troop
deployment to Vietnam that led to the merciless deaths of
our Cambodian friends. Today, the Congress is debating
resolutions against President Bush’s troops surge. Taking a
page from HUMAN EVENTS query in 1970, we resolutely ask
Congress, “Will you send the same message to our Iraqi
allies that they can ‘go hang?’”
--
Amanda B. Carpenter, assistant editor of
HUMAN EVENTS
Shameful Day in the Senate
July 11, 1970
The United States Senate has not distinguished itself very
much during the Nixon Administration. With something akin to
a display of bigotry against Southerners, it rejected two
nominees from Dixie to the Supreme Court. While its members
prattle about fiscal sanity, the Senate majority continue to
spend taxpayer money as if it were drunk.
Last week -- with the Big Labor lobbyists keeping close
tabs on the vote -- the august body passed postal reform
measure which would dragoon civil servants into unions not
of their own choosing. But the sorriest performance so far
has been the adoption of the Cooper-Church amendment to
restrict the President’s efforts to defend our allies and
our own troops in Southeast Asia.
Despite the adoption of some modifying language (the Byrd
amendment for instance), the Cooper-Church proposal does a
number of things that can only cause exultation and
hand-clapping in Hanoi and Communist capitols elsewhere.
Thus one wonders whatever possessed such basic amendment
foes as Senators Dole and Jackson to go along with the thing
at the last moment.
The passage of the measure by a sizable 58-37 vote
flashes the signal across the world that the Senate’s will
to resist Communists aggression is just about zero. The
amendment also tell our Asian allies that they can go hang,
for the U.S. Senate, at any rate, has no intention of
helping out Asian victims of Red aggression and Hue
massacres. Nor is this all.
The Cooper-Church amendment is far more than a simple
declaration or a wish against U.S. involvement in Asia. If
passed by the Hose and signed into law, the amendment could
have catastrophic consequences.
The amendment, for instance, prevents the United States
from retaining any U.S. forces in Cambodia; it bars the
direct or indirect support of any U.S> personnel in Cambodia
who may want to furnish military instruction to Cambodian
forces; it prevents combat activity in the air above
Cambodia in support of the Cambodian forces and it even
prevents the U.S. from aiding other s to aid Cambodia.
Indeed, under Cooper-Church the United States cannot
provide financial assistance to advisers or troops of other
countries that go to the assistance of Cambodia. The
Cooper-Church forces called this the “anti-mercenary”
amendment, as if it were somehow evil to provide military
assistance to Southeast Asian countries which might find
compelling reasons to send their troops into Cambodia.
Unfortunately, remarked Sen. Henry Jackson (D.-Wash.),
Section 3 of the Cooper-Church amendment is now “drafted so
broadly as to raise doubts about whether we can act to make
it possible for even the South Vietnamese to enter Cambodia
as part of their own defense.
“The broad language also raises doubts about whether we
could support ethnic Cambodians, such as the Khmer forces,
who wish to assist in the defense of their own country from
invasion, and who, in no sense, should be considered
mercenaries.
“The Khmer are highly motivated, well trained and are an
extremely effective fighting force. Moreover, they are fully
integrated into Cambodian forces; and although their
numbers are not large -- perhaps 2,000 -- they are now a
significant element in their country’s defense. They receive
for their efforts, $56 per month, hardly a mercenary wage.
If anything, the Khmer tribesmen more closely resemble the
case of Americans residing abroad returning to the Colonies
to fight the British."
Sen. Robert Griffin (R.-Mich.) in offering his own
amendment to nullify Section 3, a proposal that was defeated
by five votes, revealed that Cooper-Church would actually
repeal the Guam Doctrine. In the President’s statement at
Guam in mid-1969 and in his report to Congress on U.S.
foreign policy for the 1970s, he said that we should look to
Asian nations to increasingly assume the primary
responsibility for their own defense. “This approach,” he
stated, “requires our commitment to helping our partners
develop their own strength.” Yet under Cooper-Church the
U.S. is prohibited from providing military assistance to any
country that might come to Cambodia’s aid.
Thus the passage of Cooper-Church last week was anything
but a glorious day for the U.S. Senate, and it seems rather
paradoxical that it should be adopted almost on the eve of
July 4, a day we wouldn’t’ be celebrating if countries such
as France hadn’t come to our aid.
There is nothing really good that can be said of
Cooper-Church, for it is aimed at crippling the power of the
President at the very time he is successfully extricating us
from Viet Nam precisely because he has not had a
Cooper-Church amendment to contend with.
*A few senators who voted for Church-Cooper are still
in the Senate today. Those voting for it were: Daniel Inoye
(D.-Hawaii), Kennedy (D.-Mass.) and Ted Stevens (R.-Ala.).