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- <text id=91TT0953>
- <title>
- May 06, 1991: Welcome The Unknown Soldier
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 06, 1991 Scientology
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- Welcome the Unknown Soldier
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A few thoughts from the conquering general before his escape
- to some well-deserved peace and quiet with his family--and
- a new career
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS--Reported by Cathy Booth/Miami, Sally B.
- Donnelly/Los Angeles and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> No one seems to know for sure whether General Norman
- Schwarzkopf leans right or left, Republican or Democratic, so
- forcefully does he assert that he's an independent. Few have the
- least idea of what he thinks about monetary policy or school
- choice or quotas or global warming. Chances are, he favors a
- strong defense, though he has called war a "profane thing." What
- is most interesting is not that no one knows, but that hardly
- anyone cares.
- </p>
- <p> The virtue in Schwarzkopf's mystery is that the general
- can be anything to anybody. Corporations look at him and see a
- take-charge CEO; universities envision a powerhouse chancellor;
- publishers perceive the author of a best-selling book. Above
- all, much of the public is enraptured by a new leader whose very
- appeal is that he has no platform, no party and no intention,
- at least so far, of running for office. Such political virginity
- lets people believe that Schwarzkopf, in his big, bold way,
- could do the heavy work of democracy without being chewed into
- small pieces by its machinery.
- </p>
- <p> When Schwarzkopf came home from the war zone last week, a
- crowd gathered before dawn to foil his attempt to sneak quietly
- back into the country at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa. The
- band played a victory march and the national anthem, and the
- fans wearing STORMIN' NORMAN FOR PRESIDENT T-shirts waved flags
- and yellow balloons as sea gulls wheeled overhead. "I can't
- describe to you the emotion that's in all our hearts," he said,
- with his first words on American soil in 239 days. "It's a
- great day to be a soldier. It's a great day to be an American."
- </p>
- <p> Then he disappeared--though not completely. "After 39
- years," he explained in an interview with TIME, "I owe the
- family and myself a little time." There were steaks to eat
- (thick and rare), ice cream to scarf down (Breyers mint
- chocolate chip), family members and pets with whom to get
- reacquainted (wife Brenda, son Christian, 13, daughters Jessica,
- 19, and Cynthia, 20, and a black Lab named Bear). He could catch
- up with Jeopardy and Cheers. Come Sunday, he could go to a real
- church and sit in a pew without sand in his boots. And while he
- savored his privacy, Norman Schwarzkopf could lean back and let
- the rest of America ponder his future.
- </p>
- <p> He says he plans to retire in August, an utterly
- tantalizing prospect for pundits, pollsters, politicos, agents
- and headhunters. "I'll try and write a book," he muses. "I don't
- have the first line. Maybe, `I was born at a very early age...' How's that?" He will play grand marshal at the Kentucky
- Derby next month, and talks of becoming a first-class salmon
- fisherman and improving his sporting-clays shooting.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile the offers ring in like a cash register. His
- memoirs could fetch seven figures, his speeches $30,000 a pop.
- He has been mentioned as an ideal football coach (the
- Philadelphia Eagles) or university chancellor (Texas A&M) or
- business leader (Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca is batting his
- eyes). Van Poole, chief of the Republican Party in Schwarzkopf's
- home state of Florida, is exercising monumental restraint. "I
- thought I'd give him a couple of weeks," he says. The hope is
- to persuade the general to run against popular Democratic
- Senator Bob Graham. "I've not talked to Schwarzkopf directly,
- but through a third party," says Poole. "He's not said no."
- Others would let him skip the legislative spring training and
- go straight to the majors. Former state G.O.P. chairman Henry
- Sayler, a fellow West Pointer, launched a Draft General
- Schwarzkopf 1992 Committee this month.
- </p>
- <p> All this may be wishful thinking, since Schwarzkopf
- insists he is an independent with no political aspirations. "I
- will admit that I have voted for people from both parties for
- President," he says. But it is not easy fending off suitors
- these days. "I do not envision myself as a political candidate.
- I have said that at some point in the future, perhaps--and
- that's a very big perhaps--I might be able to find a sense of
- self-fulfillment serving my country in the political arena. But
- that's not what I plan to do at the present time, nor do I seek
- it, nor do I honestly deep down in my heart think it will ever
- happen."
- </p>
- <p> The general is battling powerful forces here, for he has
- been cast as a savior by a public that longs for shiny heroes.
- "It's sort of overwhelming," he says, blinking in the limelight.
- "I didn't have a sense of how completely spontaneous it would
- be." His incandescent televised briefing after the liberation
- of Kuwait sent a powerful message: here at last was a leader
- who was blunt, not glib; passionate, not packaged, with the
- carriage of a man of courage and principle. Even then, it was
- hard to imagine that he would willingly trade the high
- challenges of the Saudi desert for the sandbox that is American
- politics.
- </p>
- <p> The battlefield has always been a fruitful scouting ground
- for kingmakers. George Washington was eager to retire after his
- years as a soldier, but there were some who urged him to become a
- military despot, if not an absolute monarch. Andrew Jackson, the
- hero of New Orleans, rode into the White House with two bullets
- in his body and a white scar across his face. When South
- Carolina tried to annul new federal tariffs, Jackson sent
- soldiers to Charleston harbor and muttered about marching south
- with 50,000 men. William Henry Harrison was the hero of
- Tippecanoe; Ulysses Grant served under Zachary Taylor in the
- Mexican War, before going on to glory at Vicksburg and
- Appomattox; and Rough Rider Teddy Roosevelt, mustache bristling,
- charged up San Juan Hill and into American mythology. In
- Eisenhower, one of the century's greatest generals, America
- found one of its better Presidents.
- </p>
- <p> Clean wars produce clean heroes; Vietnam's graduates into
- office have tended to be former prisoners of war instead of
- generals. The gulf war is the first in a generation to produce
- a bumper crop of political recruits, with Schwarzkopf looming
- largest of all. "He represents a revival of the golden days of
- America and all that Americans are looking for," says Dom
- Bonafede, assistant professor of government at American
- University. "He's not your typical media figure with his hair
- coiffed and with spin doctors and media consultants swirling
- around him." Says Sherry Jeffe, a senior associate at the Center
- for Politics and Policy at the Claremont Graduate School: "He
- embodies what Americans dream our country can be and what it
- should be."
- </p>
- <p> Though its feelings are understandable, there is something
- scary about a country that aches for heroes and leaders in this
- way. America came through a frightening war with a great
- victory and owes its soldiers a natural debt of gratitude. Like
- Eisenhower and other soldiers before him, Schwarzkopf was the
- right man in the right place at the right time, commanding
- loyalty from his troops, respect from his peers and deference
- even from his superiors in Washington. As if that were not
- enough, some people now want him to dispel, almost
- single-handedly, the cynicism that hangs over government at
- every level.
- </p>
- <p> "He's commanding, quotable, and has a great personality,"
- says Ken Khachigian, a former Reagan speechwriter and now a
- political consultant. "He's got all the makings of a natural
- candidate." It is easier to be commanding, however, when there
- are disciplined troops to command--hardly a description of
- Congress or the federal bureaucracy. It was good sport to cut
- reporters off at the knees and to swat their questions into the
- big black box of national security. But the campaign press corps
- has some artillery of its own and takes delight in bringing out
- the dark side of a candidate. Schwarzkopf's explosive temper
- would make him vulnerable. "Long before he becomes President,
- the halo will be stripped away," says Amitai Etzioni, professor
- of government at George Washington University. "In the end, we
- can't stomach a real hero. We're happy to have heroes for a
- week, but we have to tear them down."
- </p>
- <p> In the shadow of 1992, it is not really Norman Schwarzkopf
- who deserves the close scrutiny of voters, but the process that
- seeks to loft him into the political firmament and could just as
- easily bring him crashing down. "Somebody said the other day I'd
- make a lousy politician because I say what I think," Schwarzkopf
- says. "That's a sad commentary, when we say that the
- representatives of the American people can't say what they
- believe." In fact, it is the very absence of known beliefs that
- makes Schwarzkopf unassailable as a candidate. "The tremendous
- mythology surrounding him makes him even more attractive in a
- society that is unwilling to make sacrifices and hard choices,"
- argues UCLA lecturer Hyman Frankel. Once the myth is punctured
- by real information, what, if anything, would be left? Boldness
- and candor, to be sure, but these qualities can be lethal for a
- politician.
- </p>
- <p> The general is not naive about his opportunities or the
- obstacles that await him if he rides into the political
- battlefield. "There's a great expression I've always believed,"
- Schwarzkopf observes. "`The higher the monkey gets up the
- flagpole, the more opportunity he has to show his ass.' Or I
- should say his rear end." Perhaps even a public desperate for
- a plainspoken hero will give him some time off to collect his
- thoughts.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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