WHERE HAVE ALL THE PROTESTERS GONE? By Tom Hayden Where are the voices of protest against the suffering inflicted on civilians and children by our bombardment of Serbia? The moral rationale provided by the Clinton administration at the outset of the bombing was that the brutal "ethnic cleansing" of Kosovo could be stopped in a short military campaign. That promise was either a deception or a delusion. The war has turned into a horrific quagmire, and yet even liberal Democrats remain strangely tongue-tied about the suffering, which our government lamely calls "collateral damage." Every day seems to bring news of civilians being killed and the White House apologizing. Worse, according to the Wall Street Journal, President Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair pushed in mid-April for a wider definition of targets that would increase the danger to civilians. The result is the death of cleaning ladies and bus drivers, evacuation of 85,000 people from Belgrade neighborhoods poisoned by toxic chemicals, the unemployment of 100,000 Serbs and laying waste of Serbia's civilian infrastructure with what the New York Times calls "greater effects on the gross domestic product than the Nazi and, then, the Allied bombing of Yugoslavia" during World War II. And the silence continues. Perhaps the silent ones think these are all regrettable accidents, or that war is hell, or that bombing Serb civilians who have opposed Slobodan Milosevic in the past will help them to overthrow him now. What then of the intentional indiscriminate infliction of shrapnel wounds on children? Unexploded cluster bomb units are turning whole areas of Yugoslavia into a "no man's land," wounding large numbers of children in the process. According to the Los Angeles Times, the director of Pristina's hospital says he has never done so many amputations as he has since victims of the weapon started coming in. I keep an early model of the cluster bombs used in Vietnam on my shelf as a reminder of the evil done in the name of good intentions. The bombs are dropped over a broad landscape, where they explode via timers or the simple vibration of a passer-by. The blast causes up to 300 pieces of deadly shrapnel to scatter in all directions. The shrapnel is very difficult to remove because of its deliberately jagged design. Liberal silence on these issues allows Pentagon and NATO spokesmen to systematically and routinely utilize doublespeak and refuse to discuss the kinds of weapons they are using. There seem to be two reasons for the Democratic war fever. First, invocation of the Holocaust analogy has led many to accept Ted Koppel's admonition to "get used to the idea of civilian casualties." But is this the Holocaust or is it intervention in a long-standing Balkan religious and ethnic war? Whatever the answer, is there no level of civilian suffering that makes the bombing unjustifiable? And most important, isn't the U.S. and NATO military commitment to stop ethnic cleansing in the Balkans even slightly suspicious given the ethnic cleansing that they tolerate in Tibet, Turkey, Guatemala, Rwanda and Angola? Is this war really about human rights or about consolidating the United States and NATO as an alternative to the United Nations? Second, the fact that President Clinton and his European social democratic allies started the bombing leads a majority of Democrats to rally behind their party leader. This was acceptable when the issue was belittling the president's sexual indiscretions to avoid impeachment, but it is quite something else to become apologists for the killing of children to shore up Western "credibility." The Democratic Party's domestic agenda will be unraveled by the new liberal militarism. Already the Republican Congress has forced Clinton to accept $13 billion in military funds, twice what he requested. By contrast, the president will ask for just $1 billion this year for new teachers and $5 billion over five years for school overcrowding. I want to continue deepening and expanding the president's domestic agenda of investing in schools and jobs in the inner city, providing health care and restoring the natural environment. Three decades ago, I was pursuing the same agenda when the Democratic Party started the Vietnam War and abandoned its commitment to a great society. That experience should not be repeated. Before this becomes a Vietnam in the Balkans, it is time for liberals to start breaking their silence. The Jesse Jackson mission, opposed by the White House, plainly proves that diplomatic alternatives, like a partitioned Kosovo under the United Nations, have not been exhausted. Instead, the much-touted Apache gunships with American crews are preparing to escalate the conflict. The real Apaches, the American Indians, were victims of a brutal, even genocidal, ethnic cleansing by the U.S. armed forces in the last century. That our government can self-righteously go to war to save Kosovo with helicopters named after the victims of our own ethnic cleansing measures the state of denial we are in. From the Los Angeles Times.