Interview of Gordon
Mitchell by Colleen Rowley
Topic: Second Presidential
Debate
KQV Radio (1410 AM),
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
October 9, 2004, 8:05 a.m.
COLLEEN
ROWLEY (CR):
Cloudy, 59 degrees at the airport. 60 downtown. KQV news time now 8:06. Well neither
President Bush nor John Kerry gave an inch during last night's spirited town
hall debate in St. Louis. How did they do? Joining us now on the live line is
University of Pittsburgh Associate Professor and Director of Debate Gordon
Mitchell. Good morning.
GORDON
MITCHELL (GM):
Good morning, Colleen.
CR: Well, was there any clear
winner last night, in your opinion?
GM: Colleen, I'm fortunate that
my comments today are enriched by my participation last night in a very
informative debate response panel that was hosted by the Ridgway Center for
International Security Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. The Ridgway
Center brought in 13 top scholars from around the country to study the issue of
preemptive and preventive military intervention. Two of those scholars, Tom
Goodnight and Greg Thielmann, joined University of Pittsburgh law professor
Elena Baylis on this panel. It was interesting because we got together at about
8:30 p.m. last night before the debate for some pre-debate commentary, and there
was one point of agreement that came up there. That is that there is an
elephant in the room in this election. It's a huge issue, but one that media
and the candidates seem reluctant to talk about. That changed last night when
about 30 minutes into the debate, audience member Daniel Farley asked,
"Since we continue to police the world, how do you intend to maintain our
military presence without instituting a draft?" It was a very perceptive
question. It was not the expected one of, "Will there be a draft?"
Farley wanted to know if the candidates planned to do something to avoid having a draft. The answers
we heard last night were revealing. Both candidates started by reassuring
voters that a draft is not coming. Bush said, "We're not going to have a
draft, period." Then they shifted to explanations that answered Farley's
question a little bit more directly by saying what they would do to avoid having
a draft. Bush said we could turn to technological transformation of the
military and use weapons like unmanned aerial vehicles that make soldiers less
needed. Kerry said more effective burden sharing, letting our allies carry the
load so we don't have to deploy as many soldiers on missions would do the same
job. So I think it's an important moment in the campaign in that there are
ambitious military plans being laid out by both candidates, Bush's doctrine of
preventive war and Kerry's aim to add 40,000 soldiers to the army. Each of
these policies create kind of a Hobson's choice. They're either going to have
to find patchwork ways to do them on the cheap, or seriously contemplate a
draft. The uncomfortable reality is that there is probably no easy solution.
CR:
I find your
answer there pretty interesting because I notice that all morning, the media
does focus on style over substance. They seem to be talking more about how the
president was much more aggressive in this debate. He seemed a little more
comfortable in the setting. Would you agree with that?
GM:
Yes. I think
Tom Goodnight, who has actually coached two national debate champions and was
watching with us last night had it about right. He thought that Kerry passed a
major test in showing that he really is personable. Bush did come back and
demonstrate a forceful and aggressive personality. But on content, Elena Baylis
said something that I thought was very insightful. She said there was one
foreign policy question that was important to all the people who were asking
questions last night, and she felt we never got a straight answer on it. That
question was when should we go to war? What are the criteria for going to war?
We are in the middle of an important change in U.S. law and policy that really
has not been brought out in this campaign. For years, the standard has been
that countries only go to war for self-defense, when there was an imminent
threat. Both candidates hint that they are now moving beyond this standard and
that they plan to protect the country by using less restrictive criteria for
U.S. use of force. But what exactly are those criteria? We continue to get
hints, but not clear answers.
CR:
So you
didn't really detect any differences that were outlined by either candidate?
GM:
There are
differences, certainly. But we don't get the difference at the level of an
overall doctrine. They talk about Iran; they talk about North Korea; and one
audience member asked about what happens if sanctions don't work in the case of
Iran. Will we invade? Both candidates seem unwilling at this point to commit to
clear criteria that will help American voters try to make sense of what they
can expect in terms of when each of the candidates will decide to use military
force.
CR:
Now I
believe the next debate is next Wednesday. At this point, will it change any
voters' minds?
GM:
The voters
are now going to be looking more to domestic policy issues. It is difficult to
tell how that will affect the campaign. There were certainly a raft of issues
that came up last night with the first focus on domestic issues. This debate
seemed to provide a platform for each of the candidates to return to their main
themes and shore up their storylines that they had been building on. We'll see
if that trend continues or perhaps if the candidates still have some new ideas
and arguments to unfold in the next debate.
CR:
Thank you
very much for joining us this morning.
GM:
My pleasure.