6 February 2014
–
Are You Sure That’s
What You Want to Say?
Thirty-five years ago,
the Air Force told me I was going to be an intelligence officer. I filled
out a mountain of paperwork in order to get a top secret, special compartmented
intelligence clearance upon entering active duty. Not being in control of
my life’s story started that day.
I was required to list
every place I had lived, what I did when I was there, and provide the names of
people who knew me at the time. A special investigator asked me about my
lifestyle, if I had a criminal record, used drugs, or associated with
subversive groups. He also delved into my spending habits. My answers
were simple. Boring lifestyle, no criminal record, nothing more
subversive than the Eagles Lodge in my hometown, and I think I had smelled
marijuana once. Nothing to hide. I flippantly added that I was a
married student with two children; I had no money to spend.
The investigator
glared at me. Everybody has something to hide, he said. It would be best
to tell him all my secrets because if he were to find something later that I
had failed to disclose, I might not receive a clearance and might not even be
commissioned. Trust had to be established at the beginning or it never
would be established, he warned. I told him I would remember his advice,
but that I simply had nothing else to tell him.
I’ve never forgotten
that interview.
Every five years for
the next thirty years of my Air Force career I had to update my security
clearance and answer the same questions. My life’s story, the narrative
of who I am and what I do, has long been captured and held by somebody else.
The Air Force regularly verified every aspect of my life before it, as an
organization, continued to trust me with classified information and with the
authority to act in its name. As long as I stayed honest and accurate
with my narrative, I remained the Air Force’s trusted agent. Looking
back, I am as proud of maintaining the Air Force’s trust as I am of any impressive
or exciting thing I may have done in uniform.
Establishing and
maintaining trust with those whom we serve should be the dominant standard for
all who want to be elected to political office as well. Our narrative
should be precise and truthful; it’s the only sure way to be believed.
That doesn’t mean a politician’s life won’t include difficult moments or
occasions of less-than-stellar decision-making. Nobody’s perfect.
But when the truth is obscured, reworked, or sidestepped, somebody’s going
to pay.
Texas State Senator
Wendy Davis, a gubernatorial hopeful, learned this painful lesson when she
stre-e-etched her personal narrative. She was indeed a young, divorced
mother who persevered and succeeded in school and politics. It’s a
compelling story. But, she stretched the dates of her early years of
marriage and divorce in order to gain emotional support from her constituents.
And, she got caught. Accurate marriage and divorce dates, combined
with an explanation of who paid for her elite schooling and when he paid for
it, now present the narrative of an apparent self-serving gold digger who would
do pretty much anything and abandon even her children to get what she wanted.
Somehow, Ms. Davis missed the important advice that false narratives are
fodder for political opponents who revel in exposing them. These
opponents knew, as Wendy Davis apparently did not, that if you do not tell the
truth about your own life, somebody else will.
A particularly
sobering warning in the Information Age is that now, more than ever,
embellishments and lies will be discovered and displayed. All e-mails,
tweets, phone calls, and written communications eventually find themselves in
some data base somewhere. The opposition party will lead the effort to
find these damaging secrets; that is what opposition parties do. Then,
when the moment is most advantageous, the opposition will make the lies public
and try to destroy the liar. Even war is more polite than politics.
Here’s the question:
should voters trust anything a politician says or does in political life
if he has already shown he lied about his life’s narrative? I suggest
that we trust him at our peril. A career in the business of
political/military secrets has convinced me that trustworthiness is the
greatest virtue one needs to rise from politician to statesman. Heaven
knows we need such statesmen as leaders right now.
No comments:
Post a Comment