“Charlie
Wilson’s War” is a fascinating movie for political buffs. Director Mike
Nichols, star and co-producer Tom Hanks, and co-star Julia Roberts are
well-known liberals. The U.S. support of the Afghan Mujahedin’s
fight against the Soviet invaders in the 1980s would seem to be a topic
tailor-made for conservatives and Republicans. What would Hollywood
liberals do with such a story?
I was pleasantly surprised. At the heart of
this film are several messages or morals that are either
non-ideological or, if anything, conservative in their
orientation. That isn’t to say that the movie is “the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth” about how U.S. support for the Mujahedin developed. My colleague, historian Paul Kengor, will explore some of the historical errors of omission and commission in his review. This review will assess the movie at face value—that is, as a story, not a history.
The primary theme (or at least, the one that
resonated most deeply with me) is that a determined individual can move
mountains. In the movie, three people—Congressman Charlie Wilson
(D-TX), wealthy Houston socialite Joanne Herring, and CIA employee Gust
Avrakotos—managed to change the course of history. Against a backdrop
of bureaucratic resistance and congressional indifference, these three
Americans, sharing a hatred of communism and dedicated to stopping the
Soviet genocide in Afghanistan, triumphed in their cause. They cobbled
together an unlikely network—including a Pakistani leader, an Israeli
official, a young weaponry whiz kid, and a key congressional
subcommittee chair—that got shoulder-held anti-aircraft weapons to the
Afghan Mujahedin, thereby enabling them to neutralize Soviet airpower and expel the Soviets from their country.
A second conservative theme is the old lesson
about not judging a book by its cover. Charlie, Joanne, and Gust
accomplished something very heroic. Nevertheless, like all human
heroes, and perhaps more than most, these heroes (as portrayed in the
movie) had feet of clay. Charlie Wilson was a hard-drinking
womanizer. Joanne Herring was a judgmental, imperious, tactless,
sex-loving, commie-hating, I’m-saved-so-I’ll-do-whatever-I-want
Christian. Gust Avrakotos was a cynical, volcanic, uncouth social
misfit on friendly terms with a witch in Aliquippa, PA. Few parents
would use these three as role models, but they would be proud to have
their children achieve something as worthy as what they did.
A third theme, and a very strongly conservative
one, is the depiction of Soviet conduct and policy in Afghanistan as
utterly evil. No Hollywood liberal would have made a movie depicting
the Soviet Union this way (i.e., in its true light) back when
there was a Soviet Union, but better late than never. Even today, many
liberals can’t bring themselves to portray evil non-Americans as evil,
so this film is a significant milestone. The movie makes one wonder if
there are any Charlie Wilsons hidden in the party of Nancy Pelosi and
Harry Reid today.
A fourth virtue of this movie is its keen
insights into the everyday reality of how our gigantic federal
government functions. There are vivid vignettes of turf-protecting
bureaucrats and log-rolling congressmen. Charlie Wilson won his
congressional colleagues’ support for increased funding of weapons
assistance to the Mujahedin because he had
collected more IOUs than any other congressman. His secret? His
constituents expected so little from him that he was free to trade his
vote in support of other representatives’ pet issues for future
paybacks. Charlie and Joanne knew exactly how to manipulate Rep. Doc
Long, a key congressional subcommittee chairman, into supporting their
initiative, and that is how policy often is made in Washington.
A fifth important theme raised in “Charlie
Wilson’s War” was the thorny question: What should U.S. policy be in
the aftermath of a country’s liberation from cruel oppression? After
the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, the movie shows Charlie Wilson
trying and failing to get congressional funding for modest
reconstruction aid for Afghanistan. The implication is that if we had
built schools, hospitals, etc., perhaps we could have avoided allowing
a vacuum to develop that eventually was filled by the Taliban.
The reality is that some people will condemn
the United States for getting involved in foreign lands and others will
condemn us if we don’t. And then there are the economics of the matter:
Uncle Sam can’t afford to do everything, and we all have disagreements
over what the spending priorities should be. The events in “Charlie
Wilson’s War” are water over the dam. Today, though, it appears that
the Bush Administration’s policy in Iraq is exactly what Charlie Wilson
wanted for Afghanistan—to help it rebuild after liberation from brutal
oppression. According to this movie given to us by Hollywood liberals,
we’re getting it right this time.
To wrap up: this is a movie for mature
audiences. There is nudity (nubile babes and Tom Hanks’ middle-aged
butt), a superfluity of verbal f-bombs, and disturbing images of maimed
and mutilated Afghanis. It is tightly directed by Nichols, and the
quirky, fascinating lead characters are especially well-acted by Hanks
and Philip Seymour Hoffman, who plays Gust. Roberts is adequate,
although her dorky hairpiece is unfair to the real Joanne Herring, who
is more beautiful than the woman portraying her. “Charlie Wilson’s
War” is serious and thought-provoking, yet has many moments that are
enjoyably humorous. It told an interesting story. Thank you, Mr. Hanks et al.