Month in Review #35
March 30, 2008
At
the Winter Soldier Hearings sponsored by Iraq Veterans Against the War, former
Marine machine gunner Jon Michael Turner testified:
"On
April 18, 2006, I
had my first confirmed kill. This man was innocent. He was walking back to his
house, and I shot him in front of his friend and his father. The first round
didn’t kill him, after I had hit him up here in his neck area. And afterwards
he started screaming and looked right into my eyes. So I looked at my friend
and I said, 'Well, I can’t let that happen.' So I took another shot and took
him out. He was then carried away by the rest of his family.
"We
were all congratulated after we had our first kills, and that happened to have
been mine. My company commander personally congratulated me, as he did everyone
else in our company. This is the same individual who had stated that whoever
gets their first kill by stabbing them to death will get a four-day pass when
we return from Iraq…"
Marine
Corporal Jason Washburn recounted that his platoon once killed a woman that
they genuinely believed was going to hurt them… only to realize the woman was
bringing them food.According to
Washburn, during his second Iraq
tour the Rules of Engagement declared that "anyone on the streets can be
considered an enemy combatant."
Former
Marine Corporal Matt Childers told a story about occupying a pistol factory in
Hilla. The Marines were keeping detainees; they beat them, mocked them, kept
water and food from them, blindfolded them, bound them, and forced them to
watch pornography. Childers testified that detainee abuse was commonplace in
his Marine unit, as was derogatory language to describe the Iraqis. (For videos
of Winter Soldier testimony and full information on the hearings, go to
http://ivaw.org/ )
THE NATURE OF FOREIGN
OCCUPATIONS
These
are stories from veterans who have turned against the Iraq war and
had the courage to go public. The facts aren't exceptional. They are windows
into what happens every day in Iraq.
The murder and brutalization of innocents - War Crimes - flow directly from the
logic of an unwanted foreign occupation. The population must be repressed,
intimidated, terrorized - or the occupation collapses.
To
make sure young (and frightened) GI's carry out their brutal assignments, they
have to be trained to regard the "natives" as less than human. Hence
the racism and casual cruelty that has always gone hand-in-hand with U.S.New World,
which required massacres like Wounded Knee.
One hundred years ago it was the Philippines, where the "water
cure" torture was perfected. Forty years ago it was Vietnam, with
U.S. Commander William Westmoreland declaring that "Orientals don't place
the same value on human life that we do." And today it's not just Iraq:
occupations and conquests. Four hundred years ago it started by bringing
"civilization" to the
*Afghanistan:
Just about every week there's a report of civilian deaths caused by U.S. and NATO
fire. On March 12 The British government admitted its troops were responsible
for an airstrike that killed two women and two children. The next day four
civilians were killed in Pakistan
by cross border shelling by U.S.forces. The U.S. pundit class and media bury
these reports in the back pages. Then they express front-page wonderment that
the Afghan insurgency is larger than ever.
*Palestine: Here's the
latest on the U.S.-backed occupation reported by Israeli peace activist Uri Avnery:
"A de facto suspension of hostilities was taking shape. The Egyptians had
made great efforts to turn it into an official cease-fire…. then undercover
soldiers of the Israeli army killed four Palestinians militants in
Bethlehem….The four, it was said, drew their weapons and endangered the life of
the soldiers, who only wanted to arrest them, so they were compelled to open
fire. Anyone with half a brain knows that this is a lie….
"It
was not an attempt to make an arrest. It was an execution, pure and simple… No
effort was even made to pretend that the four were about to carry out a
murderous attack. No such pretense could be put forward, because the most
important of the four had recently given interviews to the Israeli media and
announced that he was availing himself of the Israeli program under which
"wanted" militants give up their arms… The Defense Minister
endangered today's cease-fire in order to avenge something that happened seven
years ago….
"According
to [Defense Minister] Barak himself, he was ready to risk Jewish lives today in
order to take revenge on persons who may perhaps have shed blood years ago and
have since given up their armed activity. The emphasis is on the word 'Jewish'.
In his statement, Barak took care not to speak about persons 'with blood on
their hands,' but about those "with Jewish blood on their
hands". Jewish blood, of course, is quite different from any other
blood. And indeed, there is no person in the Israeli leadership with so much
blood on his hands as him. Not abstract blood, not metaphorical blood, but very
real red blood. In the course of his military service, Barak has personally
killed quite a number of Arabs. Whoever shakes his hand - from Condoleezza Rice
to Angela Merkel - is shaking a hand with blood on it."
"EVEN A FOOL
KNOWS IT'S NOT WORKING"
Occupations
based on overwhelming military firepower "work" for a time. But they
do not and cannot last forever. Sooner or later the indigenous population finds
a way (often with the support of people of conscience across the globe) to kick
out the occupier. So it will be in the Middle East.The question is: how long will it take, what
will be the human cost, will the occupiers' attempts to stave off defeat lead
to expanded wars engulfing entire regions?
The
U.S.
has already lost the battle for hearts and minds in Iraq. Even the leaders of the
U.S.-backed Iraqi government want the U.S. to leave (after they've
finished making use of U.S.
troops for their own sectarian ends). In early March Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad - now Washington's
Enemy No. 1 in the Middle East - visited Baghdad. Denied
"security protection" by U.S. troops he went out and about
in Baghdad
anyway, visiting places that no U.S.
politician dare go. He held a press conference and - while the leaders of the
U.S.-backed Iraqi government stood by his side and nodded their heads - he
bluntly declared:
“The
people of this area get nothing from the occupation here except damage,
sabotage, destruction, insults and degradation. All of the people here want
those forces to go back home.”
Just
a month later, a similar message was sent to Washington from Pakistan, where the U.S. has
invested heavily in Gen. Pervez Musharraf's policy of total reliance on
military force. Musharraf was soundly defeated in last month's parliamentary
elections. On March 21 the leaders of Pakistan’s new coalition government
said they will negotiate with the militants that the U.S. calls terrorists and will use
force only as a last resort. The heads of Pakistan’s new government told the
press: "We are dealing with our own people. When you have a problem in
your own family, you don’t kill your own family. You sit and talk. After all, Britain also
got the solution of the problem of Ireland. So what’s the harm in
conducting negotiations? Obviously what they have been doing for the last eight
years has not been working. Even a fool knows that."
Apparently
the Bush administration fits the description of "fool." Panicked by
this new course, it is exerting every ounce of pressure it can muster to
prevent negotiations from breaking out. Likewise, scared by the fragility of
its IraqU.S.
public, but all it is doing in Iraq
is prolonging the bloodshed. Including blood shed by U.S. troops, whose deaths in Iraq have now
passed the 4,000 mark.
occupation (the Green Zone is now being shelled daily), the Bush administration
just announced there will be no more troop cuts after this summer. So much for
their bluster that "the surge is working." (For an update on the
current fighting - "Surge Exposed as Failure But New Dangers Arise" -
go to http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/32342 ). The surge may be
confusing segments of the
It
is not easy to force this full picture onto the nationwide political agenda.
The deaths of U.S.
troops AND the day-to-day criminal murder of Iraqi civilians. The fact that the
U.S.
is not "winning" AND the racism built in to the idea that it is the U.S. that can
and should decide the fate of Iraq.
But
a persistent presentation of this message - along with an action focus on the
administration's most vulnerable point with the demand to get out of Iraq NOW – can
find a large audience. The Washington Post/ABC News reports that "five
years after the start of the Iraq
war, U.S.
public opinion has solidified around the notion that the war was not worth
fighting and that the U.S.
is not making significant progress toward restoring civil order there."
According to their latest poll, two-thirds of the population thinks the Iraq war was
not worth fighting, including 51% who believe that "strongly."
On
top of this, one can feel the energy as millions of people have thrown
themselves into electoral activity, based on their belief that the 2008
balloting offers a chance to repudiate the Iraq war and all that Bush has
wrought. With John "Stay-in-Iraq-100-Years" McCain anchoring his
campaign in war-on-terror fear-mongering, and the two Democratic contenders
both making promises to end the war (of course with many devils in the
details), large-scale public debate on the war in the rest of 2008 is certain.
All this is fertile territory for making sure the Out Now message and the
connected points above are put in front of millions.
WAR ECONOMY
There
are also big opportunities to make the connection between Iraq and the
economy (which polls show is now the #1 concern of the majority). Already over
50% of the populace thinks that the single biggest step the government could
take to fight economic troubles would be to get out of Iraq.
And
why wouldn't they? To date, the war has "officially" cost more than
$522 billion, with another $70 billion already allocated for 2008. And the real
cost (which is also the title of a new book by Noble Prize-winning economist
Joseph Stiglitz) is estimated at three trillion dollars. There's a number that
can wake a lot of people up – and start them on the road to thinking more
deeply about every other aspect of this war. Somewhere along that journey they
may be prodded to explore additional connections: Maybe all sectors of U.S. society
are not equally bearing the burden of the war - either in casualties or in
dollars? Maybe there is a connection between the most ardent advocates of
staying in Iraq
and corporations who make profits off of war? Or between the rush to grab oil
for corporate profit in Iraq, the privatization-for-profit of so much of the
U.S. economy, the gutting of the public sector and the decay of the country's
infrastructure? Or what about an economy built around addiction to oil, and its
link to U.S.
military intervention in other countries, and to global warming?
All
these issues are in play, or potentially in play, right in the mainstream,
beyond the circles of progressives and the left.
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