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Iraq
Vets Let Americans Know the Brutal Reality of
U.S.
Occupation While Bush Gray-Washes “Progress” in Iraq
By Kevin Zeese
ccun.org, July
14, 2007
While the Bush
administration is trying to paint an improving picture in
Iraq
, veterans of the
Iraq
occupation are finding their voice. And, they are painting a picture
of the
U.S.
role in
Iraq
that demonstrates why it is urgent for the
United States
to withdraw.
The voices of
Iraq Vets have been so effective that the military has tried
to silence their leaders with disciplinary efforts, but this has only given
them more attention in the media. And, it has enraged vets that
when they come home from risking their lives for a war started on false
pretenses that the military is trying to muzzle them – prevent them from
exercising their First Amendment rights on the most important political
issue of the day.
Next week Iraq
Veterans Against the War will be announcing a new campaign, the
Tri-Folded Flag Campaign, that will make the point that “Funding the
War is Killing the Troops.” This campaign is designed to hold the Congress
responsible for their role in continuing the war. In particular, they
will focus on Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and
Democratic Whip James Clyburn. More than 1,800 tri-folded flags will be
delivered to their offices representing the
U.S.
soldiers killed since the Democrats took control of the Congress. The
announcement event will be on Tuesday, July 17 in
Washington
,
DC
and the campaign will continue through September.
And, the
Nation Magazine is featuring the voices of
Iraq
vets in an article by
Chris Hedges & Laila Al-Arian. They write about interviews they
conducted with 50
Iraq
war veterans that describe in vivid detail how the war is really being
conducted and how civilians in
Iraq
are being mistreated, brutalized and killed. Killing of civilians is common.
The article states: “The killing of unarmed Iraqis was so common many of
the troops said it became an accepted part of the daily landscape.
The
article, “The Other War: Iraq Vets
Bear Witness,” describes the effects of “the four-year-old
occupation on average Iraqi civilians” as well as the “deep emotional
and physical scars”
U.S.
vets hold as a result of their participation in the occupation. The article
describes the “brutal side of the war rarely seen on television screens or
chronicled in newspaper accounts.”
The
authors summarize their findings writing:
“Their
stories, recorded and typed into thousands of pages of transcripts, reveal
disturbing patterns of behavior by American troops in
Iraq
. Dozens of those interviewed witnessed Iraqi civilians, including children,
dying from American firepower. Some participated in such killings; others
treated or investigated civilian casualties after the fact. Many also heard
such stories, in detail, from members of their unit. The soldiers, sailors
and marines emphasized that not all troops took part in indiscriminate
killings. Many said that these acts were perpetrated by a minority. But they
nevertheless described such acts as common and said they often go
unreported--and almost always go unpunished.”
One
vet summed it up saying “I guess while I was there, the general attitude
was, A dead Iraqi is just another dead Iraqi.” Another described the
attitude as “a lot of guys really supported that whole concept that, you
know, if they don't speak English and they have darker skin, they're not as
human as us, so we can do what we want.”
A
dozen described open racism with ridicule of Iraqis in racist terms, with
troops deriding “haji food,” “haji music” and “haji homes.”
One soldier described the impact of this racism, “By calling them names
they're not people anymore. They're just objects.”
This
article was brought to life by Amy Goodman of Democracy
Now who interviewed some of the veterans interviewed in the article on
her nationally syndicated radio and television show.
The
voices of
Iraq
veterans are becoming more and more important as the Bush administration
continues to take a misleading approach to what is happening in
Iraq
. The administration’s July 12th report
on ‘progress’ in Iraq that tries to “grey wash” reality
– a white wash would just have not passed the straight face test as enough
information is escaping about Iraq so that most Americans and members of
Congress know things are going poorly. The grey the administration
attempts to paint is really much darker.
Iraq
is a disaster, even the
Green Zone is not safe anymore.
As
Staff Sgt. Timothy John Westphal concluded on Democracy Now “we
need to bring our troops home right now, because all we’re doing is making
more terrorists and more people who hate
America
.”
Opposition
to the war by veterans is not new. Many vets who see the reality on
the ground in
Iraq
have become opponents of the occupation. More than a year ago a Zogby
poll of
Iraq
soldiers found that 72%
of the troops want the U.S. should withdraw in a year, now more and more
troops are becoming vocal in their opposition to the war and their lack
faith in their commander in chief. Polls of Military
Times readers have found growing disenchantment with the war and loss of
faith in the Commander-in-Chief.
The Zogby poll
and poll of readers of Military Times are confirmed by a recent DoD
May 4, 2007 survey by the Pentagon’s Office of the Surgeon General of
the US Army Medical Command which found just 47 percent of soldiers and 38
percent of marines agreed that civilians should be treated with dignity and
respect. Only 55% of soldiers and 40% of marines said they would report a
unit member who had killed or injured a civilian.
While
politicians in
Washington
position themselves for the 2008 election and President Bush puts forward
his uncompromising stay the course stubbornness despite reality things
continue to deteriorate in
Iraq
. There is no question that the Democrats in Congress have the power
to end the war. For example, the
Democrats could filibuster continued funding unless it includes an exit
from
Iraq
. The Republican minority has used the filibuster to continue the war
but the Democrats don’t use their power to end it. And certainly
President Bush as commander in chief could end the war.
Yet
the war drags on and every day more soldiers and their families suffer the
consequences of death, maiming and psychological trauma and at the same time
Iraqis suffer the painful existence of being occupied with thousands of
civilians killed every month, life without electricity, adequate food, fuel
and other necessities of life as well as millions exiled and displaced.
Where
will the leadership come to end the war? We must look to ourselves and
bring elected ‘leaders’ with us. They are better at following then
leading.
Kevin
Zeese is Executive Director of Democracy Rising (www.DemocracyRising.US)
and Chair of VotersForPeace (www.VotersForPeace.US).
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