-Caveat Lector-

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sat, 10 Nov 2001 18:27:54 -0000
From: Robert Sterling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Konformist: What it really means to be for this war

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Thanks,

Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com


[EMAIL PROTECTED]

This fine editorial comes courtesy of Canadian Content. The original
is at: http://www.track0.com/cc/features/110601gowans.html
Another editorial by the same author, "Selling liberties for
security," can be found at:
http://www.track0.com/cc/features/102601gowans.html

What it really means to be for this war

by Stephen Gowans
In his 1939 antiwar classic, Johnny Got His Gun, Dalton Trumbo builds
a story around an American casualty of W.W.I. Horribly mangled in
combat, Trumbo's casualty has no arms, no legs, no eyes, no ears, no
tongue. He can't talk or hear or speak or walk or touch. Confined to
a glass case, lost in mute isolation, all he can do is breathe and
eat and shit and piss...and think.
"Take me wherever there are parliaments," he thinks, "and diets and
chambers of statesmen. I want to hear when they talk about honor and
justice and making the world safe...Let them debate...why should we
take all this crap off Germany or whoever the next Germany is. Let
them talk more munitions and airplanes and battleships and tanks and
gases, why of course we've got to have them, we can't get along
without them, how in the world could we protect the peace if we
didn't have them? Let them form blocs and alliances and mutual
assistance pacts...But before they vote on them, before they give the
order for all the little guys to start killing each other, let the
main guy rap his gavel of my case and point down at me and say, here
gentlemen is the only issue before this house, and that is, are you
for this thing here or are you against it?"
 Weeks after the US and Britain began bombing Afghanistan, leveling
Red Cross warehouses, destroying Red Crescent buildings, flattening
hospitals, taking out mud huts, the true nature of the war has begun
to sink in.
As many as 1.5 million Afghans are on the move, according to the UN,
fleeing the bombing. Up to 7.5 million face starvation, as bombing
disrupts the humanitarian food relief efforts needed to alleviate the
effects of decades of civil war and one of the worse droughts in the
country's history.
 And there's carnage. If you don't turn away, it's there for you to
see. The Afghan child, maybe two or three, with the red pulpy divot
taken out of the right side of her skull, lying beside the still,
lifeless body of her brother. Had a madman driven a golf tee into the
child's head, and then swung at the ball resting atop the tee sunk
into brain tissue? Did he swing too low, driving his three iron
through the child's skull, with an explosion of blood and bits of
pulpy tissue that splattered all over her mother's face and clothes?
Or was it a young American pilot, a guy who plays golf when he's at
home, who had dropped a bomb marked Made in the USA that accomplished
what a three iron could accomplish just as readily? Did the pilot
scrawl across the bomb, "To Osama bin Laden," the way World War Two
flyers used to write To Adolph Hitler on their bombs? Or did he
write, "To Mamoud, aged 2"?
For that's what war is, isn't it? It isn't a pilot giving the thumbs
up, as she waits to take off from an aircraft carrier, captured by an
AP photographer, his handiwork splashed across the front pages of
newspapers around the world to make the people back home feel good
about this war of terror that's supposed to root out terrorism. She
was taking off for another bombing run against, what? Taliban
targets, or that little kid's house?
Brains sprayed across the floor, mothers weeping over little kids who
got in the way, amputated legs on the operating room floor, poor,
starving, wretched people, with what few possessions they have,
trudging up a muddy road, to get away from all the bombing, not
knowing where they're going to live, not knowing how they're going to
survive, not knowing whether the jets flying over their heads are
going to make another of their infamous blunders and unleash the
fires of Hell on them, just innocents, trying to get out, away from
the devastation, and all the corpses. Oh well, that's war, shrug the
phony sages and corporate media executives and politicians back home.
 That's what this war is, isn't it? It isn't Osama bin Laden, on the
run, hiding in a warren of caves high the Afghanistan mountains (or
is it somewhere in Pakistan, or maybe Albania, by now?); it's 16-year
old Assadullah, not a Taliban solider, but an ice-cream vendor,
without a leg and two of his fingers gone, blasted away when an
American missile slammed into an airport near his home. It's Trumbo's
Johnny, no Mohammed, no legs, no arms, no eyes, no mouth, no ears,
lying in his glass case. Are you for this? Or against it?
 Those who are for it -- the politicians and Generals and newspaper
editors -- are afraid that more and more of us, aren't.
In Britain support for the war is "wobbly," as the British press puts
it. Tony Blair urges those whose support is faltering to think about
how they felt when the Twin Towers collapsed. War feeds on emotion.
War needs emotion. War demands emotion, to fog the brain, to keep
people from thinking about the essential contradiction: We're killing
innocent civilians to show that killing innocent civilians is wrong.
 In Canada, the Globe and Mail tries to put some steel into the
spines of Canadians whose support for the war is flagging. It
publishes the photographs of 19 Canadians killed in the Sept. 11
attacks, under the headline, Never to be heard from again. It won't
publish the photographs of the hundreds of Afghans killed by US and
UK bombs under the same headline.
 On October 31 the newspaper gives over a full page to its religion
and ethics reporter, Michael Valpy. Accompanying the article is a
cartoon depicting God giving a thumbs up to American bombers. The
headlines read:
The Just War
 The right to smite
 If the US and its allies are to maintain the moral high ground, they
must weigh the costs of their war against its benefits, (assuming off
the bat there's a moral high ground to maintain.)
 And then Valpy writes: "Those theologians who are not pacifists have
generally given the US and its allies the green light on the right to
go to war."
 Buck up, Canadians. God is on our side.
Were the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin alive, he may have
thundered in retort: If God approves the war, then God, if he truly
exists, must be abolished.
 Just a day before, Walter Isaascon, chairman of CNN, decided that
his reporters were focussing "too much on the casualties and hardship
in Afghanistan," and ordered CNN reporters "to make sure people
understand that when they see civilian suffering there, it's in the
context of a terrorist attack that caused enormous suffering in the
United States." Rick Davis, CNN's head of standards and practices,
tells anchors to put scenes of Afghans suffering "into context." He
recommends anchors say: "The Pentagon has repeatedly stressed that it
is trying to minimize civilian casualties in Afghanistan, even as the
Taliban regime continues to harbor terrorists who are connected to
the Sept. 11 attacks that claimed thousands of innocent lives in the
US. We must keep in mind...that these US military actions are in
response to a terrorist attack that killed close to 5,000 innocent
people in the US."
 In other words, because innocent people were killed in the US, it's
all right to kill innocent people in Afghanistan. Or as Foreign
Affairs Minister John Manley said, when asked about civilian
casualties, "Canada would feel that innocent people have already been
hurt." Kindergarten moral reasoning.
 Turn this around: Imagine Osama bin Laden remonstrating with his
followers who are uncomfortable with the deaths of innocent Americans
in the New York and Washington attacks. "The US government refuses to
renounce its Middle East policies which have led to the deaths of 1.5
million Iraqis through sanctions and have allowed the illegal Israeli
occupation of Palestine to continue for over three decades, causing
untold suffering for Palestinians. Washington refuses to apologize
for atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and for the killing of
millions of civilians in South East Asia. You have to understand that
while you see civilian suffering there, it's in the context of
American foreign policy that caused enormous suffering in the Middle
East and throughout the world."
Reasoning like this was vigorously disputed when some people -- Simon
Fraser university professor Sunera Thobani, for example -- tried to
explain the Sept. 11 attacks as blow back for what she called "blood-
soaked" US foreign policy. Who was disputing the views of Thobani and
others like her vigorously? The very same people who are telling you
that the suffering of innocent Afghans has to be understood in the
context of the Sept. 11 attacks.
 Johnny continued, "And if they are against this, why goddam let them
stand up...and vote."
 And if you are for this, then stand up and say so, too. Don't hide
behind God or the 6,000 killed in Washington and New York or John
Manley's kindergarten moral reasoning or lame aphorisms about war
being terrible (so too is terrorism -- does that excuse it?). Say
you're for the killing of innocents, because that's what you're for.
Say you're for millions starving, because that's what this war is
about. And say you're for the smashed in skull of a three year old,
and for her mother weeping over her. And remember whose support
allowed it all to happen.


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