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Subject: Marshall / September 11:  The Epitome of American Arrogance / 
Sep 30
Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2007 19:42:46 -0700 (PDT)
From: ZNet Commentaries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-09/22marshall.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
September 11:  The Epitome of American Arrogance September 30, 2007
By Lucinda Marshall

Another September 11th has been and gone.  Flags were waved, tears were 
shed and silence observed. Generals offered their assessments and 
politicians blustered.  Across the political spectrum, we Americans 
continue to insist upon our unwavering support for the troops, from the 
right-wing call for continued funding of their work to the left-wing 
call to bring them home.

In what can only be called the epitome of American arrogance, concern 
for the plight of the Iraqi people, particularly the 4 million of whom 
are now refugees is absent from the rhetoric, the clear implication 
being that that our suffering, which is the result of our own failed 
policies, is far more important than the suffering we have inflicted 
upon others. Missing from the national dialog is any sense of  pressing 
horror at the lack of electricity and potable water in Iraq, or the 
trauma and malnutrition, especially among children.

Of particular concern is the increasingly dire plight of Iraqi women, 
whose lives President Bush promised to better. "Violence against women 
and girls has been an invisible but constant feature of ethnic 
cleansing, which the US continues to ignore," according to the human 
rights organization Madre in their analysis of the Petraeus report, a 
point made all too clear by the slaughter of women and children by U.S. 
Marines at Haditha.  As Madre points out, that women cannot go out in 
public without their husbands or that girls are forbidden to attend 
school in some areas is not a factor in the rosy assessments of progress 
being made.

In addition, pregnant women face serious dangers because of the constant 
bombing, curfews, lack of electricity and safe water, hospitals that 
have been destroyed and lack of medicine and medical personnel. 
According to reports from Save the Children and UNICEF, rates of 
maternal mortality, anemia and underweight children have sky-rocketed as 
have the mortality rates for children under five.

There have been numerous reports of women in Iraq being  kidnapped or 
sold into sexual slavery by families desperate to put food on the table. 
  Widows are particularly vulnerable.  Al Jazeera reports that prior to 
the U.S. invasion, Iraqi widows were provided with financial and housing 
help and free education for their children.  Today, no such safety net 
exists.

The Organization for Women's Freedom in Iraq (OWFI) estimates that some 
4000 women and girls have disappeared since the U.S. invasion and have 
likely been trafficked to other countries and forced into prostitution. 
  Honor killings have also risen dramatically since the U.S. invaded 
Iraq.  In Kurdish Iraq alone there have been 350 such deaths so far this 
year and there were 95 reports of women committing suicide by 
self-immolation during the first six months of 2007.

As difficult as life is in Iraq, leaving the country poses significant 
problems for women as well.  Iraqi law requires that women have 
permission from a male relative in order to get a passport, which is 
only obtainable in Baghdad, a journey that is too difficult and 
dangerous to be feasible for many women who do not dare risk traveling 
without a male relative.

For those women who are able to leave, economic realities force many to 
turn to prostitution in order to feed their families. The Independent 
(UK) reports that some 50,000 refugee women are now working as 
prostitutes.  While that number seems huge, given that there are an 
estimated 4 million refugees, the majority women and children who are 
not being allowed to work in other occupations, the number is sadly 
believable.

As horrific as the humanitarian crisis that is occurring in Iraq is, in 
terms of American politics, it is the expected and acceptable collateral 
damage of war, where the lives of women and children in particular are 
routinely discounted.  Certainly it is not worthy of Congressional 
attention or media coverage.  The unfortunate truth is that it will take 
much more than bringing the troops home to truly end the war. Yet with 
persistent myopia, we continue to discuss Iraq in terms of our national 
honor, refusing to acknowledge the true scope of the carnage and 
humanitarian disaster that we have inflicted upon the Iraqis, especially 
women and children.  To continue to do so is an act of great folly, one 
that will ultimately become our greatest national disgrace.



Lucinda Marshall is a feminist artist, writer and activist. She is the 
Founder of the Feminist Peace Network, www.feministpeacenetwork.org. Her 
work has been published in numerous publications in the U.S. and abroad 
including, Counterpunch, Alternet, Dissident Voice, Off Our Backs, The 
Progressive, Countercurrents, Z Magazine , Common Dreams, In These Times 
and Information Clearinghouse. She also blogs at WIMN Online and writes 
a monthly column for the Louisville Eccentric Observer.

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