http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/01/opinion/01herbert.html?th&emc=th

Warfare as It Really Is

By BOB HERBERT
NY Times Op-Ed: May 1, 2006

In the first few moments of the documentary film "Baghdad ER," we see a man
dressed in hospital scrubs carrying a bloodied arm that has been amputated
above the elbow. He deposits it in a large red plastic bag.

This HBO production is reality television with a vengeance - warfare as it
really is. And while it is frightening, harrowing and deeply painful to
watch, it should be required viewing for all but the youngest Americans. It
will premiere May 21.

For two months in 2005, the directors Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill were
given unprecedented access by the Army to the 86th Combat Support Hospital
in the Green Zone in Baghdad. Working 12-hour shifts, they watched - and
taped - the heroic struggle of doctors, nurses and other medical personnel
to salvage as many lives as possible from what amounted to a nonstop
conveyor belt of bloodied, broken and burned G.I.'s.

At one point in the film, a specialist who survived a roadside bomb attack
murmurs from a stretcher, "It was the worst thing I ever saw in my life,
sir."

"What was that?" he is asked.

Recalling his last view of a buddy who was killed in the attack, he says,
"My friend didn't have a face."

The movie is neither pro-war nor anti-war. It is simply a searing record of
the ferocious toll that combat takes on real human beings.

In an interview, Mr. Alpert described "the shock of seeing human beings
twisted into these horrible shapes, with parts missing and parts being
detached from them." In the first couple of hours after he and Mr. O'Neill
had arrived at the hospital, he said, "We had already seen two amputations
and they were prepping someone else for another one."

Before long, he said, the effort to document the daily activities became
psychologically grueling because "you just knew that every single day that
door was going to open up, that the helicopter was going to land, and they
were just going to bring in something that looked like hamburger instead of
a human being."

Above all else, war is about the suffering of individuals. The suffering is
endured mostly by the young, and these days the government and the media are
careful to keep the worst of it out of the sight of the average American.
That way we can worry in peace about the cost of the gasoline we need to get
us to the mall.

"Baghdad ER" is going to tell us right in the comfort of our living rooms
that there is really horrible stuff going on over there in Iraq, and whether
we think this is a good war or a bad war, we need to be paying closer
attention to the human consequences.

"We tried to put a human face on the war," said Sheila Nevins, the head of
documentary programming at HBO. "It's a part of the story that hasn't really
been told."

Capt. Glenna Greene, an operating room nurse, says in the film:

"It just kills me, because these kids are, you know - I'm old enough to be
their mom. And just to see them hurt, it's very difficult."

She said she tries to comfort those who are seriously wounded and about to
be evacuated to Germany. "I always try to tell them before they go to sleep:
'You'll wake up in Germany. Have a beer for us.' " And then she laughed.
"Some of them aren't even old enough to drink," she said.

The medical personnel do an extraordinary job. The film tells us right at
the beginning that 90 percent of the troops wounded in Iraq survive, which
is the highest survival rate in U.S. history. But many of the more than
17,000 who have survived their wounds will face a lifetime of physical and
mental struggle.

A member of the operating room team, commenting on the amputation of a
soldier's thumb and the partial amputation of his ring finger, says that the
patient who immediately preceded him "lost his left arm and his right leg
above the knee. And, you know, there was a couple of marines in here the
other day, one lost both his arms, the other lost both his legs. And this is
a bad injury, but certainly could have been worse."

The movie does not shrink from those instances in which the G.I.'s do not
survive. We see doctors all but begging the patient to make it. We see
buddies weeping. We see a chaplain speaking softly to a mortally wounded
marine:

"We don't want you to go. We want you to fight. ... But if you can't, it's
O.K. to go. It's O.K. to go. But we'll be right with you. If you get better,
or if you go."

HBO. Later this month.

***

CounterPunch - April 28, 2006
http://www.counterpunch.org/baroud04282006.html

Government in a Cage

Hamas' Impossible Mission

By RAMZY BAROUD

It should be established by now that most Western governments are the least
interested in honoring the decided democratic choice of the Palestinian
people, which elevated to power a movement that is branded 'terrorist' by
Israel, thus by much of the Western hemisphere.

Since facts and common sense are of little concern to those who hastily
decided to withhold badly needed funds to support the battered economy of
the Occupied Territories, there would be no need to once again marvel at the
rhetorical inconsistencies of the Bush Administration and of the European
Union.

So what if Hamas has adhered to a virtually unilateral ceasefire for over a
year, while Israel did not? So what if the newly formed government has given
ample evidence that it is keenly interested in dialogue, not violence? So
what if the majority of the Palestinian people have adamantly and repeatedly
-- according to recent public opinion polls -- expressed their interest in a
negotiated settlement with Israel? Indeed, so many "so whats" that hardly
matter now, since it is quite clear that the US and the EU's real intentions
are to topple the Palestinian government, along with the sham of a doctrine
which claims that democratizing the Arabs is the ultimate policy objective
of Bush and Blair.

Seeing ample empirical evidence that supports such a claim, one has to
wonder what the remaining options are for the Palestinian government.
Unfortunately, there are not many, and none of them are trouble-free.

The coordinated financial and diplomatic boycott, led by the US, which was
demanded by Israel, makes it impossible for the Palestinian government to
pay the salaries of some 150,000 government employees. Even Arab banks could
be punished if they agreed to transfer funds to the Palestinians, according
to US terror laws. The Palestinian government is, naturally, desperate to
secure whatever meager funds from alternative sources.

Concurrently, the word is out that disgruntled Fatah members -- whose party
has dominated the political scene for many years until they were cast aside
last January by Palestinian voters, fed up with corruption and nepotism --
are planning to stage wide protests demanding salaries and government
services. Early signs of such disorder have been plentiful in recent weeks.
Moreover, former PA government advisors - now posing as independent
'experts' with newly forged think-tanks - sound as eager to maintain a
financial stranglehold on the new government as any pro-Israeli analyst in a
Washington-based neoconservative think-tank.

It's now politics at work; forget about a "just solution" to the conflict,
"peace" and "democracy" and all other ornamental phrases. What's at play
here is politics, and dirty politics at that: any Palestinian government or
leader, democratically elected or not, that fails to perform according to a
specified role and insists on addressing the central elements of the
conflict, must be fought, branded and discarded, no matter how pragmatic his
argument may be.

Former Palestinian Authority President Yassir Arafat was caged in the
basement of his battered offices in the West Bank town of Ramallah for
years, for simply failing to read his assigned lines. The lapel of his
jacket was decorated not only with the flag of Palestine, but that of Israel
as well. He condemned terrorism, shut down Palestinian charities, imprisoned
militant and political leaders, but was still deemed "irrelevant" and was
literally imprisoned until a mysterious illness and death set him free. He
would call Israeli leaders "my brothers", "my partners", he would condemn
attacks on Israeli civilians and often neglected to even address attacks on
Palestinian civilians, yet he was told that all was not enough. "Arafat must
condemn Palestinian terrorism in Arabic," US officials and pundits parroted.
He did. That too did not suffice. "He must follow his words with deeds,"
they further instructed, but without calling on Israel to free him to
achieve such a mission.

He was humiliated, physically confined and completely stripped of any
tangible powers, and yet he was expected to ensure Israel's security while
in his shackles. He was expected to do the impossible, and naturally he
failed.

History has an odd and often ironic way of repeating itself.

The same conditions are now being imposed on Hamas, who would, predictably
have to do more to prove to be seen as a legitimate partner in a peace
process that doesn't exist and was not meant to exist. The US is now backing
Fatah, which was much more "flexible" and ready to sign and initial with the
slightest wink, yet, it was too "no peace partner", according to Israel, and
of course the US.

Undoubtedly, Washington has no constructive foreign policy of its own
regarding the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and is itself following an
Israeli script, one that will deem any Palestinian leadership "terrorist",
"irrelevant" and "no peace partner", even if the entire Palestinian
leadership was made of vegetarian, pacifist, Mother Teresa incarnates.
That's all beside the point.

All Israel is striving for is time: to consolidate its strong hold over
occupied Jerusalem, to conclude the construction of its illegal Apartheid
Wall built mostly on Palestinian land and to demarcate its own borders,
which also happen to fall in Palestinian areas.

Meanwhile, let Palestinians starve, wrangle over pathetic powers of the
government and the president, and resort to Iran for financial aid. None of
this is of any concern to Israel, but it provides the further proof needed
to brand Palestinians incapable of governing themselves, and to make obvious
the "evil" alliance between Hamas and Iran - which in turn places the
Palestinian government in the anti-American camp.

It's unfortunate indeed that the EU has agreed to participate in this
charade, betraying the trust of most Palestinians who have always seen
Europe as different from the US, believing that their foreign policies have
not yet been fully hijacked by pro-Israeli lobbies, and so forth. All of
this is faltering will likely push the Palestinian government, willingly or
not, toward a more detrimental and extremist political line, because mere
survival - neither pragmatism nor a shadowy peace -- is now its ultimate
objective.

[Ramzy Baroud teaches mass communication at Australia's Curtin University of
Technology, Malaysia Campus. He is the author of Writings on the Second
Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press,
London.) He is also the editor-in-chief of the PalestineChronicle.com.]









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