http://www.suntimes.com/output/steyn/cst-edt-steyn04.html#
 

Events at Haditha don't change need for victory 

June 4, 2006 
BY MARK STEYN SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST 

Here are a couple of observations from two parents of American heroes fallen
in Iraq. The first is from Cindy Sheehan, the mother of Army Spec. Casey
Sheehan, a brave man who enlisted in 2000, re-upped for a second tour and
died in 2005 after volunteering for a rescue mission in Sadr City: 
"We've been talking about Martin Luther King Jr. this night. My son was
killed the same day he was killed, on April 4. I don't believe in any
coincidences. Casey was born on John F. Kennedy's birthday. He was born on
the day, and died on the day, of two people who were assassinated by the war
machine in my country." 
The second observation is from Martin Terrazas, the father of Marine Lance
Cpl. Miguel Terrazas of El Paso, who was killed by a roadside bomb at a town
called Haditha: 
"I don't even listen to the news." 
The New York Times' Maureen Dowd, the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist of
the most important newspaper in America (well, OK, the most self-important
newspaper in America), has written that "the moral authority of parents who
bury children killed in Iraq is absolute." She wrote this in a column about
Sheehan. She doesn't seem to have found the time to write any columns about
any other parents of fallen soldiers and their absolute moral authority.
Elizabeth Edwards, the wife of "moderate" "mainstream" Democratic Party vice
presidential nominee John Edwards, sent out a letter headlined: "Support
Cindy Sheehan's Right To Be Heard." Mrs. Sheehan doesn't have much
difficulty being heard. The remarks above were made a week ago at a meeting
in Melbourne. That's to say, dozens of organizations pay to fly her around
the United States and Canada and over to Britain and Europe and all the way
to Australia to ensure her "right to be heard," now and forever. She is the
subject of a forthcoming movie, in which she will be played by Susan
Sarandon. 
But I would hazard that Martin Terrazas is far more typical of the families
of American forces in Iraq: A man who can't bear to pick up an American
newspaper, or listen to a radio news bulletin, or watch a political talk
show, because every square peg of an event is being hammered into the round
hole of the same narrative, the only narrative our culture knows: This is
Vietnam, it's a quagmire, we can't win, and the longer we delay losing and
scuttling and getting the hell outta there, the more wicked things we will
do. And, lookie here, whaddaya know, here comes the Sunni version of the My
Lai massacre. 
I don't know any more than you do about the precise nature of events
triggered in Haditha by Cpl. Terrazas' death. But assume every dark rumor
you've heard is true, that this was the murder of civilians by American
service personnel. In the run-up to March 2003, there were respectable cases
to be made for and against the Iraq war. Nothing that happened at Haditha
alters either argument. And, if you're one of the ever swelling numbers of
molting hawks among the media, the political class and the American people
for whom Haditha is the final straw, that's not a sign of your belated moral
integrity but of your fundamental unseriousness. Anyone who supports the
launching of a war should be clear-sighted enough to know that, when the
troops go in, a few of them will kill civilians, bomb schools, torture
prisoners. It happens in every war in human history, even the good ones.
Individual Americans, Britons, Canadians, Australians did bad things in
World War II and World War I. These aren't stunning surprises, they're
inevitable: It might be a bombed mosque or a gunned-down pregnant woman or a
slaughtered wedding party, but it will certainly be something. And, in the
scales of history, it makes no difference to the justice of the cause and
the need for victory. 
For three years, coalition forces in Iraq behaved so well that a salivating
Vietnam culture had to make do with the thinnest of pickings: one depraved
jailhouse, a prisoner on a dog leash with a pair of Victoria's Secret
panties on his head and an unusually positioned banana. "Just look at the
way U.S. army reservist Lynndie England holds the leash of the naked,
bearded Iraqi," wrote Robert Fisk, the dean of the global media's Middle
Eastern correspondents. "No sadistic movie could outdo the damage of this
image. In September 2001, the planes smashed into the buildings; today,
Lynndie smashes to pieces our entire morality with just one tug on the
leash." 
Down, boy. 
But now at last the media have their story. They're off the leash. And, if
the worst rumors are true, those 10 Marines will come to symbolize the 99.99
percent of their comrades who every day do great things for the Iraqi and
Afghan people. In 2004, in the wake of Abu Ghraib, I wrote that "there is
something not just ridiculous but unbecoming about a hyperpower 300 million
strong whose elites -- from the deranged former vice president down -- want
the outcome of a war, and the fate of a nation, to hinge on one freaky
jailhouse; elites who are willing to pay any price, bear any burden, as long
as it's pain-free, squeaky-clean and over in a week. The sheer silliness
dishonors the memory of all those we're supposed to be remembering this
Memorial Day." 
Two years on, it's even worse. If you examine the assumptions underlying
speeches by professors, media grandees, etc., it's hard not to agree with
the Wall Street Journal's James Taranto, that these days America can only
fight Vietnam, over and over: Every war is "supposed to become a quagmire,
which provokes opposition and leads to American withdrawal.'' That's how the
nation demonstrates its "moral virtue" -- i.e., its parochial
self-absorption. 
Last week, Cindy Sheehan said in Melbourne that "Bobby Kennedy was
assassinated by the war machine in my country." This week, Bobby's son,
Robert Kennedy Jr., said in Rolling Stone that Bush stole the 2004 election.
Next week, it'll be something else. 
But there is more pain and more truth about America in those seven words of
Martin Terrazas. A superpower that wallows in paranoia and glorifies
self-loathing cannot endure and doesn't deserve to. 
CMark Steyn, 2006


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