By Aaron Glantz, Haymarket Books
Posted on October 10, 2008, Printed on October 24, 2008
http://www.alternet .org/story/ 102352/
In March of this year, a courageous group of veterans brought the war home, at 
a historic event held in Silver Spring, Md., inspired by Vietnam veterans a 
generation before. "Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan" convened more than 
200 soldiers who have served in the so-called "War on Terror;" like their 
fellow soldiers before them, who shared stories that laid bare the nightmare of 
Vietnam, these veterans bore witness to the crimes that have been committed in 
Americans' names during the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. The hearings 
lasted four days; in their testimony, soldiers described how the discarding of 
the military's rules of engagement and its systematic dehumanization of Iraqi 
and Afghan civilians has led to horrible acts of violence against innocent men, 
women and children. "These are not isolated incidents," was a common refrain, 
even as the episodes they described seemed exceptionally brutal. For many of 
the veterans, it was the first
 time they had told their stories.
Now, the searing testimony has been compiled in an important new book: Winter 
Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupation, edited by 
Aaron Glantz and published by Haymarket Books. I strongly encourage you to buy 
the book, preferably though the Web site of Iraq Veterans Against the War, 
which organized the Winter Soldier hearings and continues to hold similar 
events in cities across the country. All proceeds of books purchased through 
IVAW will go to support its crucial work.
The following excerpt comes from Michael Prysner, a corporal in the Army 
Reserve who came home in February 2004. 
-- Liliana Segura, Editor, War on Iraq Special Coverage
When I first joined the army, I was told that racism no longer existed in the 
military. A legacy of inequality and discrimination was suddenly washed away by 
something called the Equal Opportunity Program. We would sit through mandatory 
classes, and every unit had an EO representative to ensure that no elements of 
racism could resurface. The army seemed firmly dedicated to smashing any hint of 
racism.
Then September 11 happened, and I began to hear new words like "towel-head, " 
and "camel jockey," and the most disturbing, "sand nigger." These words did not 
initially come from my fellow lower-enlisted soldiers, but from my superiors: 
my platoon sergeant, my first sergeant, my battalion commander. All the way up 
the chain of command, these viciously racist terms were suddenly acceptable.
When I got to Iraq in 2003, I learned a new word, "haji." Haji was the enemy. 
Haji was every Iraqi. He was not a person, a father, a teacher, or a worker. 
It's important to understand where this word came from. To Muslims, the most 
important thing is to take a pilgrimage to Mecca, the Hajj. Someone who has 
taken this pilgrimage is a haji. It's something that, in traditional Islam, is 
the highest calling in the religion. We took the best thing from Islam and made 
it into the worst thing.
Since the creation of this country, racism has been used to justify expansion 
and oppression. Native Americans were called "savages," the Africans were 
called all sorts of things to excuse slavery, and Vietnam veterans know the 
multitude of words used to justify that imperialist war.
So haji was the word we used. It was the word we used on this particular 
mission I'm going to talk about. We've heard a lot about raids and kicking down 
the doors of people's houses and ransacking their houses, but this was a 
different kind of raid.
We never got any explanation for our orders. We were only told that a group of 
five or six houses was now property of the U.S. military, and we had to go in 
and make those families leave their houses.
We went to these houses and informed the families that their homes were no 
longer theirs. We provided them no alternative, nowhere to go, no compensation. 
They were very confused and very scared. They did not know what to do and would 
not leave, so we had to remove them.
One family in particular, a woman with two small girls, a very elderly man, and 
two middle-aged men; we dragged them from their house and threw them onto the 
street. We arrested the men because they refused to leave, and we sent them off 
to prison.
A few months later I found out, as we were short interrogators and I was given 
that assignment. I oversaw and participated in hundreds of interrogations. I 
remember one in particular that I'm going to share with you. It was the moment 
that really showed me the nature of this occupation.
This particular detainee was already stripped down to his underwear, hands 
behind his back and a sandbag on his head. I never saw this man's face. My job 
was to take a metal folding chair and smash it against the wall next to his 
head -- he was faced against the wall with his nose touching it -- while a 
fellow soldier screamed the same question over and over again. No matter what 
his answer, my job was to slam the chair against the wall. We did this until we 
got tired.
I was told to make sure he kept standing up, but something was wrong with his 
leg. He was injured, and he kept falling to the ground. The sergeant in charge 
would come and tell me to get him up on his feet, so I'd have to pick him up 
and put him against the wall. He kept going down. I kept pulling him up and 
putting him against the wall. My sergeant was upset with me for not making him 
continue to stand. He picked him up and slammed him against the wall several 
times. Then he left. When the man went down on the ground again, I noticed 
blood pouring down from under the sandbag. I let him sit, and when I noticed my 
sergeant coming again, I would tell him quickly to stand up. Instead of 
guarding my unit from this detainee, I realized I was guarding the detainee 
from my unit.
I tried hard to be proud of my service, but all I could feel was shame. Racism 
could no longer mask the reality of the occupation. These are human beings. 
I've since been plagued by guilt. I feel guilt any time I see an elderly man, 
like the one who couldn't walk who we rolled onto a stretcher and told the 
Iraqi police to take him away. I feel guilt any time I see a mother with her 
children, like the one who cried hysterically and screamed that we were worse 
than Saddam as we forced her from her home. I feel guilt any time I see a young 
girl, like the one I grabbed by the arm and dragged into the street.
We were told we were fighting terrorists; the real terrorist was me, and the 
real terrorism is this occupation. Racism within the military has long been an 
important tool to justify the destruction and occupation of another country. 
Without racism, soldiers would realize that they have more in common with the 
Iraqi people than they do with the billionaires who send us to war.
I threw families onto the street in Iraq, only to come home and find families 
thrown onto the street in this country, in this tragic and unnecessary 
foreclosure crisis. Our enemies are not five thousand miles away, they are right 
here at home, and if we organize and fight, we can stop this war, we can stop 
this government, and we can create a better world. 
Aaron Glantz is the author of two upcoming books on Iraq: The War Comes Home: 
Washington's Battle Against America's Veterans (UC Press) and Winter Soldier: 
Iraq and Afghanistan (Haymarket). He edits the Web site WarComesHome. org. 
© 2008 Haymarket Books All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet .org/story/ 102352/


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