America’s Imperial Wars: We Need to See the Horrors




By Dave Lindorff 
April 12, 2009 "Commondreams" -- When I was a 17-year-old kid in my senior year 
of high school, I didn't think much about Vietnam. It was 1967, the war was 
raging, but I didn't personally know anyone who was over there, Tet hadn't 
happened yet. If anything, the excitement of jungle warfare attracted my 
interest more than anything (I had a .22 cal rifle, and liked to go off in the 
woods and shoot at things, often, I'll admit, imagining it was an armed enemy.) 
 
But then I had to do a major project in my humanities program and I chose the 
Vietnam War. As I started researching this paper, which was supposed to be a 
multi-media presentation, I ran across a series of photos of civilian victims 
of American napalm bombing. These victims, often, were women and children-even 
babies. 
 
The project opened my eyes to something that had never occurred to me: my 
country's army was killing civilians. And it wasn't just killing them. It was 
killing them, and maiming them, in ways that were almost unimaginable in their 
horror: napalm, phosphorus, anti-personnel bombs that threw out spinning 
flechettes that ripped through the flesh like tiny buzz saws. I learned that 
scientists like what I at the time wanted to become were actually working on 
projects to make these weapons even more lethal, for example trying to make 
napalm more sticky so it would burn longer on exposed flesh. 
 
By the time I had finished my project, I had actively joined the anti-war 
movement, and later that year, when I turned 18 and had to register for the 
draft, I made the decision that no way was I going to allow myself to 
participate in that war. 
 
A key reason my-and millions of other Americans'--eyes were opened to what the 
US was up to in Indochina was that the media at that time, at least by 1967, 
had begun to show Americans the reality of that war. I didn't have to look too 
hard to find the photos of napalm victims, or to read about the true nature of 
the weapons that our forces were using. 
 
Today, while the internet makes it possible to find similar information about 
the conflicts in the world in which the US is participating, either as primary 
combatant or as the chief provider of arms, as in Gaza, one actually has to 
make a concerted effort to look for them. The corporate media which provide the 
information that most Americans simply receive passively on the evening news or 
at breakfast over coffee carefully avoid showing us most of the graphic horror 
inflicted by our military machine. 
 
We may read the cold fact that the US military, after initial denials, admits 
that its forces killed not four enemy combatants in an assault on a house in 
Afghanistan, but rather five civilians-including a man, a female teacher, a 
10-year-old girl, a 15-year-old boy and a tiny baby. But we don't see pictures 
of their shattered bodies, no doubt shredded by the high-powered automatic 
rifles typically used by American forces. 
 
We may read about wedding parties that are bombed by American forces-something 
that has happened with some frequency in both Iraq and Afghanistan-- where the 
death toll is tallied in dozens, but we are, as a rule, not provided with 
photos that would likely show bodies torn apart by anti-personnel bombs-a 
favored weapon for such attacks on groups of supposed enemy "fighters." (A 
giveaway that such weapons are being used is a typically high death count with 
only a few wounded.) 
 
Obviously one reason for this is that the US military no longer gives US 
journalists, including photo journalists, free reign on the battlefield. Those 
who travel with troops are under the control of those troops and generally 
aren't allowed to photograph the scenes of devastation, and sites of such 
"mishaps" are generally ruled off limits until the evidence has been cleared 
away. 
 
But another reason is that the media themselves sanitize their pages and their 
broadcasts. It isn't just American dead that we don't get to see. It's the 
civilian dead-at least if our guys do it. We are not spared gruesome images 
following attacks on civilians by Iraqi insurgent groups, or by Taliban forces 
in Afghanistan. But we don't get the same kind of photos when it's our forces 
doing the slaughtering. Because often the photos and video images do 
exist-taken by foreign reporters who take the risk of going where the US 
military doesn't want them. 
 
No wonder that even today, most Americans oppose the wars in Iraq and 
Afghanistan not because of sympathy with the long-suffering peoples of those 
two lands, but because of the hardships faced by our own forces, and the 
financial cost of the two wars. 
 
For some real information on the horror that is being perpetrated on one of the 
poorest countries in the world by the greatest military power the world has 
ever known, check out the excellent work by Professor Marc Herold at the 
University of New Hampshire 
 
(http://cursor.org/stories/civilian_deaths.htm and 
http://www.rawa.org/temp/runews/2008/10/06/the-imprecision-ofus-bombing-and-the-under-valuation-of-an-afghan-life.html).
Dave Lindorff is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist. He is author of 
Marketplace Medicine: The Rise of the For-Profit Hospital Chains (BantamBooks, 
1992), and his latest book "The Case for Impeachment" (St. Martin's Press, 
2006). His work is available at www.thiscantbehappening.net





Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
Phone: 7917-7000, 7918-4544 ext. 4034,  Fax: 79184558, 79184627
 
http://satrioarismunandar6.blogspot.com
http://satrioarismunandar.multiply.com  
 
Verba volant scripta manent...
(yang terucap akan lenyap, yang tertulis akan abadi...)


      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke