The following remarks were made on the occasion of the removal for winter of flags commemorating lives lost in Iraq and Afghanistan at the Iraq War Dead Memorial in Blue Hill, Maine on Saturday, November 10th 2012.
I hope to make
the case today for us to continue, even redouble, our efforts to effect real
change when there may be a window of opportunity for our voices to persuade
President Obama to morph into a leader faithful to a gentler inner self.
I have a
comforting expectation that my words will fall on sympathetic ears. Not so, if
this were your typical Armistice Day parade or gathering happening all over the
country this weekend. My remarks don’t
celebrate or glorify the military, which is what we generally hear on this day.
Quite the opposite.
I am extremely
proud to be a member of Veterans for Peace. Founded 27 years ago in Maine, VFP
now has over 5000 members and more than 130 chapters. We are the only
veterans' organization that
is opposed to all war and we’re
dedicated to increasing awareness of the costs of war, to counter-recruiting,
and to seeking justice for veterans and all victims of war.
Unfortunately,
most Americans would be dismissive of VFP, maintaining we're naïve, that man is
inherently violent and that, therefore, war is inevitable. My experience
teaching peace has convinced me that, on the contrary, there are many
cultures that are peaceful and that war is a matter of choice. We
here in America resist that notion, I think, largely, because of our violent
history.
It is simply too
uncomfortable for Americans to accept that wars aren't necessary or that war
often has been closer to our leaders' first option rather than their last. And so our history only
contributes to the disheartening resolute march down a blood-soaked and beaten
path.
We Americans
need to examine America's record honestly, just as we need to examine the
American mythology of exceptionalism. Years ago I came to the conclusion that
Martin Luther King, Jr's stinging rebuke on April 4, 1967, was right on.
His country was the greatest purveyor of violence. That
distinction is inarguably, I think, just as valid today.
Making the case
for the U.S. being among the bloodiest of nations prior to WWII meets with
considerable resistance, though it’s
pretty hard to dismiss the genocide of native Americans, the slave trade, our
Civil War, the Mexican War, the Spanish American War, when war in the
Philippines alone took 300,000 to 500,000 lives, and WWI and II. Could they
possibly all be aberrations?
The picture
since WWII is too fresh in our memory to deny. Between six and seven million
people died in our three big wars since the "good" one-Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq.
A total of six to seven million!
Celebrated
author and activist Brian Willson's research found that between 1945 and 2008
there have been 390 overt U.S. military interventions. Author William Blum
writes that we've bombed 28 countries. When I was teaching I was fond of citing
peace guru Colman McCarthy' quiz. He asked his students how many of those
incursions led to the establishment of a democratic government respectful of
human rights. The answer, sadly and not surprisingly, is zero.
I have recently
been reading John Tirman's, "The
Deaths of Others," which
addresses the question, "Why are Americans so indifferent to the deaths of
others?" Tirman is the
executive director of the Center for International
Studies at MIT and was responsible for the surveys that found that an
astonishing 655,000 deaths were attributable to the war in Iraq by 2006. That
discovery prompted his investigation into the evident lack of sympathetic
response in America to the bloodshed.
In part, Tirman
explains, this callousness can be attributed to a conscious campaign by policy
makers to assure the American public of the essential rightness of our wars and
their benefits to those populations under siege, never mind the horrific death
toll.
The selling of
war to the American public is, of course, responsible for the victimization of
the mostly young people commemorated here. No doubt, many, probably most,
believed they were serving an admirable cause-that they were taking freedom and
democracy to dark regions of the planet.
These lives
lost, along with the physically and emotionally damaged who have returned
represent the highest costs of our wars. As an aside: Can we ignore the
suicides-nearly one military suicide a day for the first six months of 2012, 26
attempted suicides by active military personnel in July alone?
But, the toll is extensive in many other ways we know.
There's the
shear monetary drain and the associated "opportunity costs". Costs of our wars
since 9/11 will be over $4 trillion. Trillions down a drain that might better
have been dedicated to other problems---world poverty, climate change, renewable
energy solutions.
Tirman has
brought home to me the costs of wars and our militarism as experienced by others
and the associated loss of our international stature. Americans may give little
attention to our track record-they may be ignorant or oblivious, but citizens of
other countries may not be so clueless.
It is well
known, for instance, in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East that the incidence
of abnormal births in Fallujah and Basra is off the charts, though not generally
known here. The abnormalities found among the newborn to over half the families
recently surveyed in Fallujah are such that we'd rather turn away. Certainly
they are an echo of the legacy of Agent Orange in Vietnam where some 2-3 million
victims live today, unable to take care of themselves.
In a world
connected and informed as it is today, very little is secret. Not these
histories in Iraq and Vietnam. Not the torture at the hands of our military, or
CIA, or private contractors. Not the renditions, or drone assassinations, or
kill lists. Not the crippling sanctions we have imposed on
Iran based on totally unsubstantiated claims of a nuclear weapons program. It's
all known.
Brian Willson
believes that each of those killed at our hands leave behind an average of 5
loved ones who are traumatically conditioned to violence. We should ask what
that means and how might those survivors feel about America. A family member of
one of our errant drone attacks in Pakistan was quoted as saying "It is beyond
my imagination how they can lack all mercy and compassion, and carry on doing
this for years. They are not human beings." We don't want to think about who "they" is.
It is useful to
view the consequences of our vast military empire from the perspective of the
"other-" through the eyes of the
Vietnamese, the Chinese, the Iranians, the Pakistanis. We would have serious
objections if the Chinese were to build a base
on a Caribbean island as we are doing on the Korean island of Jeju.
There would be
"push back" if toxic
defoliants were sprayed over Miami. And, there would be serious blowback if
suddenly Americans were essentially vaporized from above as is happening in
Pakistan, and Yemen, and the Sudan, and Mali. And I believe all our bases around
the world cause far more mischief than do they make us safe.
So, yes, my
experiences in the military and those years since have led me to hate war. For
me it is personal. I have sat with and interviewed Inuit from Greenland who were
displaced in Trail of Tears-like fashion to make way for Thule Air Force Base. I
have sat with and interviewed people of Diego Garcia, a remote Indian Ocean
island, who were evicted to make way for a gigantic base from which we have
launched bombing missions over Iraq and Afghanistan.
I have sat with
and interviewed Marshall Islanders whose islands became uninhabitable thanks to
our atomic weapons testing there. And I have sat with and interviewed Agent
Orange victims and family members in Vietnam. The heart-wrenching stories I have
heard, without being overly dramatic, have etched searing images. They are us
and we are them and we ought to know their anguish.
For me it is
personal. I did not know anyone commemorated here. But, I do know former Marine
Jerry Stadtmiller, who was shot in the face in Vietnam and is blind, Duane
Wagner who lost both legs to a grenade, Allen Hayes another double leg amputee,
victim of a land-mine, Artie Guerrero who was shot four times in Vietnam and is
confined to a wheelchair with trauma induced MS, Carlos Moleda, a Navy Seal
paraplegic who was shot in Panama, Dan Jensen who lost a leg to a land mine.
I knew well my
three teammates, nine classmates, and my best friend, Don MacLaughlin whose
names are all on the wall. I mourn for them. Just as I mourn the loss of these
commemorated here. All victims of failed leadership. All victims of our failure
to redirect our government.
Buffy Sainte-Marie has written, "He's the universal soldier. He's fighting for Canada, he's fighting for France and he's fighting for the U.S.A. He's the universal soldier and he really is to blame." But then, she goes on to say, "his orders come from far away no more."
"They come from here and there and you and me
and brothers can't you see. This is not a way to put an end to war." In a youtube video Sainte-Marie
says that while composing the song she realized we all must take
responsibility-that the soldiers take their orders from the generals, the
generals take their orders from the politicians, but the politicians take their
orders from us. More like the 1% now; but we can't concede responsibility to
them or allow them to prevail.
So I see all
those commemorated here to be like you and me. It is right that they be mourned
and not forgotten. They are you and me and we all must take responsibility and
redouble our awareness and our work to stop what is being done in our names. We
must build coalitions, with "occupiers", labor activists,
education activists, with healthcare activists, marriage equality activists,
women’s rights activists, environmentalists,
anti-corporatists, all of us and we must persist and we must know
that if not us, then who?
ISH/SM