
A Culture of Atrocity
by Chris Hedges
www.truthdig.com, June 18, 2007

All troops, when they occupy and battle
insurgent forces, as in Iraq, or Gaza or Vietnam, are swiftly
placed in what the psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton terms "atrocity-producing
situations." In this environment, surrounded by a hostile
population, simple acts such as going to a store to buy a can
of Coke or driving down a street means you can be killed. This
constant fear and stress leads troops to view everyone around
them as the enemy. The hostility is compounded when the enemy,
as in Iraq, is elusive, shadowy and hard to find. The rage that
soldiers feel after a roadside bomb explodes, killing or maiming
their comrades, is one that is easily directed over time to innocent
civilians who are seen as supporting the insurgents. It is a
short psychological leap, but a massive moral one. It is a leap
from killing-the shooting of someone who has the capacity to do
you harm-to murder-the deadly assault against someone who cannot
harm you. The war in Iraq is now primarily about murder. There
is very little killing. American Marines and soldiers have become,
after four years of war, acclimated to atrocity.
The American killing project is not described
in these terms to the distant public. The politicians still speak
in the abstract of glory, honor and heroism, of the necessity
of improving the world, in lofty phrases of political and spiritual
renewal. The press, as in most wars, is slavishly compliant.
The reality of the war-the fact that the occupation forces have
become, along with the rampaging militias, a source of terror
to most Iraqis-is not transmitted to the American public. The
press chronicles the physical and emotional wounds visited on
those who kill in our name. The Iraqis, those we kill, are largely
nameless, faceless dead. Those who kill large numbers of people
always claim it as a regrettable but necessary virtue.
The reality and the mythic narrative of
war collide when embittered combat veterans return home. They
find themselves estranged from the world around them, a world
that still believes in the myth of war and the virtues of the
nation.
Tina Susman in a June 12 article in the
Los Angeles Times gave readers a rare glimpse into this side of
the war. She wrote about a 17-year-old Iraqi boy killed by the
wild, random fire unleashed by American soldiers in a Baghdad
neighborhood following a bomb blast. These killings, which Iraqis
say occur daily, are seldom confirmed, but in this case the boy
was the son of a local Los Angeles Times employee.
Iraqi physicians, overseen by epidemiologists
at Johns Hopkins University's Bloomberg School of Public Health,
published a study last year in the British medical journal The
Lancet. The study estimated that 655,000 more people than normal
have died in Iraq since coalition forces invaded the country in
March 2003. This is more than 20 times the estimate of 30,000
civilian deaths that President Bush gave in a speech last December.
Of the total 655,000 estimated "excess
deaths," 601,000 resulted from violence. The remaining deaths
occurred from disease and other causes, according to the study.
This is about 500 additional violent deaths per day throughout
the country.
Lt. Col. Andrew J. Bacevich, a Vietnam
veteran who is a professor of international relations at Boston
University, estimated last year that U.S. troops had killed "tens
of thousands" of innocent Iraqis through accidents or reckless
fire.
Official figures have ceased to exist.
The Iraqi government no longer releases the number of civilian
casualties and the U.S. military does not usually give reports
about civilians killed or wounded by U.S. forces.
"It's a psychological thing. When
one U.S. soldier gets killed or injured, they shoot in vengeance,"
Alaa Safi told the Los Angeles Times. He said his brother, Ahmed,
was killed April 4 when U.S. troops riddled the streets of their
southwestern Baghdad neighborhood with bullets after a sniper
attack.
War is the pornography of violence. It
has a dark beauty, filled with the monstrous and the grotesque.
The Bible calls it "the lust of the eye" and warns
believers against it. War allows us to engage in primal impulses
we keep hidden in the deepest, most private interiors of our fantasy
life. It allows us to destroy not only things but human beings.
In that moment of wholesale destruction, we wield the power of
the divine, the power to give or annihilate life. Armed units
become crazed by the frenzy of destruction. All things, including
human beings, become objects-objects to either gratify or destroy
or both. Almost no one is immune. The contagion of the crowd
sees to that.
Human beings are machine-gunned and bombed
from the air, automatic grenade launchers pepper hovels and neighborhoods
with high-powered explosives, and convoys tear through Iraq, speeding
freight trains of death. These soldiers and Marines have at their
fingertips the heady ability to call in firepower that obliterates
landscapes and villages. The moral universe is turned upside
down. No one walks away uninfected. War thrusts us into a vortex
of barbarity, pain and fleeting ecstasy. It thrusts us into a
world where law is of little consequence.
It takes little in wartime to turn ordinary
men and women into killers. Most give themselves willingly to
the seduction of unlimited power to destroy. All feel the peer
pressure to conform. Few, once in battle, find the strength to
resist gratuitous slaughter. Physical courage is common on a
battlefield. Moral courage is not.
Military machines and state bureaucracies,
which seek to make us obey, seek also to silence those who return
from war and speak the truth. Besides, the public has little
desire to puncture the mythic, heroic narrative. The essence
of war, which is death, is carefully masked from view. The few
lone journalists who attempt to speak the truth about war, to
describe the experience of constantly being on the receiving end
of American firepower, soon become pariahs, no longer able to
embed with the military, dine out with officials in the Green
Zone or get press credentials. And so the vast majority of the
press lies to us, although not overtly; it is the lie of omission,
but it is a lie nonetheless.
The veterans who return, even if they
do not speak about the atrocities they have committed or witnessed
in Iraq, will spend the rest of their lives coping with what they
have done. They will suffer delayed reactions to stress. They
will endure, as have those who returned from Vietnam, a crisis
of faith. The God they knew, or thought they knew, failed them.
The high priests of our civic religion, from politicians to preachers
to television pundits, who promised them glory and honor through
war betrayed them.
War is always about betrayal, betrayal
of the young by the old, of idealists by cynics and of troops
by politicians. This bitter knowledge of betrayal is seeping
into the ranks of the American military. It is bringing us a
new wave of enraged and disenfranchised veterans who will never
again trust the country that sent them to war.
We make our heroes out of clay. We laud
their gallant deeds. We give them uniforms with colored ribbons
for the acts of violence they committed or endured. They are
our false repositories of glory and honor, of power, of self-righteousness,
of patriotism and self-worship, all that we want to believe about
ourselves. They are our plaster saints, the icons we cheer to
defend us and make us and our nation great. They are the props
of our demented civic religion, our love of power and force, our
belief in our right as a chosen nation to wield this force against
the weak. This is our nation's idolatry of itself.
Prophets are not those who speak of piety
and duty from pulpits-there are few people in pulpits worth listening
to. The prophets are the battered wrecks of men and women who
return from Iraq and find the courage to speak the halting words
we do not want to hear, words that we must hear and digest in
order to know ourselves. These veterans, the ones who dare to
tell the truth, have seen and tasted how war plunges us into barbarity,
perversion, pain and an unchecked orgy of death. And it is their
testimonies, if we take the time to listen, which alone can save
us.
Chris
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