Big-Game Hunting in Iraq
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Nick Turse
by Tom Engelhardt
and Nick Turse
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Evidently,
Blackwater, the now infamous private security company whose hired
guns, working for the State Department, mowed down at least 17 Iraqis
in a Baghdad square recently, wants to soften its image. (I wonder
why?) The New
York Times' Paul von Zielbauer just reported that the company
has redesigned its logo. Once, according to him, it was "a bear's
paw print in a red crosshairs, under lettering that looks to have
been ripped from a fifth of Jim Beam" on a "menacing" black field.
Like Daniel Boone, the company was evidently selling its ability
to put "big game" in the crosshairs of its gun sights in countries
like Iraq and Afghanistan. Now,
subtly transformed, the logo is on a white background; the bear's
paw more modest looking; and the crosshairs of that sniper's rifle
have simply disappeared.
Maybe it will
prove a tad late for Blackwater to take its rep out of the Wild
West and into the mild and corporate, but it's certainly never too
late to try. Americans (if not Iraqis) are a forgiving people, who
believe in the second chance. While Blackwater sends in the marketing
guys to humanize itself, it looks as if the U.S. military may be
moving in another direction when it comes to big-game hunting, as
Nick Turse, on the Tomdispatch
military beat, reports today. ~ Tom
(Un)Fair
Game
By Nick
Turse
Earlier this
month, news of the military's use of Human Terrain Teams
U.S. combat units operating in Afghanistan and Iraq that contain
anthropologists and other social scientists who have traded in their
academic robes for body armor hit the front-page
of the New York Times. While the incorporation of academic
experts into combat units has raised ire in some scholarly
circles, their use as "cultural advisers" to aid the war effort
has been greeted by the military as "a crucial new weapon in counterinsurgency
operations" and in the media as an example of increased cultural
sensitivity as well as evidence of a new Pentagon willingness to
think outside the box.
But the university
is only one of a number of areas where an overstretched military,
involved in two losing wars, is in a desperate search for new ideas.
And humanizing allies and enemies alike has only been one part of
the process. Dehumanizing them has been the other. At a recent conference
on urban warfare in Washington, D.C., James Lasswell, a retired
Marine Corps colonel who now heads the Office of Science and Technology
at the Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory, opened an interesting
window into this side of things. He noted that, as part of an instruction
course named "Combat Hunter," the Marines have brought in "big-game
hunters" to school their snipers in the better use of "optics."
According to a September 2007 article by Grace Jean in NationalDefense
Magazine, "[T]he lab conducted a war game with Marines,
African game hunters and inner city police officers to search for
ways to improve training." The program included a 15-minute CD titled
"Every Marine a Hunter."
Earlier this
year, according to an article by Kimberly Johnson of the Marine
Corps Times, Col. Clarke Lethin, chief of staff of the I Marine
Expeditionary Force (I MEF) a unit based in Camp Pendleton,
California that took part in the 2003 invasion of Iraq and will
be returning
there soon indicated that its commanders "believe that
if we create a mentality in our Marines that they are hunters and
they take on some of those skills, then we'll be able to increase
our combat effectiveness." The article included this curious add-on:
"The Corps hopes to tap into skills certain Marines may already
have learned growing up in rural hunting areas and in urban areas,
such as inner cities, said Col. Clarke Lethin, I MEF's chief of
staff." Outraged by the statement, one Sgt. Ramsey K. Gregory wrote
a letter
to the publication asking, "Just what was meant by that comment
about the inner city? I hope to God that he's not saying that people
from the inner cities are experts in killing each other and that
we all just walk around carrying guns."
While the
colonel's language defended
by some did seem to suggest that inner-city dwellers lived
in an urban jungle of gun-toting hunters of other humans, none of
the letters, pro or con, considered quite a different part of the
Colonel's equation: the implicit comparison of enemies in urban
warfare, today largely Iraqis and Afghans, to animals that are hunted
and killed as quarry. As Lethin had unabashedly noted, "We identified
a need to ensure our Marines were being the hunters… Hunting is
more than just the shooting. It's finding your game."
That military
men might indulge in this sort of description was perhaps less than
surprising, given the degree to which "hunting" the enemy has been
on the lips of America's commander-in-chief. George W. Bush has,
on many occasions,
invoked the image: "We're hunting them down, one at a time" he likes
to say of, for instance, al-Qaeda terrorists, or "we're smoking
them out," as he said
in November 2001.
In fact, the
President needed no big-game hunters to coach him on his optics
or anything else. He's talked incessantly of hunting humans
in speeches
to American troops, at photo
ops with foreign leaders, at family
fundraisers, even in the midst of remarks
about homeownership.
Nor is there
anything new about Americans treating racial and ethnic enemies
as the equivalent of animals to be abused or killed. In his memoir
of the Vietnam War, Dispatches, acclaimed combat correspondent
Michael Herr, for example, recalled a young soldier from the Army's
1st Infantry Division who admitted, "Well, you know what we do to
animals…. kill em and hurt em and beat on em …. Shit, we don't
treat the Dinks [Vietnamese] no different than that." Another veteran,
quoted elsewhere remembered, "As soon as I hit boot camp…. they
tried to change your total personality…. Right away they told us
not to call them Vietnamese. Call them gooks, dinks…. They were
like animals, or something other than human…. They told us they're
not to be treated with any type of mercy…" Today, the slurs of the
Vietnam era have been replaced
by "haji" and "raghead," while the big-game hunters and the language
that goes with killing animals have added to the atmosphere of dehumanization.
That program
of instruction is, however, just one recent example of an undercurrent
within the military's institutional culture that implicitly reduces
people to animals. It's not just in the language of everyday anger
and dismissal by soldiers in a strange land where danger is everywhere
and it's difficult to tell friend from foe. It's lodged right in
the institutional language, if you care to notice. Last month, a
piece in the Washington
Post, for example, drew much media
attention when it came to light that U.S. Army snipers from
the "painted demons" platoon of the 1st Battalion, 501st Infantry
Regiment, 25th Infantry Division allegedly took part in "a classified
program of 'baiting' their targets" to lure insurgents within their
sniper scopes.
"Basically,
we would put an item [like a spool of wire or ammunition] out there
and watch it," said Capt. Matthew P. Didier, the leader of the elite
sniper platoon in a sworn statement. "If someone found the item,
picked it up and attempted to leave with the item, we would engage
the individual as I saw this as a sign they would use the item against
U.S. Forces." While there has been much subsequent discussion about
the ethics and legality of such a program, nobody seemed to take
note of the hunting language involved. After all, when you "bait"
a trap (or a hook), it's to lure an animal (or fish) in for the
kill. But "bait" for a human?
While the
use of anthropologists and other social scientists has made headlines,
the utilization of "big-game hunters" as troop trainers for the
"urban jungles" of Iraq has been essentially ignored. Programs stressing
cultural sensitivity may be covered, but treating Iraqis scavenging
in a weapon-strewn war zone as the equivalent of elephants, water
buffalo, or other prized trophies of great white hunters
has gone largely unexamined in any meaningful way.
From
the commander-in-chief to low-ranking snipers, a language of dehumanization
that includes the idea of hunting humans as if they were animals
has crept into our world unnoticed and unnoted in the mainstream
media. Perhaps a few linguistics professors or other social scientists
might like to step into the breach and offer their views on the
subject unless, of course, they've already been mustered
into those Human Terrain Teams.
October
27, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Nick Turse is the associate editor and research director
of Tomdispatch.com. He has written for the Los
Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Nation,
GOOD
magazine, the Village Voice, and regularly for Tomdispatch.com.
His first book, The
Complex, an exploration of the new military-corporate complex
in America, is due out in the American
Empire Project series by Metropolitan Books in 2008. His new
website NickTurse.com (up
only in rudimentary form) will fully launch in the coming months.
Copyright
© 2007 Nick Turse
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