A Breeding Ground For Tyrants
by
Michael Gaddy
by Michael Gaddy
The
irritating sound of a ringing phone brought me roughly back to reality.
I had been lost in the serenity of the snow-covered peaks of the
La Plata and San Juan Mountains of Southern Colorado. At first,
there was no immediate response to my hello. I thought it a call
from a telemarketer, but after the pause, was delighted to hear
the voice of a damn good soldier I have known for over two decades,
who is on his second tour in Iraq. His response to my question of
what was going on over there now, still assaults my conscience:
"Well, this morning our unit went out and shot up a bunch of
civilians and our commander is writing it up as a great military
victory."
This
is not
the first report of unacceptable military and civilian leadership
as it pertains to the war in Iraq I have received from this soldier.
He continued telling me of the insane actions of his commander:
"He has a whole new definition of ‘recon-by-fire;’ he picks
out a building in our area of operations, then tells his soldiers
to ‘fire it up.’ It makes no difference we have no Intel of enemy
activity, nor have we received any enemy fire from that building.
His purpose is to continue to shoot into buildings until someone
shoots back."
When
asked what was the reaction by most of the soldiers in this unit
to such actions by their commander, I was told there are basically
two types of soldiers in most units. There are the career guys who
have more than a decade invested and have seen so many commanders
like this they believe them to be the norm rather than the exception.
Then, there are the young soldiers who have fallen for the line
about killing as many of these "rag heads" as possible
because of 9/11 and protecting "the folks back home."
Soldiers, who see this war for what it is and voice those thoughts,
are reported up the line as malcontents and enemy sympathizers.
The vast majority of soldiers would rather live through the lies
and atrocities than be labeled a traitor and the ramifications of
that label once they return home. So, many just hope to survive
and get the hell out of the military and away from the madmen who
lead them.
This
nation, its political leadership and the vast majority of its religious
leaders, have thrown away their moral compass and replaced it with
a rabid nationalism unseen on the world stage since Germany in the
1930s. Torture and murder of hundreds of thousands are readily accepted,
as long as it is done for the graven image called the State. Eventually,
unless we take a different path, the number of those tortured and
murdered will include those in this country who refuse to submit
to the State as it pursues its "mission
from God." The venom readily spews forth from the shills
for the State now, building a hate and resentment in the masses
for any who would challenge the official position of perpetual war
for peace.
Since
our nation and its civilian leaders have lost their ability to judge
right from wrong, why should we expect anything different from our
military?
Many
military officers see this war as the open door of opportunity to
the stars of a general and all the attendant trappings: power, money
and prestige. Like the perfumed princes of the Vietnam War, they
believe, "it may not be a good war, but it is the only war
we have." Success in war is a simple equation: how many people
can you put in a body bag? An immoral leadership cares little if
they are combatants or civilians. Military leadership follows the
lead of its civilian leadership; if they lie, it is an acceptable
practice, if they condone illegal war, they do the same, if killing
and torturing innocents is ordered and then covered-up, then it
must be OK. Why should we even question this
or this
when it comes to our military leaders seeking to move up the career
ladder?
Those
in the military see two separate but distinct choices: embrace illegal
war and the actions necessary to "succeed," or do what
is right and suffer the ridicule, humiliation, and possible imprisonment
of others
who chose that path.
Tragic
are those who choose to support illegal war and then have
to deal with their consciences once they are away from the false
bravado and macho support. Just another casualty of war, they say.
Most
of the military officers, who excel at unconstitutional, aggressive
war, will move into positions of higher authority once this war
is over and will dictate military policy in the future. They will
remember the path they took to attain the lofty status of general
and so will those who are younger and seek to emulate them. They
will have learned that to follow the lies of unprincipled civilian
leadership is indispensable to success, and conscience and morals
will never take you past colonel if that far.
None
of these officers will consider their oath
of enlistment and its mandate of obeying the Constitution over
unconstitutional, illegal orders. After all, following the Constitution
is not a step on the career path to the inner ring at the Pentagon.
They will never allow the thought to enter their minds that anyone
issuing an unconstitutional order, military or civilian, is, in
fact, the domestic enemy referred to in the enlistment oath.
March
10, 2005
Michael
Gaddy [send him mail], an
Army veteran of Vietnam, Grenada, and Beirut, lives in the Four
Corners area of the American Southwest.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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