Some Will Pay a Heavy Price for What We Have Done
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Think
if you will, fifteen years from now, when a young son or daughter
asks his mom or dad, who served in our War on Terror, what they
did in the war. For that first minute some veterans will have to
think about kicking a shackled prisoner to death or even that they
had to hear that prisoner’s screams and there was nothing they could
do to stop it.
There
are Pentagon reports from every theater of this war describing the
torture and killing of prisoners by our troops. In a 2,000-page
Pentagon report leaked to the New York Times this weekend,
it reports that Specialist Damien Corsetti an American interrogator
was called "Monster" and "He had that word tattooed
in Italian across his chest. "One Saudi detainee testified
that Spc. Corsetti held his penis against his face and threatened
to rape him.
This
is really nothing new for many veterans of past American wars; they
know what we have done in the past and they have to live every day
with their memories.
We have all seen some of the pictures that came from the sexual
abuse and torture of prisoners in Iraq, but we haven’t seen the
most graphic photos that are still classified, because they were
too terrible for the public to see.
We
can read all sorts of reports about torture and abuse of prisoners
in our special prison set up in Cuba and we now know about American
guards kicking to death Afghan prisoners.
"Habibullah
was captured in November 2002. He was locked in an isolation cell
with his hands shackled to the wire ceiling above his head. The
report describes how he was literally kicked to death over several
days."
Just
how many men and women do you think will pay the price for our policy
of torture? Oh sure, a few will do a bit of prison time, but what
about all those who were never really involved up close, but had
to witness what went on?
If
we add up all the prisons in Iraq, the several in Afghanistan and
our Camp X-ray in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba the number of American prison
workers, guards, and interrogators could number in the thousands.
No
one who has never heard it can even imagine what a man sounds like
when he is beaten to death or tortured, but that sound is horrible
and carries for a long ways. People outside might think there is
an animal in a trap or someone had their guts ripped out with a
knife. Soon everyone at the facility knows what is going on and
everyone is affected.
Our
troops who were assigned to our prisons will carry the sounds of
torture with them until they die. Not right away, but someday the
memories will start to eat at them. Some will take the easy way
out and commit suicide, others will take their pain out on their
loved ones, and still others will be going to the VA Hospital or
one of the Veteran drop-in centers set up around the nation for
a lifetime of counseling and/or drugs.
Maybe
some in Washington will tell you that we have to torture prisoners
to save American lives, but those people telling you that have no
idea of the number of troops who will be paying for that torture
for decades to come.
May
25, 2005
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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