Atrocities in the 'Good War': A Tract for Today
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Even Americans
who detest war and recognize that nearly every war is the product
of mendacious, power-hungry political leaders generally make an
exception for World War II, the so-called Good War. They believe
that the Americans fought for an entirely good and proper cause,
that they fought only after having been attacked without provocation,
that their enemies were vile monsters, and that their victory made
the world a better and more hopeful place for all mankind. In short,
they believe in a myth. Perhaps they do so in part because so many
of those who composed the so-called Greatest Generation had engaged
personally in the war and needed a way to understand their involvement
and to forgive themselves for what they had done or witnessed their
comrades doing without objection. In any event, their actual actions
in that war, which contrast starkly with the story line of the prevailing
myth, might well teach valuable lessons to Americans today, as they
ponder the meaning of atrocities such as those committed by U.S.
soldiers, airmen, and Marines at Abu Ghraib, Fallujah, and Haditha,
among many other places in Iraq yet to receive comparable publicity.
After "forty
months of war duty and five major battles" in which Edgar L. Jones
served as "an ambulance driver, a merchant seaman, an Army historian,
and a war correspondent," he wrote an article titled "One
War Is Enough" for the February 1946 issue of the Atlantic
Monthly. Some of the actions he described in that article may
come as a shock to many readers today; they're not the sort of actions
John Wayne was taking in all those postwar movies about World War
II. Yet, over the years, many soldier-memoirists, such as Paul Fussell,
William Manchester, and E. B. Sledge, and many historians, such
as Michael C. C. Adams, John W. Dower, and Gerald F. Linderman,
have confirmed them. The text that follows is excerpted verbatim
from Jones's article.
We Americans
have the dangerous tendency in our international thinking to take
a holier-than-thou attitude toward other nations. We consider ourselves
to be more noble and decent than other peoples, and consequently
in a better position to decide what is right and wrong in the world.
What kind of war do civilians suppose we fought, anyway? We shot
prisoners in cold blood, wiped out hospitals, strafed lifeboats,
killed or mistreated enemy civilians, finished off the enemy wounded,
tossed the dying into a hole with the dead, and in the Pacific boiled
the flesh off enemy skulls to make table ornaments for sweethearts,
or carved their bones into letter openers. We topped off our saturation
bombing and burning of enemy civilians by dropping atomic bombs
on two nearly defenseless cities, thereby setting an all-time record
for instantaneous mass slaughter.
As victors
we are privileged to try our defeated opponents for their crimes
against humanity; but we should be realistic enough to appreciate
that if we were on trial for breaking international laws, we should
be found guilty on a dozen counts. We fought a dishonorable war,
because morality had a low priority in battle. The tougher the fighting,
the less room for decency, and in Pacific contests we saw mankind
reach the blackest depths of bestiality.
Not every
American soldier, or even one per cent of our troops, deliberately
committed unwarranted atrocities, and the same might be said for
the Germans and Japanese. The exigencies of war necessitated many
so-called crimes, and the bulk of the rest could be blamed on the
mental distortion which war produced. But we publicized every inhuman
act of our opponents and censored any recognition of our own moral
frailty in moments of desperation.
I have
asked fighting men, for instance, why they – or actually, why we
– regulated flame-throwers in such a way that enemy soldiers were
set afire, to die slowly and painfully, rather than killed outright
with a full blast of burning oil. Was it because they hated the
enemy so thoroughly? The answer was invariably, "No, we don’t
hate those poor bastards particularly; we just hate the whole goddam
mess and have to take it out on somebody." Possibly for the
same reason, we mutilated the bodies of enemy dead, cutting off
their ears and kicking out their gold teeth for souvenirs, and buried
them with their testicles in their mouths, but such flagrant violations
of all moral codes reach into still-unexplored realms of battle
psychology.
It
is not my intention either to excuse our late opponents or to discredit
our own fighting men. I do, however, believe that all of us, not
just the battle-enlightened GI’s, should fully understand the horror
and degradation of war before talking so casually of another one.
War does horrible things to men, our own sons included. It demands
the worst of a person and pays off in brutality and maladjustment.
It has become so mechanical, inhuman, and crassly destructive that
men lose all sense of personal responsibility for their actions.
They fight without compassion, because that is the only way to fight
a total war. . . .
Peter
Bowman summed up our victory to date in Beach
Red when he wrote, "Battle doesn’t determine who is
right. Only who is left." We destroyed fascists, not fascism;
men, not ideas. Our triumphs did not serve as evidence that democracy
is best for the world, any more than Russian victories proved that
communism is an ideal system for all mankind. Only through our peacetime
efforts to abolish war and bring a larger measure of freedom and
security to all peoples can we reveal to others that we are any
better than our defeated opponents.
Today we
stand on trial – we are either for peace or for war, and the rest
of the world is prepared to move with us or against us. The burden
of proof is on us; and our willingness to make peace, not our capacity
to wage war, is the true measure of our good-neighborliness.
June
19, 2006
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. His most recent book is Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy. He is also
the author of Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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