The
Answer to Cindy Sheehan’s Question
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
Cindy Sheehan has asked President
Bush an important question: Exactly what noble cause
did her son Casey die for in Iraq? Its a question that some
Ohio parents whose children were recently killed in Iraq are also
asking. Its a question that every American should be asking.
I couldnt help but be
somewhat mesmerized reading about the attitudes of the young Ohio
Marines who recently died as well as the diverse reactions of their
families to their deaths. The accounts brought to mind the deep
range of thoughts and feelings that I experienced as a student at
the Virginia Military Institute from 1968 to 1972, during the height
of the Vietnam War. I would like to share some of my personal experiences
at VMI during those tumultuous times.
VMI is a four-year military
college in which every student is required to be a member of the
corps of cadets. When I was there, everyone was also required to
sign a commitment to serve in the military forces for at least two
years. During my senior year at VMI (19711972), however, given
that U.S. forces were withdrawing from Vietnam, the Army offered
graduating seniors a 3-month active-duty, 8-year Reserve commitment
in lieu of the 2-year active-duty commitment; it was an offer that
I accepted without hesitation.
During my freshman year (196869),
when I was 18 and 19 years old, I was a gung-ho supporter
of U.S. intervention in Vietnam, much as is the case with many young
soldiers today in Iraq. I was fully prepared to travel thousands
of miles away to fight for my country and for freedom
by killing communists in the rice paddies of Southeast
Asia. I was innocent and naïve, never once thinking that federal
officials would lie to the citizenry, especially not about something
as serious as war.
In my sophomore year (196970),
the administration promoted me to corporal within the VMI cadet
corps. During my junior year (197071), I was a member of VMIs
elite Ranger military unit, and the administration promoted me to
sergeant. The next step would ordinarily have been promotion to
officer status within the corps of cadets during my senior year.
Alas, it was not to be, for
it was during my junior year that I along with lots of other
VMI cadets broke through to the truth and realized what other
college students around the nation were discovering that
the Vietnam War was based on U.S. government lies, falsehoods, and
deceptions. It was during that year that many of us at VMI began
asking the same question that Cindy Sheehan is asking: What were
U.S. soldiers dying for?
Some of my most memorable experiences
during my four years at VMI occurred periodically during supper
in the mess hall, whenever a cadet officer would make a certain
special announcement over the public address system. I dont
recall the exact words but they were something along the following
lines, and they always caused an immediate hush of silence to sweep
across the 1,000 students in the hall: Attention to orders,
October 28, 1969, Republic of Vietnam. [Pause, followed by complete
silence across the mess hall.] Lt. John Smith, VMI Class of 1967,
killed in action this day.
By the time I finished my junior
year, I knew the answer to the question that is now bedeviling Cindy
Sheehan, and its not a painless one: Those VMI graduates,
along with all the other soldiers who were dying in Vietnam, were
dying for nothing.
As I reflect back on those
years and on recent political events in this country, there is no
doubt in my mind that people such as George W. Bush, Dick Cheney,
and Paul Wolfowitz had asked themselves the same question that Cindy
Sheehan is asking today and that they had come up with the same
answer that I and others had, which is precisely why they did whatever
was necessary to avoid service in Vietnam. In retrospect, in my
opinion they were the smart ones. Those who went, such as John McCain,
John Kerry, and Max Cleland, who have suffered the insults, contempt,
and scorn from those who did not go, were in my opinion the chumps.
An Ohio mother, Rosemary Palmer,
whose son was recently killed in Iraq, observed that there are lots
of parents who oppose the war but who are afraid to speak
out, believing their children will be punished by their commanders.
Ms. Palmer has no idea how
right she is. Permit me share a couple of examples, again from my
experience as a young cadet at VMI.
It shouldnt surprise
anyone that during the Vietnam War, the VMI administration, which
was headed by a no-nonsense Marine general, strongly aligned itself
with the federal government, especially the Pentagon, and thus supported
Lyndon Johnsons and Richard Nixons war in Vietnam.
One day, a group of VMI cadets
requested the school administration to grant them permission to
attend an anti-war rally at Washington and Lee University, which
is situated adjacent to VMI in Lexington. To everyones surprise,
the administration granted the request, with the proviso that no
cadet attending the rally could wear his VMI uniform. (Ordinarily,
wearing civilian clothes in town was a violation of VMI regulations
and entailed a severe penalty for breach.) The most probable reason
the request was granted was that the administration, aware of the
pressure-cooker environment that the war was engendering within
the student body, figured that letting the anti-war crowd at VMI
attend the rally would help to release some of that steam.
I didnt attend the rally,
but I can tell you what happened to the cadets who did. As they
were returning to barracks, there was a VMI tactical officer waiting
for them, who recorded each of their names and then imposed a ludicrous
penalty on them for having long hair.
As for me, once my attitude
toward the war and the military changed, my military career at VMI
was over. Rather than promote me to officer status my senior year,
the administration demoted me to private. But that actually turned
out to be a rather minor thing, especially since any VMI cadet will
tell you that being a private during ones senior year at VMI
is not such a bad experience. Unfortunately, that wasnt all
they did to me.
In 1979, almost eight years
after graduation and near the end of my eight-year Army Reserve
commitment, I happened to take a look at my Army 201
personnel file and discovered that prior to graduation (1972) a
VMI official had stuck a notation in my file stating that I was
unsuited for military life. Now, I don’t deny that the
official was justified in reaching that conclusion given the fact
that I had lost my gung-ho-ness about the Vietnam War
and even the military during my last two years at VMI. But I still
consider what he did to be quite a nasty thing to do to someone
who was just starting out in life and who had just survived four
years at what is arguably the most rigid military college in the
country, especially since he knew that my 201 file would follow
me to every duty station I would be assigned to for the next eight
years, including infantry school at Ft. Benning, Georgia. I still
wonder what they inserted into the 201 files of those cadets who
attended that antiwar rally at Washington and Lee.
The unfortunate truth is that
that is all too often a characteristic of the military mindset.
It is resentful of people who think independently those who
dont toe the official line, dont believe the official
lies, and dont fully support whatever ones government
does with respect to war. Thats why such people identify patriotism
with support of the federal government. Thats why they never
questioned the U.S. intervention in Vietnam and still dont!
Its why they question the patriotism of those of us who have
challenged the U.S. intervention in Iraq. They simply cannot understand
how or why someone thinks independently of how federal officials
think, at least when it comes to war.
Ironically, it seems that some
things havent changed much since I graduated from VMI more
than 30 years ago. About a year before the torture-and-sex-abuse
revelations at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, I wrote an article entitled
Obedience to Orders, which focused on and opposed torture
by U.S. troops at the Pentagons base at Guantanamo Bay. I
suggested that it was the duty of an officer not only to refrain
from participating in such misconduct but also to do whatever was
necessary to put an immediate halt to it, regardless of orders from
his superior officers.
Despite the fact that my article
praised VMI for producing higher caliber officers than West Point
because of VMIs emphasis on educating and training citizen-soldiers,
who tend to be independent-minded, rather than blind-obedience,
sycophantic professional soldiers that the military academies tend
to produce, my torture article generated an unfortunate nasty email from the executive vice president of the VMI Alumni
Association, one Paul Maini, to officials at West Point that apologized
for my article, which, again, was both anti-torture and pro-VMI.
What many VMI officials such
as Maini dont understand is that while many in the VMI administration
would like nothing more than to produce the types of officers that
the professional academies tend to produce, by and large VMI fails
in that mission. But in that failure lies the very success of the
school and its what makes the school different, in a positive
way, from the professional military academies. That is, that while
VMI does produce some of the Blindly obey orders and please
your superiors types of military officers that the professional
academies tend to produce, that is normally the exception. The vast
majority of VMI graduates are the independent-thinking types who
will refuse to sacrifice personal integrity and right conduct for
the sake of pleasing their superiors or blindly obeying their orders.
My hunch is that that is a prime reason why non-commissioned officers
(NCOs) usually prefer to serve under a VMI officer than a West Point
officer.
The interesting problem,
however, is that the VMI administration that is, the
officials charged with setting and enforcing policy at the school
inevitably seems to attract an overwhelming abundance of
officials with the standard military mindset, including both graduates
of the professional academies and of VMI itself. This sets up an
interesting dynamic, which I believe provides a key as to why the
school is so much more successful than the professional military
academies. Permit me to share with you an example of how things
work inside VMI, especially compared to the professional military
academies.
When I was at VMI, every room
in barracks had a fat book called the Blue Book, which contained
hundreds of rules and regulations governing the conduct of VMI cadets.
Every cadet was supposed to read the Blue Book and be fully knowledgeable
of its contents. More important, cadets were expected to fully follow
all the rules and regulations whether they agreed with them or not.
It didnt take long, however,
especially in conversations with VMI upperclassmen, for VMI cadets
to realize that at least 97 percent of the rules and regulations
in the Blue Book were ludicrous and, therefore, deserved to be broken.
Thus, the last three years at VMI were essentially a cat-and-mouse
game between the cadet corps and the administration, with the cadets
breaking the ridiculous rules and regulations and the administrations
officers trying to catch them and, when successful, imposing harsh
penalties on them. I myself returned my junior year with a penalty
of 10-2-and-10, which meant 10 demerits, 2 weeks of confinement,
and 10 one-hour penalty tours for getting caught committing the
grievous offense of wearing civilian clothes in barracks during
finals weekend the previous spring. (Fortunately, the VMI official
who caught me didnt see me wearing them when I walked into
barracks because, as previously noted, that would have entailed
a much more severe penalty than the one that was imposed on me for
wearing the clothes inside barracks.) Now, is that ridiculous or
what?
(Note: All this applies only
to the administrations Blue Book and not to VMIs student-run
and student-enforced Honor Code, which is the most stringent and
stringently enforced in the nation.)
Now thats the difference
between VMI and West Point. The West Point officer would never understand
or countenance such rebelliousness, especially because it violates
the cardinal principle of please your superiors if you want
to get rewarded or promoted. In most cases, the VMI officer,
because of the spirit of independent-thinking combined with a high
sense of honor engendered at the school, will examine a rule or
a policy or an order and will be willing and able to reach a quick
decision on its propriety and willing to break it or violate
it if it is ludicrous, invalid, or illegal and willing to suffer
the consequences for doing so. Thats why it would not surprise
me to learn that West Point officers riddle the chain of command
with respect to the torture, rape, sex abuse, and murder scandal
at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib and the subsequent whitewashes
and cover-ups. I could be proven wrong, but Id be very surprised
if VMI officers are in that chain of command.
Rosemary Palmer is right. Generally
speaking (there are always exceptions), the military mindset does
not like or countenance people who think independently people
who question or criticize official U.S. government policy, even
when it involves illegally and immorally invading and occupying
foreign countries or violating constitutional provisions (such as
the declaration of war requirement) or the Geneva Convention. And
those who spend their lives toeing the official line will oftentimes
do bad and nasty things to people who dont. Just ask former
U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson and his wife, Valerie Plame. Or Sgt. Kevin Benderman, who was court-martialed and sentenced to
serve 15 months in jail for following his conscience and refusing
to return for a second tour in Iraq. Or Sgt. Carlos Mejia, who they sent to the jail for the same reason.
Or even Cindy Sheehan, who is now the victim of a conservative and
neo-conservative smear campaign.
But criticize and condemn federal
wrongdoing we must when our government is deserving of such criticism
and condemnation. That is the moral and political duty of every
citizen. After all, if we fail to do so because we fear retribution
or retaliation from government officials or even fellow citizens,
then how can we consider ourselves different from people in foreign
lands who have failed to speak out against wrongdoing by their governments?
If people want lies and deception
about the Iraq War, then they should continue listening to the words
that are spoken by federal politicians and bureaucrats, including
those in the Pentagon, the CIA, and the Congress. They have trained
themselves to lie, and they are very good at it.
If people instead want the
truth about U.S. foreign policy, including the Iraq War, then they
should read such writers as James Glaser
(a Marine Vietnam veteran), Chalmers Johnson, Laurence M. Vance, Lew Rockwell, Robert Higgs, Karen Kwiatkowski, Ivan Eland, Congressman Ron Paul, Anthony Gregory, Charley Reese, Pat Buchanan,
Eric Margolis,
Paul Craig
Roberts, Doug Bandow (also found here), Ted Galen Carpenter, Justin Raimondo, Sheldon Richman, and James Bovard, and regularly visit such websites as LewRockwell.com, The Cato Institute, The Independent Institute, Antiwar.com, and The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
The plain truth is that Iraq
never attacked the United States and never even threatened to do
so. Neither the Iraqi people nor their government had anything to
do with the 9/11 attacks. Therefore, the U.S. government had no
moral or legal right to invade Iraq and kill and maim the Iraqi
people. That makes the United States the aggressor nation in this
conflict. It is the invader. It is the conqueror. Dont forget
that aggressive war was punished as a war crime at Nuremberg and
that it is barred by the UN Charter, to which the United States
is a signatory. Dont forget also that Bush invaded Iraq without
the constitutionally required congressional declaration of war,
making the war illegal under our own form of government.
And it was never about democracy,
freedom, or the liberation of the Iraqi people. After all, if democracy
was so important, would U.S. officials be embracing the military
dictator of Pakistan as well as authoritarian dictators all over
the Middle East? And if the freedom and well-being of the Iraqi
people were so important, would U.S. officials have continued
maintaining the sanctions against
Iraq year after brutal year, despite the ever-growing number of deaths
of Iraqi children?
It just doesnt add up,
does it? And the reason it doesnt is that its all a
lie just as the supposed North Vietnamese attack at the Gulf
of Tonkin, which President Lyndon Johnson and the U.S. Congress
used as an excuse to expand the Vietnam War, which ended up killing
58,000 American soldiers and wounding countless more, was a lie.
To answer Cindy Sheehans
question plainly and directly: Her son died for nothing. Or if she
would prefer a diplomatic, polite answer, her son died not for a
noble cause, as both President
Bush and Vice-President
Cheney have recently stated, but instead for an ignoble cause
regime change hard-ball politics at the international
level the ouster and replacement of a foreign politician,
Saddam Hussein, who fell
out of grace with U.S.
officials.
With all due respect, regime
change, while important to U.S. politicians and bureaucrats, is
nothing worth dying for and, for that matter, its nothing
worth killing for.
We can all express our deepest
condolences to Ms. Sheehan and the other families who have lost
loved ones in Iraq. But only the truth, no matter how painful, will
ultimately set them and the rest of us free of the lies and deceptions
that underlie U.S. foreign policy. Only the truth will enable us
move our nation away from the grip of empire
and militarism
and toward the principles of a limited-government republic that
guided our Founding Fathers.
August
20, 2005
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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