It’s
Happening Now
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
The
realist
foreign policy events in Washington, local political movements
around
the country opposing the ongoing American occupation of Iraq,
and Jon
Stewart’s immense popularity among the under-40 crowd America
are all important.
They
do
their part to help us, as a people, come to grips with the lies
repeatedly spoken by our dear leaders. They shed light on the American
tax-and-debtfunded exploration of the farthest frontiers of
greed. They articulate the national shame that we are beginning
to feel about the tyrannous acts we have committed at home and abroad
in the name of "freedom" and "democracy."
The
power of popular domestic outrage at a behemoth state shouldn’t
be underestimated. In this country, it provides fertile ground for
what soldiers and Marines back from Iraq and Afghanistan are telling
us – the ugly truth that our President and his supportive Congress
and corrupted judiciary can never say and will never admit.
Domestic
outrage and honesty from the battle lines are creating a binary
weapon powerful enough to bring down whole governments. At a minimum,
it isolates our political parasites and deprives them of political
energy, mobility and security.
The
explosion of the Abu Ghraib prison scandal of last year could not
be contained by the elite-serving government regime, even as the
Pentagon followed its established procedure to condemn publicly
an isolated act of a few bad apples, punish the low ranking, and
change the subject.
A
sense of duty and ethics is still present in our all-volunteer military,
despite crass anti-republican inducements of travel, adventure,
education and cash. A real sense of human compassion and a practiced
ability to distinguish between good and evil persists in the modern
American military, at least at the soldier level. We may find solace
in knowing that a soldier’s compassion and morality is neither dependent
upon nor subordinate to the latest cheerleading chant from the presidential
bullhorn.
Take
for example, the New
York Times’ Saturday report on the travails of the 82nd
Airborne’s Captain Ian Fishbeck. Fishbeck and several NCOs in
his unit tried for months to get honest and rock-solid guidance
on the legal and correct treatment of Iraqis – prisoners, detainees,
and in general. The DoD leadership chain, as it so often does when
faced with a hard decision, a moral quandary, or the possibility
of bucking the wishes and intents of its political masters, demurred.
Fishbeck persisted for 17 months, and after 17 months of systemic
stonewalling, called Human Rights Watch and the U.S. Congress directly
with his questions and concerns.
Consider
the writings
and speeches
of retired Lt Col Robert Bowman and Hart Viges, another
former member of the 82nd Airborne. Recall the public
trials and tribulations of active
duty NCOs who have spoken the truth about the invasion and occupation
of Iraq, and Afghanistan too.
We
still won’t see this level of honesty in all the major national
papers, but we no longer have to rely solely on the independent
or international news for the truth. Talk to the reservists and
guardsmen and active soldiers and marines who have returned home
from Iraq and Afghanistan, on leave and between tours. Hear their
words across your kitchen table and your local bar, listen to their
pillow talk and their advice to their children, nieces and nephews.
The
soldiers’ words advise us not to believe the senior spokesmen at
the Pentagon because these spokesmen have been lying for a good
long time. The soldiers’ words do not echo, and in fact contradict,
the foot-stomping and fist-raising rhetoric of the neoconservative
voices in the White House and Congress and at the American Enterprise
Institute. The soldiers’ words warn their younger friends and relatives
to stay far away from the deadly and immoral grip of federal service
in uniform.
Most
of these military men and women have no political agenda – although
congressional campaigns by Paul
Hackett in Ohio, Patrick
Murphy in Pennsylvania, David
Ashe in Virginian, and Tim
Dunn in North Carolina have been launched on the wings of the
truth about Iraq as seen by a soldier who was there. Three of these
four campaigners are military lawyers, and only one has featured
a truly antiwar message. But all four candidates have emerged as
fiscally conservative, morally sound, Republic-cherishing Democrats.
Given
the presumed political nature of the military today as traditionally
conservative – and yet contradictorily historically very supportive
of George W. Bush – perhaps we are seeing an early psychological
breakthrough in the treatment of the two faces of the Republican
Party.
As
with Eve,
recognition of the "other" personality must come first,
and only then can conservatives choose which personality to accept,
and which to destroy. A Chinese proverb says, "The beginning
of wisdom lies in calling things by their right name." Perhaps
it follows that the beginning of ethics is choosing to live consistently
with revealed wisdom.
In
any case, it’s happening. In my all-Republican county of Shenandoah,
it is doubtful many of my neighbors drove the 90 minutes into DC
this weekend to express antiwar sentiment. But at the local gas
station, two local men were overheard this weekend discussing the
most recent price hike. One said, shaking his head, "That damn
George Bush." The other local man nodded with "He has
to go."
A
few weeks ago, I spoke at an event sponsored by the Libertarians
at Virginia Tech. It wasn’t overly amusing to examine our ongoing
Iraq policy, but the audience nodded and chuckled when I noted how
successful the administration and congressional agenda had been
in the Middle East so far. Washington has gained a dozen brand-new
U.S. military bases in Southwest Asia, we got Iraq, the oil companies
are reporting record-setting profits, and not a single neoconservative
has been harmed.
The
well-dressed and coiffed elite decision makers see Iraq as just
one successful part of a larger international agenda – an agenda
naturally paid for in taxes, inflation, home-grown fascism and the
blood of less-than-elite Americans and desperate
would-be citizens. Still thriving politically in Washington,
these neo-Jacobin imperialists may not fully sense the sea change.
But
just about everyone else does.
September
27, 2005
Karen
Kwiatkowski, Ph.D., [send her
mail] is a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, who spent her final
four and a half years in uniform working at the Pentagon. She lives
with her freedom-loving family in the Shenandoah Valley, and among
other things, writes a bi-weekly column on defense issues with a
libertarian perspective for militaryweek.com.
Copyright ©
2005 LewRockwell.com
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