Attention
on Deck! Violation of Rule 17!
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
"It
is the absolute right of the State to supervise the formation
of public opinion."
~
Paul
Joseph Goebbels
Tami
Silicio’s photograph of flag draped coffins on their way home from
Iraq was
meant to send a message of care and respect. When Uncle Sam
and Grandpa Rumsfeld complained, her employer, Maytag Aircraft,
took action.
Maytag
did the only thing it could do and remain part of that honorable
band of brothers known as the American defense industry. The company
immediately fired Tami Silicio. For good measure and as a sign of
everlasting faith and obedience, Maytag gratuitously fired her husband
as well.
Tami’s
employment dilemma is made even more pointless, because the Air
Force itself had one week earlier released hundreds of pictures
of the caskets of American servicemen and women coming home from
Iraq. With a Freedom of Information Act request, 34-year-old Russ
Kick, continues to make history. His website at TheMemoryHole.org
(mirror
site) provides 361 Air Force photographs of funereal processions
and ceremonies taking place at Dover AFB since February 2003.
For
this small flirtation with honesty, the Air Force is now in hot
water with the higher ups at the Pentagon.
For
thirteen years the Pentagon has had a blackout policy for coffin
photos. Deputy Under Secretary of Defense John Molino explains.
"This policy of no photos has been in effect since 1991….It
has been tested over time and it reflects what families tell us
that they would like as far as treatment of shipment of remains."
"Quite frankly, we don't want the remains of our service members
who have made the ultimate sacrifice to be the subject of any kind
of attention that is unwarranted or undignified."
Unwarranted,
undignified, disrespectful, unbecoming? None of the pictures remotely
approach that. Perhaps what Molino meant to say is we really can’t
have Americans reminded of the incredible human overhead already
paid – and more bills due daily – for the Bush-Cheney misadventure
in Iraq.
Using
"what the families want" to justify the media lockdown
is Goebbelian Pentagonese at its most subtle and restrained. It
is a tragedy that the ship of State, commandeered by the Chief Executive
and his gnomic little team of soft-bellied war-worshipping brainiacs,
cannot apply that thinking to the other things the families want.
Things
like adequate training, suitable protective gear, fact-based intelligence,
honest military leadership, a real war plan that applies to the
real situation, an exit strategy. Well, at least we can be buoyed
and uplifted because the Pentagon cares about what wives, husbands,
parents, siblings and children want after it has all become immaterial.
Indeed,
photographs and other evidence of the deaths of hundreds of young
Americans are, as Rumsfeld might put it, "very unhelpful."
For the State to allow their release also violates Goebbels’ 17th
rule of propaganda, which says, "Propaganda to the home front
must diminish the impact of frustration."
I
guess the nation can take comfort in the fact that the rest of Goebbels’
19 rules of propaganda
are being followed magnificently. Now if we could only
shut down the Internet....
April
26, 2004
Karen
Kwiatkowski [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 now lives with
her freedom-loving family in the Shenandoah Valley, and writes a
bi-weekly column on defense issues with a libertarian perspective
for militaryweek.com.
Copyright ©
2004 LewRockwell.com
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