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The
Children's Crusade
by Ryan McMaken
It is one of
the most unfortunate realities of war, that no matter how just a
cause may be, once the hostilities begin, the people on the front
lines pay the highest price. This includes both Iraqi and American
soldiers, of course, and many thousands of Iraqi civilians as well,
but alas, in the chaos of war – and it truly is chaos there is little
time to debate how one ended up in such a regrettable place.
For the Americans,
this is an aggressive war. The battle lines have been drawn many
thousands of miles from American soil, and the Iraqis are paying
for the crimes of a band of Saudi Arabian ideologues educated in
Western universities. For the Catholic American soldier who no doubt
is aware that the Church has condemned this conflict, how much responsibility
does he share? His Holiness John Paul II has deemed this war well
outside the just war tradition, but has saved his ire only for those
who have had direct responsibility in beginning hostilities. Archbishop
Edwin O’Brien took a similar position, but in the typical language
of the watered-down American version of Catholicism stated that
it is "appropriate" to "presume the integrity of
our leadership and its judgments." Now, as noted by other observers
of this little discussion, the archbishop’s use of the word "appropriate"
is a long way from using a word like "proper" or "correct."
The fact that both the Pope and Archbishop O’Brien are willing to
give the common soldiers a pass in this conflict probably comes
out of the knowledge that both men have of the horrors and the confusion
of war.
Any combat
veteran will tell you that in the heat of battle, one is thinking
little of abstract ideals or philosophical conundrums. One fights
primarily for the defense of his brothers in arms and out of a good
old-fashioned desire for self-preservation. The law of the jungle
that contrary to the fantasies of the War Party prevails on
the battlefield does not allow much more than minimalist thinking.
A friend of mine in graduate school, who had served as an infantryman
in the Gulf and in Somalia, once remarked that "nothing focuses
your mind like battle," for at such times, no other thoughts
may be indulged. To hold the young men and (unfortunately) women,
who find themselves in such situations without ever wishing it upon
themselves, to the same standards as the ideologues and desk jockeys
who put them there is unwise.
Should 19 year-olds
like Jessica Lynch be condemned for fighting a war that Richard
Perle & Co. started? Can we in good conscience expect someone
who is essentially little more than a high school senior to tell
his or her commanding officers to buzz off? There will be situations,
of course, where one will be required to use his moral judgment
in the face of seemingly irresistible peer pressure and reckless
orders handed down from the civilians playing GI Joe at the Pentagon.
All we can do is hope that these men and women, for their sakes,
will have the fortitude to do what is right.
Like my friend
who joined the Army to escape the poverty of the Indian reservation,
many of these soldiers have joined the military because they saw
no other opportunities available to them. In a country with declining
real wages, exorbitant tax rates, a rising cost of living due to
a reckless monetary policy, and a crippled economy, who can blame
such people for taking advantage of the lure of college scholarships
and job security? As billions of dollars are taxed out of the private
sector and put into government jobs, what can one do but simply
follow the money?
This is not
to say that people who enlist do not have free will. The arguments
that some leftists make about the military being inherently racist
have little basis in fact, but we do know that the ranks of enlisted
men and women is not exactly representative of the most well-educated
and most economically endowed people in the country. We also know
however, that this war is primarily the brain-child of a small group
of very highly educated men and women, mostly of the New York-D.C.
axis and virtually none of whom have had any military experience.
While the American
soldiers marching through Iraq will no doubt get real blood on their
hands –some of it from fallen comrades and some from Iraqis those
who have the truly blood-soaked hands will be those who insisted
that the reluctant military leadership send these people into combat
and destroy a starving, diseased population in the name of "preemptive"
war and a nonexistent connection to the forever at-large Osama bin
Laden.
Just as it
was wrong to label every German boy who fought in World War II a
Nazi, it would be wrong now to label 20 year-old boys complicit
in the utopian dreams of the establishment elites. Kurt Vonnegut
subtitled his World War II novel, Slaughterhouse
Five, "The Children’s Crusade," and there is no
doubt the author witnessed how, during the Battle of the Bulge,
Roosevelt and his lieutenants sent rosy-cheeked 18 year-old draftees
to take a bullet on the front lines. It was the children who fought
the war then, and unfortunately, little has changed.
April
11, 2003
Ryan
McMaken [send him mail]
writes from Colorado. His personal web site can be found here.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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