Calculating
the Real Costs
by
Justine Nicholas
by Justine Nicholas
DIGG THIS
What does –
and will – the invasion and occupation of Iraq really cost
the people of this country?
Dollar
figures are not hard to find. Even the low-ball figures are
bad enough. And, as anyone who has taken on a multifaceted task
of any sort knows, it will always cost much more, and take more
time, than planned. Even if we triple or quadruple the worst-case
estimates we’ve seen, we can still at least have some idea of what
we may have to pay, now and in the future. And, of course, if enough
people had the will to end the war, all Congress would have to do
is cut off the funding, and eventually – if in the distant future
– it would cease to extract our hard-earned money.
But another
cost of the war may be more difficult to calculate. I’m talking,
of course, about the human cost. Lives lost cannot be recreated;
lives disrupted and families and communities fragmented may not
be made whole again. And even if it were possible to re-construct
the communities broken by the war, they would never be the same
cities, towns, farms or other social constructs the people remember.
Those affected will need to cope in new ways yet have fewer resources
for doing this.
Perhaps the
best we can do is to try to find out, however inexactly, how many
people have been killed or wounded (whether physically or psychologically)
by the fighting, and what it has cost them, their loved ones and
their communities not only in terms of money, but in their overall
well-being.
Even if we
add the number of Iraqi civilians (anywhere from 83,000 to 91,000)
killed as a result of the invasion and occupation to all of the
military personnel (4000+
for the US, 200+ for the rest of its coalition and 100,000
for Iraq) who were slaughtered on both sides of this immoral
conflict, we still wouldn't have anywhere near an idea of what the
death toll really is. We could also add the number of contractors,
journalists and others who have been killed in the combat zone,
and we still wouldn’t have any idea of how many lives have been
lost, let alone what the loss of those lives means.
For starters,
let's consider the 18
veterans who commit suicide every day. (Mental health professionals
estimate that for everyone who actually manages to end his or her
life, fifteen
others attempt to do so.) And let's add all the people who will
die, not only from injuries, but also from the after-effects of
chemicals and such. And what of the family members, friends and
others who fall victim to those who return home enraged and with
no other means of dealing with their anger but to kill and destroy.
And, I'm sure there are shell-shocked Iraqis who are doing similar
things, even if they've escaped to the relative safety of other
countries.
And let's not
forget the ones whose experience initiates or exacerbates their
substance abuse problems. How many of those will turn to deaths
that will come much too early, whether to themselves or their loved
ones?
But, as terrible
as it is to lose any life to this war, the body count is only the
beginning of what official lying has cost, and will cost, this country.
Worst of all, I think, is what it's doing to this country spiritually.
I'm not a religious
person, but I believe that the venal sin of lies have led to a terrible
cardinal sin (OK, I was raised as a Catholic) from which this country
may not ever be redeemed. Even though I haven't believed politicians
or many other public figures for a very long time, I still thought
that there was at least some basic level of morality that guided
this country, whatever or whether its people believed in. Now I
feel we may have lost that, and I don't think it's possible to recover
it once it's lost.
The mere fact
that so many lives were thrown away for the mendacity of plutocrats
is, in itself, an indictment of where the morality of this country
has gone. The decline didn’t start with this war, of course, or
even with Bush the Elder’s Excellent Iraqi Adventure, the Vietnam
War, Roe v Wade, or any of the coups and insurgencies this country
fomented in Iran, Nicaragua and any number of countries. Each of
them was like another one of Dante’s circles of Hell through which
the narrator of The
Inferno descends before reaching the pit. Dante populates
the Eighth (penultimate) circle with seducers, flatterers, false
prophets, corrupt politicians, thieves, alchemists and counterfeiters,
among others. Does that sound like a familiar cast of characters?
And
don't get me started on Pelosi and the others who enabled all of
them! They have cost us too much already. I hope only that as individuals,
and as members of our families, communities and circles of friends,
we may still be able to redeem what this war and its antecedents
have leeched out of our country and culture.
May
16, 2008
Justine
Nicholas [send her mail]
is the deputy director of the Office of Academic Achievement at
York College in Queens, New York.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
Justine
Nicholas Archives
|