War
and Empire
By Chris Hedges
This
is the Rockford College graduation speech Chris Hedges tried to
give on May 17, 2003, before being drowned out by shouts and boos
and fog horns. A Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for the New
York Times, he is author of the highly recommended War
Is the Force That Gives Us Meaning.
I
want to speak to you today about war and empire.
Killing,
or at least the worst of it, is over in Iraq. Although blood will
continue to spill theirs and ours be prepared for this. For
we are embarking on an occupation that, if history is any guide,
will be as damaging to our souls as it will be to our prestige,
power, and security. But this will come later as our empire expands
and in all this we become pariahs, tyrants to others weaker than
ourselves. Isolation always impairs judgment and we are very isolated
now.
We
have forfeited the good will, the empathy the world felt for us
after 9-11. We have folded in on ourselves, we have severely weakened
the delicate international coalitions and alliances that are vital
in maintaining and promoting peace and we are part now of a dubious
troika in the war against terror with Vladimir Putin and Ariel Sharon,
two leaders who do not shrink in Palestine or Chechnya from carrying
out acts of gratuitous and senseless acts of violence. We have become
the company we keep.
The
censure and perhaps the rage of much of the world, certainly one-fifth
of the world's population which is Muslim, most of whom I'll remind
you are not Arab, is upon us. Look today at the 14 people killed
last night in several explosions in Casablanca. And this rage in
a world where almost 50 percent of the planet struggles on less
than two dollars a day will see us targeted. Terrorism will become
a way of life, and when we are attacked we will, like our allies
Putin and Sharon, lash out with greater fury. The circle of violence
is a death spiral; no one escapes. We are spinning at a speed that
we may not be able to hold. As we revel in our military prowess
the sophistication of our military hardware and technology, for
this is what most of the press coverage consisted of in Iraq
we lose sight of the fact that just because we have the capacity
to wage war it does not give us the right to wage war. This capacity
has doomed empires in the past.
"Modern
western civilization may perish," the theologian Reinhold Niebuhr
warned, "because it falsely worshiped technology as a final good."
The
real injustices, the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land, the
brutal and corrupt dictatorships we fund in the Middle East, will
mean that we will not rid the extremists who hate us with bombs.
Indeed we will swell their ranks. Once you master people by force
you depend on force for control. In your isolation you begin to
make mistakes.
Fear
engenders cruelty; cruelty, fear, insanity, and then paralysis.
In the center of Dante's circle the damned remained motionless.
We have blundered into a nation we know little about and are caught
between bitter rivalries and competing ethnic groups and leaders
we do not understand. We are trying to transplant a modern system
of politics invented in Europe characterized, among other things,
by the division of earth into independent secular states based on
national citizenship in a land where the belief in a secular civil
government is an alien creed. Iraq was a cesspool for the British
when they occupied it in 1917; it will be a cesspool for us as well.
The curfews, the armed clashes with angry crowds that leave scores
of Iraqi dead, the military governor, the Christian Evangelical
groups who are being allowed to follow on the heels of our occupying
troops to try and teach Muslims about Jesus.
The
occupation of the oil fields, the notion of the Kurds and the Shiites
will listen to the demands of a centralized government in Baghdad,
the same Kurds and Shiites who died by the tens of thousands in
defiance of Sadaam Hussein, a man who happily butchered all of those
who challenged him, and this ethnic rivalry has not gone away. The
looting of Baghdad, or let me say the looting of Baghdad with the
exception of the oil ministry and the interior ministry the only
two ministries we bothered protecting is self immolation.
As
someone who knows Iraq, speaks Arabic, and spent seven years in
the Middle East, if the Iraqis believe rightly or wrongly that we
come only for oil and occupation, that will begin a long bloody
war of attrition; it is how they drove the British out and remember
that, when the Israelis invaded southern Lebanon in 1982, they were
greeted by the dispossessed Shiites as liberators. But within a
few months, when the Shiites saw that the Israelis had come not
as liberators but occupiers, they began to kill them. It was Israel
who created Hezbollah and was Hezbollah that pushed Israel out of
Southern Lebanon.
As
William Butler Yeats wrote in "Meditations in Times of Civil War,"
"We had fed the heart on fantasies / the hearts grown brutal from
the fair."
This
is a war of liberation in Iraq, but it is a war now of liberation
by Iraqis from American occupation. And if you watch closely what
is happening in Iraq, if you can see it through the abysmal coverage,
you can see it in the lashing out of the terrorist death squads,
the murder of Shiite leaders in mosques, and the assassination of
our young soldiers in the streets. It is one that will soon be joined
by Islamic radicals and we are far less secure today than we were
before we bumbled into Iraq.
We
will pay for this, but what saddens me most is that those who will
by and large pay the highest price are poor kids from Mississippi
or Alabama or Texas who could not get a decent job or health insurance
and joined the army because it was all we offered them. For war
in the end is always about betrayal, betrayal of the young by the
old, of soldiers by politicians, and of idealists by cynics. Read
Antigone, when the king imposes his will without listening to those
he rules or Thucydides' history. Read how Athens' expanding empire
saw it become a tyrant abroad and then a tyrant at home. How the
tyranny the Athenian leadership imposed on others it finally imposed
on itself.
This,
Thucydides wrote, is what doomed Athenian democracy; Athens destroyed
itself. For the instrument of empire is war and war is a poison,
a poison which at times we must ingest just as a cancer patient
must ingest a poison to survive. But if we do not understand the
poison of war if we do not understand how deadly that poison
is it can kill us just as surely as the disease.
We
have lost touch with the essence of war. Following our defeat in
Vietnam we became a better nation. We were humbled, even humiliated.
We asked questions about ourselves we had not asked before.
We
were forced to see ourselves as others saw us and the sight was
not always a pretty one. We were forced to confront our own capacity
for a atrocity for evil and in this we understood not only
war but more about ourselves. But that humility is gone.
War,
we have come to believe, is a spectator sport. The military and
the press remember in wartime the press is always part of the
problem have turned war into a vast video arcade came. Its very
essence death is hidden from public view.
There
was no more candor in the Persian Gulf War or the War in Afghanistan
or the War in Iraq than there was in Vietnam. But in the age of
live feeds and satellite television, the state and the military
have perfected the appearance of candor.
Because
we no longer understand war, we no longer understand that it can
all go horribly wrong. We no longer understand that war begins by
calling for the annihilation of others but ends if we do not know
when to make or maintain peace with self-annihilation. We flirt,
given the potency of modern weapons, with our own destruction.
The
seduction of war is insidious because so much of what we are told
about it is true it does create a feeling of comradeship which
obliterates our alienation and makes us, for perhaps the only time
of our life, feel we belong.
War
allows us to rise above our small stations in life; we find nobility
in a cause and feelings of selflessness and even bliss. And at a
time of soaring deficits and financial scandals and the very deterioration
of our domestic fabric, war is a fine diversion. War for those who
enter into combat has a dark beauty, filled with the monstrous and
the grotesque. The Bible calls it the lust of the eye and warns
believers against it. War gives us a distorted sense of self; it
gives us meaning.
Once
in war, the conflict obliterates the past and the future all is
one heady intoxicating present. You feel every heartbeat in war,
colors are brighter, your mind races ahead of itself. We feel in
wartime comradeship. We confuse this with friendship, with love.
There are those who will insist that the comradeship of war is love
the exotic glow that makes us in war feel as one people, one
entity, is real, but this is part of war's intoxication.
Think
back on the days after the attacks on 9-11. Suddenly we no longer
felt alone; we connected with strangers, even with people we did
not like. We felt we belonged, that we were somehow wrapped in the
embrace of the nation, the community; in short, we no longer felt
alienated.
As
this feeling dissipated in the weeks after the attack, there was
a kind of nostalgia for its warm glow and wartime always brings
with it this comradeship, which is the opposite of friendship. Friends
are predetermined; friendship takes place between men and women
who possess an intellectual and emotional affinity for each other.
But comradeship that ecstatic bliss that comes with belonging
to the crowd in wartime is within our reach. We can all have
comrades.
The
danger of the external threat that comes when we have an enemy does
not create friendship; it creates comradeship. And those in wartime
are deceived about what they are undergoing. And this is why once
the threat is over, once war ends, comrades again become strangers
to us. This is why after war we fall into despair.
In
friendship there is a deepening of our sense of self. We become,
through the friend, more aware of who we are and what we are about;
we find ourselves in the eyes of the friend. Friends probe and question
and challenge each other to make each of us more complete; with
comradeship, the kind that comes to us in patriotic fervor, there
is a suppression of self-awareness, self-knowledge, and self-possession.
Comrades lose their identities in wartime for the collective rush
of a common cause a common purpose. In comradeship there are
no demands on the self. This is part of its appeal and one of the
reasons we miss it and seek to recreate it. Comradeship allows us
to escape the demands on the self that is part of friendship.
In
wartime when we feel threatened, we no longer face death alone but
as a group, and this makes death easier to bear. We ennoble self-sacrifice
for the other, for the comrade; in short we begin to worship death.
And this is what the god of war demands of us.
Think
finally of what it means to die for a friend. It is deliberate and
painful; there is no ecstasy. For friends, dying is hard and bitter.
The dialogue they have and cherish will perhaps never be recreated.
Friends do not, the way comrades do, love death and sacrifice. To
friends, the prospect of death is frightening. And this is why friendship
or, let me say love, is the most potent enemy of war. Thank you.
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