Killing America's Kids
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
Recently
by Fred Reed: TSA
and Its Brethren
The
web is covered in stink today because of a reporter for the Associated
Press, Julie Jacobson, who photographed the death of a Marine whose
legs had just been blown off. The kid was Joshua Bernard, a Lance
Corporal of 21 years. When the photo appeared, Robert Gates, the
Secretary of Defense [sic] furiously tried to get the AP to quash
the photo. It didnt, to its everlasting credit. To quote one
of many accounts on the web:

BEFORE
Joshua
Bernard
Somewhere
there is a picture of me, looking almost exactly the same.
Gates
followed up with a scathing letter to Curley [of AP] yesterday afternoon.
The letter says Gates cannot imagine the pain Bernard's family is
feeling right now, and that Curley's lack of compassion and
common sense in choosing to put out this image of their maimed and
stricken child on the front page of multiple newspapers is appalling.
The issue here is not law, policy or constitutional right
but judgment and common decency.’”
I thought a
long time before writing about this matter, and was not pleasant
to be around. The photo resonated with me, as we say. You see, long
ago, in another pointless war, promoted by another conscienceless
Secretary, I too was a Marine Lance Corporal of twenty-one years.
I too got shot, though not nearly as badly as this kid, and spent
a year at Bethesda Naval Hospital. At this point I am legally blind
following my (I think) thirteenth trip to eye surgery as a result
of an identical foreign policy.
Big fucking
deal. Shit happens. At this point Im comfortable and doing
fine. Dont cry for me, Argentina. The other kid is dead.
But that bothers
me. And all of this perhaps gives me a certain insight into the
matter that not all reporters have, nor all editors. It also makes
me poisonously, bottle-throwing angry to think about another chilly
professional bureaucrat, the Second Coming of McNamara, with less
combat experience than Tinkerbell, sending kids to croak in weird
places having nothing to do with the US.
But Gates.
The words decency and unconscionable coming
from him are fetid with hypocrisy. Gates was director of the CIA.
Intelligence agencies are moral dirt, hated the world
over for torture, murder, and destabilization of countries leading
to hundreds of thousands of deaths. The KGB, Mossad, CIA, STASI,
SAVAK theyre all the same. A man who presides over torture
and murder should not speak of decency. He has none.
Nor is it easy
to believe that Gates feels the slightest sympathy for the dead
kid or for his family. If you dont want kids to die in Afghanistan,
dont send them there. He does. How sorry can he be?

AFTER
It could almost
make you turn against the war. Some 6,000 American kids have died
like this, the photographs carefully hidden by the press. The Pentagon
has killed many, many more Afghan and Iraqi civilians, and the number
of permanently disabled Americans is far higher. Today I find a
column on Antiwar.com by Joe Galloway, whom I remember from UPI
Saigon, entitled The
War in Afghanistan is Not Worth Another American Life. I agree.
Nor another Afghan life. They did nothing. Another headline notes
that the Kondor Legion, the USAF, killed ninety-five Afghans in
another witless air strike. These days, we are the Nazis.
Why then is
he so angry at having the war photographed? Easy: Spin control.
Spin is so very important in war these days. While America is only
barely a democracy, still, if the public, the great sleeping acquiescent
ignorant beast, ever gets really upset, the war ends. The Pentagon
is acutely aware of this. It remembers its disaster in Asia. The
generals of today learned nothing military from Vietnam they
are fighting the same kind of war as stupidly as before but
they learned something more important: Their most dangerous enemy
is the America public. You. Me. Defeating the Taliban isnt
particularly important, or even desirable. (No war means fewer promotions
and fewer contracts). But while the Taliban cannot possibly defeat
the Pentagon, the American public can.
Photographs
are death to a war, boys and girls. They can asphyxiate a war faster
than roadside bombs can even dream. Gates does not want the sprawling
somnolent inattentive beast, the public, to see what his wars really
are.
In wars, there
are many enlightening things to see. For example, the Marine with
a third of his face and half a lung, going ku-kuk-kuk as red gunk
rolls out of his mouth and he drowns in his blood. Ruined or dying
teenagers whimpering the trinity of the badly wounded, Mother, wife,
and water. The brain-shot guy jerking like an epileptic as he tries
not to die. Ever see brain tissue from gunshot? I have. It makes
a pink spew across the ground. Like strawberry chiffon.
Gates does
not want you to see this. You would puke, buy a bottle of bourbon,
and take to the streets. He knows it. CBS could end these wars in
a week if it aired what really happens. Gates cannot afford to let
the dam break. PR is all. Thus Bush forbade the photographing of
coffins coming home, and the CIA ferociously resists the publication
of photographs of torture. Professional sadists do things to people
that would make you gag.
Then there
are the enlisted men. In these hobbyist wars, and to an extent even
in peacetime, it is crucial to keep the enlisteds from thinking.
In some three decades of covering the military, I saw this constantly.
If I went to Afghanistan today as a correspondent, I could argue
in private about the war with the colonel. If I suggested to the
troops that they were being suckered, the colonel would go crazy.
Next to keeping the public quiescent, keeping the troops (and potential
recruits) bamboozled is vital. If a high-school kid saw what awaited,
if he saw the cartilage glistening in wrecked joints, he wouldnt
sign.
Do I think
that the press should publish such photos? Not yes but hell yes
on afterburner. Every time an editor covers for the Pentagon, every
time papers refuse to show the charred bodies still
slowly
moving,
the dead children, the
never mind. The effect is to ensure
that more kids will die the same way. And the press almost always
does exactly this. We are a trade of whores and shills. Except that
whores give value for money. The press kills our children.
Julie Jacobson
sounds like that modern-day rarity, a reporter, as distinguished
from a volunteer flack. Bless her. I used to wonder whether women
could hack it as combat correspondents. I no longer do. (There are
lots of them.) I used to refer to smarmy over-groomed bloodthirsty
office warts as pussies, saying that they lacked balls. The anatomical
reference no longer works. I note that Jacobson has more combat
time than the aggregate for Bush II, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Obama,
Biden, Gonzalez, Clinton, Perle, Abrams, Kristol, Feith, Podhoretz,
Krauthammer, George Will, Dershowitz, and Gates. These men, if the
word is appropriate, killed that kid. Jacobson just caught them
in the act.
September
8, 2009
Fred Reed
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well and A
Brass Pole in Bangkok: A Thing I Aspire to Be. His latest
book is Curmudgeing
Through Paradise: Reports from a Fractal Dung Beetle. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2009 Fred Reed
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