Be All That You Can Be
by
Fred Reed
by Fred Reed
Regarding
the torture of Iraqi men by the American military as chronicled
by the world’s press:
Janis
Karpinski, reportedly a general in the American military, presided
over the prison where it happened, and therefore over the torture.
To her I want to say: I’m proud of you, Janis. As one who served
in the armed forces, as one whose father was in the Pacific in World
War II, and spent the rest of his career as a mathematician for
the Navy, I want to thank you for making your prisoners give each
other blow jobs. This is what America stands for, after all: Compulsory
blow jobs. Giving sadistic little bitches and sons of bitches sex
toys to torment. I’m proud of you, Janis.
Now,
the soldiers who did it apparently were enlisted. What may we deduce
from this?
Enlisted
men do not undertake systematic complicated degradation and torture
of prisoners without the knowledge and approval of their officers.
The officers knew. Officers to what level? Officers are college
graduates and understand the political implications of such things.
A lieutenant is too junior to risk it and in any event couldn’t
hide it from the captain. Prisons I’ve been in a bunch of them are
intimate places. People know what goes on.
Karpinski,
covering her behind (as well she might: this is war-crimes stuff
and she could take the fall) says why she had no idea and who would
have thought it and anyway the intelligence people were behind it.
Sure. I believe she didn’t know. Stalin didn’t know what was going
on either. Naw. In this business we’re all virgins.
But
suppose, as Karpinski says, the intelligence agencies were behind
it. Then it was deliberate, systematic, and authorized, wasn’t it?
Not rogue soldiers. American policy. A general as much as says so.
Intelligence agencies don’t just, oops, torture people systematically.
You know, like stepping on the cat. Who could doubt the word of
a general?
The
pictures, note, are trophy pictures. The torturers are proud of
what they are doing. They think it’s a hoot. They want to show people
back home. (Though perhaps not their mothers.) Note how obedient
the Iraqis are. Think about this. One man doesn’t give another a
blow job for the amusement of Twiggy unless he is terrified of the
consequences if he refuses. Is it only psychological torture? In
the pictures, yes. Somebody is behind them with whips and pliers.
Those men are scared shitless, and they have a reason.
Torture
is routine in war and intelligence. We know about assassinations
by the CIA and Mossad, don’t we? An agency that will kill people
won’t torture them? It isn’t remotely just the Americans and Israelis.
Pick your war and read the history. It’s everybody. If you enjoy
gagging, the French in Algeria were particularly good.
Why
does it happen? First, because it’s practical. Knowledge is power.
Knowledge is lives. You capture a guy at the bomb factory. You want
to know where the bomb will go off because you know it will kill
all sorts of people you don’t want killed. He doesn’t want to tell
you because he hates you. You squeeze it out of him. You do whatever
you have to do. You crush joints, fire up the propane torch, chop
off fingers an inch at a time and move up the arm. Don’t believe
me? Pick your war and do some careful reading.
Second,
soldiers come to hate the enemy, to regard him as subhuman, especially
if he differs from them. When you have seen the remains of a friend
who burned to death in an APC hit by Iraqi RPGs, philosophy departs.
Our alleged common humanity takes fifth place behind a desire to
kill the bastards any way possible. Torture? Why not? They’re worse
than dogs.
Third,
jobs involving torture attract people who like it. Would you crush
a man’s testicles because the lieutenant ordered you to? Probably
not, or not without misgivings. You might understand the reasoning:
"Look, this guy is IRA and he knows where five hundred pounds
of Semtex is hidden in downtown London. We have to find out."
The arithmetic is hard to argue. And the terr can stop the proceedings
simply by talking. You might see no choice.
But
you would probably prefer to leave it to someone else, for when
you were out of earshot.
So
you need specialists. Always there are people around who are comfortable
with torture and degradation, who just flat enjoy hurting people.
They are called "sadists." They are useful. Note the smile
on the face of the little minx who is making the Iraqi man masturbate
for her. She is getting off. It’s fun. Note the expressions of the
guys in the pictures. These are special people.
How
surprising is any of this? Not very. War brutalizes people. It provides
opportunities to people who are already brutal. This is no secret.
The various Moslem groups torture prisoners. The Afghans are famous
for it. Democracies lie about it, but they do it. Wars do not bring
out the Emily Post in us. Torture is what we do.
Morals?
Nobody has any. The Iraqi resistance doesn’t hesitate to car-bomb
targets in downtown Baghdad, killing large numbers of civilians.
The US forces don’t hesitate to bomb cities, killing large numbers
of civilians. I get email from Americans revolted that GIs could
engage in torture. But…that’s because we think our people should
be above such things.
Some
wars are necessary. Some aren't. Why are we in Iraq? After WWII,
the French occupied Vietnam (again) by force of arms; in 1954, after
years of bloody war, they lost at Dien Bien Phu and left. In the
late forties, the Jews occupied Palestine by force of arms; after
years of bloody war, that one is still undecided. A bit later, the
French, having learned nothing, did the same thing in Algeria; they
lost again and left again.
Meanwhile
the Americans, having learned nothing from all of this, occupied
Vietnam by force; after years of bloody etc, they leaped off the
top of the Embassy and fled. The Israelis, sigh, occupied southern
Lebanon, and ….The Russians occupied Afghanistan and after years
of bloody etc, got whipped. Is there a pattern here? Or did someone
put something in my tequila?
Presumably
having noticed none of this, America is occupying both Afghanistan
and Iraq. We send our soldiers to preside over torture and humiliation.
I doubt it's what they enlisted for.
May
4, 2004
Fred
Reed [send him mail]
is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2004 Fred Reed
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