No-Win War
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
I
heard a lecture by an Army psychologist who contended that after
90 days of combat, the casualty rate was 98 percent. Those not wounded
physically were wounded psychologically. The other 2 percent were
psychopaths.
His passing remark about the psychopaths was interesting. A psychopath
is a defective human being, almost a bionic robot. Psychopaths can
be intelligent and manipulative, but they lack totally the capability
of feeling any emotion for or attachment to other human beings.
They are without conscience, without remorse, without regret, without
compassion. They can feel rage when frustrated. They commit a lot
of the crime and in prisons usually run the inmates.
A close friend who led a Ranger platoon in heavy fighting during
World War II said the only member of his outfit who didn't get a
scratch was a psychopath, a convicted murderer paroled into the
Army. This man loved to kill and often exposed himself to enemy
fire just to hurl insults at the Germans. He and a Choctaw Indian
would have long arguments over whether the knife or the hatchet
was the best tool for killing a sentry. The psychopath favored the
hatchet, using it to deliver a blow to the back of neck and sever
the spinal cord.
War is both brutal and brutalizing, and so it is good to see that
more and more Americans are beginning to realize the war in Iraq
was a mistake. Wars are nearly always a mistake, because even if
you win them, you lose so much. A man who ought to know, William
Sherman, told some cadets that war is hell. Another combat veteran
described it as being eye-deep in hell.
What we need to come to grips with is that war, as old as the human
race, has become too dangerous to practice. Today we have people
not very different from people 5,000 years ago who
command weapons that can literally destroy life on Earth. History
tells us that war corrupts even good people. It didn't take long
in World War II before the strategic-bombing advocates were saying
cities needed to be carpet-bombed without regard for civilian casualties.
That culminated in dropping the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Those bombs were spitballs compared with the thermonuclear weapons
in the arsenals today of the United States, Russia and China, as
well as Great Britain, France, Israel and presumably Pakistan and
India. In one real sense, these weapons prevented war, as neither
the U.S. nor the Soviet Union could figure out how to have a nuclear
war and survive. Even so, there were some close calls.
Yet, so decisive is the weapon that those countries that have them
are reluctant to give them up, and other countries that don't have
them want them. I'm not concerned about small countries, even such
as North Korea. A few bombs will not threaten mankind. It is the
large arsenals that can bring about extinction.
Wars, of course, are effects, not causes. Usually they are the effects
of conflicts over land and resources and sometimes ideology or religion.
Surely the destructiveness of war, in terms of both economic resources
and human lives, should tell people that there must be a better
way to settle conflicts. I fear, though, that it is like asking
a cave man to negotiate with his neighbor rather than brain him
with his stone ax. Technology has advanced tremendously; the human
race is stuck with the same old human nature it has always had.
One can be cynical and say that since all humans must die, there
is no point in worrying about the manner or timing of their deaths.
I might agree if the human race consisted entirely of adults, but
children deserve a chance to sample the joys of living, and modern
warfare kills children as if they were nothing more than ants. We
said, for public-relations purposes, that Hiroshima was a military
target, but in fact there were only 43,000 soldiers there. The 300,000
civilians were nearly all women, children and old men.
I applauded the dropping of the bombs at the time, and if I had
been Harry Truman, I probably would have made the same decision.
That's what I mean by war corrupting even good people. It forces
them to make decisions they wouldn't make in peacetime.
The
real crime against humanity is war itself. Rather than charge soldiers
with war crimes, the political leaders who start the wars should
be put in the dock. Their decisions to go to war are the mother
of all the crimes and cruelty that follow.
August
16, 2005
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years. Write to
Charley Reese at P.O. Box 2446, Orlando, FL 32802.
©
2005 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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