Stop the Cannon Fodder
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
There are
two concepts all of us have to struggle with. One is our individuality.
The other is the mass.
Individual
soldiers who survive combat often come home to realize that all
of the horrific and heroic actions they took don't mean anything.
Vietnam, for example, is ruled by a communist government. Nobody
but a historian even remembers what World War I was all about, much
less the 10 million young men who died fighting it. World War II
and Korea are likewise fading from public memory.
It's poignant
to realize that each human being, unique in the entire universe,
has at best only a short life. If left in peace, he can experience
childhood, youth, middle age and finally old age. But all too often,
governments come along, lying to beat the band, and persuade youth
to become part of the mass and fight in a war.
I saw a documentary
on the Battle of the Somme recently. It was a dandy plan to subject
the German trenches in World War I to a heretofore-unprecedented
artillery barrage. Then the lads would charge out of their trenches
across no man's land. The generals thought they would punch a hole
in the German lines through which the cavalry would ride and break
the war wide open.
The artillery
barrage, hellish as it was, didn't do the job. German machine-gunners
came out of their bunkers and mowed down the young Brits. About
20,000 died on that day. Altogether, before the battle was over,
British casualties would total 370,000.
Even this
brief description reduces it all to the abstract. Twenty thousand?
What's that? A number. The Somme is just a place in France. One
wishes one could put a face on each of the 20,000. Add a face, a
name, a life story. But no, they are just part of the masses that
were sacrificed in the 20th century, a portion of the nearly 200
million who died in that failed century.
I'm glad that
I discouraged all my children from serving in the military, even
though I had served. It is important, I believe, to separate the
natural and noble feeling of love of country from the present reality.
The young people dying in Iraq are not dying to protect their country.
As usual, they were lied to. They're dying for corporate profits,
in which they do not share; they are dying because of some academic's
harebrained belief that we can turn Iraq into a liberal democratic
state; they are dying because of political opportunists in Washington.
Iraq is an
artificial country created at the end of World War I by British
colonialism. It has always existed because a powerful central government,
wielding its authority in the most savage manner, has forced it
to hold together. That is the only history Iraq has. Can any honest
American say that 10 years from now, Iraq will be a peaceful and
prosperous country with many monuments to the Americans who liberated
it? No, if Iraq exists, it will exist the way it always has
with a central government wielding its power in a savage and bloody
manner.
American veterans,
like the veterans of other modern wars since 1945, will conclude
that all they did turned out to be meaningless.
When the enemy
is in American surf, when his foot is on our soil, then we will
all fight and gladly die in defense of our country. But it is time
to stop supplying cannon fodder to an imperial government pursuing
God-knows-what secret schemes in distant parts of the world.
Do
not hand your precious one-of-a-kind children over to cynical men
who will squander their lives without blinking an eye. It is a sad
thing to die for another's profits.
January
27, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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