Discovering Sin
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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The International
Herald Tribune recently published an article about a new Army
medical book on trauma wounds. The reporter said that "the
gruesome photographs illustrate the grim nature of today's wars,
in which more are hurt by explosions than by bullets, and body armor
leaves many alive but maimed."
That's a naïve
statement. Probably since World War I and certainly since World
War II, explosions have killed more people than bullets in most
wars. As for the maimed, since time began there have always been
more people wounded than killed in wars. In the War of Northern
Aggression, 140,415 Yankees were killed in battle and 281,881 were
wounded. More than 200,000 died of "other causes," which
usually was disease.
Body armor
is about as old as war itself, and the bureaucratic label "improvised
explosive device" is just government-bull language for booby
trap. Booby traps also are old. The only thing new is the bureaucratic
language, which the press, like a parrot, repeated.
I'm not knocking
the reporter. His story about the medical manual was well-written.
It just struck me that every generation seems to go through the
ritual of discovering sin for the first time. The present younger
generation is seeing war for the first time in Iraq and Afghanistan.
As wars go, they aren't much. In five years, we've lost a little
more than 4,000 souls. The single battle of Okinawa killed 7,600
Americans on land, and another 5,000 were killed at sea by Japanese
suicide bombers. Nor should we forget Hiroshima, where 80,000 people
died in about 10 seconds.
Altogether,
some 55 million people died in World War II, and that war, at least
for us, lasted only four years.
War indeed
is grim and horrible, and it's no surprise that nearly all governments
try to hide the horror from the civilians back home. As long as
war is a parade with flags and bands and bumper stickers, it doesn't
seem so bad. On the field of battle, strewn with body parts, excrement,
blood and the smell of burnt flesh, it becomes a pretty hard sell
for the military public-relations types.
The human
species being what it is, pacifism is suicide, but every single
American should be against war except as the last extreme resort.
Getting rid of Saddam Hussein was not worth 4,000 American dead
and another 29,000 wounded. He had no weapons of mass destruction,
and he was definitely not an imminent threat to the United States.
The Iraq War is one for which George W. Bush and Dick Cheney should
not be forgiven. There was no excuse for ordering it. The American
troops didn't die for freedom; they died because Bush didn't like
Saddam or because the American Establishment wants permanent military
bases on a big pool of oil.
I said during
the buildup to war that it's too bad we couldn't stage an old-fashioned
duel, strip Bush and Saddam down to their shorts, give them each
a bowie knife and lock them in a dark room. Politicians have become
more reckless as they have become less accountable for their sins.
At least Saddam has paid for his.
Harry
Truman was fond of saying that the only surprises are the history
you don't know. Though these latest photographs of torn bodies shocked
the reporter, wars have always torn up bodies. I recall the photographs
in an older Army medical book that you wouldn't want to look at
over lunch. I expect every battlefield presents a grim picture
men hacked to death with swords and axes no doubt were not pretty
to look at. Or, for that matter, people stepped on by elephants
or eaten by lions.
I've noticed
one thing about all the dead bodies I've seen: It's obvious the
person who once inhabited the body is no longer there. It's a good
argument that there is such a thing as a soul. Whatever the mystery
of life is, you can tell when it departs by the change in the appearance
of what's left behind.
August
9, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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