Vengeance
by
Charley
Reese
Here's
a story from Arabic folklore. A man returned to his village after
an absence of several days. He met his best friend, and they sat
down to drink tea.
"Do
you remember the man who offended me 25 years ago?" the man
asked his friend.
"Sure."
"Well,
I killed him two days ago."
"Why
were you in such a hurry?" his friend asked.
Now here is a true story reported in the news some months back.
An American officer went to the home of a family whose young son
had been killed by American soldiers who mistook him for an enemy.
"What
compensation would you accept for your son?" the American officer
asked.
"Ten
dead Americans," the father replied.
I tell you these anecdotes to point out something that apparently
a great many American government officials haven't quite grasped:
When we operate in an Arab country, especially Iraq, we are operating
in a culture that places a very high value on vengeance and honor.
The significance is that when we kill an Iraqi, if the death is
perceived by his family as unjust, then the dead man's extended
family assumes an unavoidable obligation to avenge it. The family
might not try to avenge it the next day. That is the point of the
first story. People in that part of the world perceive time in a
different way than we do. But the passing of time will not lessen,
much less eliminate, the desire and intention to avenge the death.
The object of the vengeance need not be the particular person who
committed the original act. Any representative person will do. In
our case, any American will do.
When a mob mutilated the bodies of four American mercenaries in
Fallujah, a majority of the people there felt shame. Mutilating
the dead is against the teachings of Islam. They didn't regret the
killings, but they were shamed by the mutilation.
Had we been smart, we would have played on that shame, and no doubt
the people would have helped us identify the culprits. But smart
is not what the occupation government in Iraq is. In fact, it is
dumb. It made the decision instead to punish the entire city and
all of its residents.
The battle is going on as I write, and already we have killed women
and children in the course of it. This is a guarantee that we will
lose in the long run. Oh, we can take the city. We can kill or capture
a lot of people. We can blow up a lot of houses. But instead of
solving the problem, we will be enlarging it, because we will create
more enemies than we kill. After this is all over, Fallujah will
not be pacified. It will be more dangerous than it is today.
This is precisely the problem that has so frustrated the Israelis.
They have done a competent job, if you want to call it that, of
killing Palestinians, blowing up their homes and uprooting their
olive trees, but all they've accomplished is to produce more hate
and more violence. Now we are following the exact same path in Iraq,
and we will reap the exact same results.
Just because generals are good at moving around tanks, airplanes
and troops doesn't mean they know squat about the country or the
culture in which they are fighting. Most of our generals are neither
intellectuals nor scholars. That ought to be obvious from the inane
and stupid names they apply to even the smallest tactical missions.
There are some people who can be beaten into submission by brute
force. Iraqis and Palestinians are not among them.
I'm sure we have some Special Forces people who understand the Arab
culture and could call the right shots. Unfortunately, they are
kept out of the loop as far as being able to make the big decisions.
They are treated by the brass as gofers. Iraq might not be George
Bush's Vietnam, but it's certainly his tar baby. I predict a day
will come when Bush will wish he had never heard of the place.
April
10, 2004
Charley
Reese has been a journalist for 49 years, reporting on everything
from sports to politics. From 196971, he worked as a campaign
staffer for gubernatorial, senatorial and congressional races in
several states. He was an editor, assistant to the publisher, and
columnist for the Orlando Sentinel from 1971 to 2001. He
now writes a syndicated column which is carried on LewRockwell.com.
Reese served two years active duty in the U.S. Army as a tank gunner.
Write to Charley Reese at P.O. Box 2446, Orlando, FL 32802.
©
2004 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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