That
Death Toll
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
There is something
morally creepy about the way the White House responded to the news
released as inconspicuously as possible that the 2,500th
American soldier has died in Iraq.
"Its a number,"
said White House Press Secretary Tony Snow.
Yes, and so
is 5,000, and 10,000, and 15,000. Is there no amount of American
bloodshed that would trigger a reassessment of the ideological fantasy
that US power can transform Iraq into Kansas?
As an old news
hand, Snow caught the tenor of his dismissive remark and modified
it with presidential pieties about sadness and heartache. But there's
not enough of the latter to compel a change in policy, so how seriously
can we take these expressions of regret?
What's missing
from the administration is a normal sense of moral outrage that
would usually be associated with 2,500 deaths that resulted from
another cause. If, for example, a sniper or a serial killer in New
York were to bring about this horror, or if such a level of death
were associated with a coal-mine disaster or the explosion of a
nuclear-power plant, the attitude would be very different indeed.
There would be a deafening outcry to find out who or what permitted
this to happen.
There would
be no inadvertently dismissive talk about 2,500 deaths as a "number."
The remark
came so quickly because of the true attitude behind such statistics:
they constitute merely a political problem for the Bush administration,
a speed bump on the road to a state-imposed end. They regard anyone
who would emphasize such a milestone as a political enemy with an
agenda.
The priority
of dealing with the political problem is a matter of public relations.
Further, there is a difference between a moral problem and a political
problem. It's like the child who doesn't regret his lies so much
as the fact that he was caught. The upshot is that the child works
harder in the future to cover his tracks.
What is the
life of a soldier worth and what are the incentives to preserve
it? In modern nation-state warfare, soldiers are fodder. This follows
directly from the prevailing theory of government that war should
be total. Before the 19th century, wrote Mises, "only
the soldiers fight; for the great majority war is only a passing
suffering of evil, not an active pursuit." Soldiers were direct
employees of the sovereign, and there were limits on their numbers.
They had value. A king who expended their lives wantonly would run
out of resources or be deposed.
Today, mobilization
in war is total, and all citizens are expected to pay the price.
The sovereign believes there is no price too high because the regime
itself does not bear the liability. Death is just a number. The
US doesn't even bother counting enemy dead. It counts American dead
only because it has to.
"There is a
greater good which sometimes necessitates tremendous sacrifice,"
said Gen. Carter Ham of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
They define
the greater good; others make the sacrifice.
This is especially
true in this regime in this time. The Bush administration is ensconced
in its marble castles in Washington, D.C., and meets average soldiers
only in carefully managed PR events. The soldiers are from far away
places Louisiana, North Carolina, Alabama, New Jersey and occupy
a different layer of the social strata from anyone in the ruling
class. Usually soldiers sign up for economic reasons. They expect
a career boost.
But if the
regime wants a foreign war, these young kids must go. Many must
die. If the ranks of the enlisted get too thin, they have ways of
thickening it: the hidden draft of coerced extended duties, for
example. And just as the central bank knows that it can always print
all the money it needs, the war regime knows that it always has
the draft. The military is "too big to fail" because everyone is
a potential member.
The only real
moral issue that strikes the Bush administration which is directly
responsible for every one of these lost lives is annoyance that
anyone would be upset. The fodder knew what they were getting into
when they signed up. It's dangerous work. In any case, it is a noble
cause, or so they are told.
We are told
that the cause is the democratic reconstruction of Iraq, but the
invasion has so far resulted in a society ruled by martial law,
a people imprisoned under a conquering regime, and a puppet state
that swears to uphold Islamic law.
What has Iraq
gained? What has America gained? Even if you believe there have
been gains, are the deaths worth it?
A death is
always more than a number; every one means a young man or woman
cut down in the prime of life, leaving broken-hearted parents, loved
ones, and children. It is an unmitigated catastrophe for the family
and everyone who knew and loved the person.
And
these deaths occur amid terrible fear and often excruciating suffering,
at the hands of people who have never met them, and all in the name
of a political conflict between militarized occupiers and a domestic
resistance.
What's more,
it's a number that continues to grow even as the opposition grows
in Iraq. It is no longer plausible to even speak of an isolated
insurgency. The US has sparked a full-scale civil war between tribes,
a war that cannot be won no matter which side the US takes in the
struggle. Perhaps 100,000 Iraqis have already been killed.
Yes,
we've all heard the clichés about the greater good. I've
never met a serial killer, a sniper, or the leader of a suicide
cult. But I'm willing to bet that they too believe that they served
a greater good.
June
21, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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