Who Is Responsible?
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
DIGG THIS
"I oppose
the war far more than you do. The fault is not that of soldiers
sent to war. Only an immature idiot like yourself would make that
claim. Your comments on what soldiers are good for is an embarrassment.
They are heroes, you are an ass." ~ One of my critics
Who is responsible
for the death and destruction
in Iraq? A critic of mine believes that the U.S. soldiers who kill
people and break things are not responsible for their actions. I
strongly disagree.
No one questions
whether the Russian soldiers who executed 21,000 Polish Army reservists
in the Katyn Forest Massacre are responsible for their actions.
No one questions whether the German soldiers who invaded Poland
are responsible for their actions. No one questions whether the
Turkish soldiers who massacred thousands of Armenians in 1915 are
responsible for their actions. Why is it then that few Americans
– even those opposed to the war – question whether U.S. soldiers
are responsible for their actions?
Not only are
U.S. soldiers not viewed as responsible for the death and destruction
that they bring, we continually see signs and yellow ribbons expressing
support for the troops. We also frequently hear from church pulpits
that we should pray for the troops. Sometimes this is expanded to
praying for the safety of the troops while they are defending our
freedoms, but it is usually just the nebulous refrain: "pray
for the troops."
Although many
defenders of the Iraq war have tried, usually under the umbrella
of "just war" theory, it can’t be said that the actions
of U.S. soldiers in this war are so different from the actions of
Russians, Germans, and Turks that they should be commended instead
of condemned. Labeling the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq
a just war does not make it one. By no stretch of the imagination
can the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq be called a just war.
In fact, the war violates every "just war" principle ever
invoked to justify a war. So why aren’t U.S. soldiers viewed as
responsible for the death and destruction in Iraq – even by many
of those who see this as an unjust war?
Those who say
the troops are not responsible are, consciously or unconsciously,
saying one of four things (or perhaps even all four).
Some say the
troops are not responsible because they are just following the orders
given them by their superiors. U.S. soldiers were told to invade
and occupy Iraq. They were told to hunt down "terrorists."
They were told to load their planes and their weapons. They were
told to drop their bombs and fire their bullets. Even some who oppose
the war would agree. They maintain that although Bush the liar in
chief and Rumsfeld the secretary of lies are war criminals, the
individual soldier is not responsible because the chain of command
goes all the way back to them. But I thought it was only God who
should be obeyed 100 percent of the time without question? These
people are hypocrites. No supporter of the war in Iraq who uses
the "obeying orders" defense would allow a German officer
at the Nuremberg Trials to get away with saying that he was just
obeying Hitler’s orders. Do those who use the "obeying orders"
defense actually believe that a soldier should never question the
morality of his orders? Should a soldier shoot unarmed civilians
because a Lt.
Calley orders him to do so? Why not? He would just be obeying
orders. Being told to clean or paint a piece of equipment is one
thing; being told to bomb or shoot a person is another.
Others say
the troops are not responsible because, as citizens of the United
States, soldiers, like everyone else, must do as the state dictates.
Many evangelical Christians agree, and join in this chorus of statolatry
with their "obey the powers that be" mantra. No soldier
is responsible for the death and destruction he inflicts as long
as it is state-sanctioned death and destruction. Those who consistently
hold this opinion have made the state their god; those who don’t
should not be taken seriously.
Many say the
troops are not responsible because they are American troops. Unlike
the soldiers of any other country, U.S. soldiers are always liberators
and peacekeepers, never invaders and occupiers. True, the United
States has troops scattered all over the globe in 155
countries or territories, but America is a benevolent hegemon.
Here too many evangelical Christians concur. They view the United
States as the God-anointed protector of Israel that enjoys a special
relationship with God. The war in Iraq is a modern-day crusade.
The U.S. military is the Lord’s army that fights against the Muslim
infidel. The inevitable conclusion to this aberrant nationalism
can be seen in a statement from a critic of mine who considers me
to be a "traitor": "Every war that has ever been
fought and ever will be fought by the United States has been just
and has been for honor." The government and the military could
not ask for a more loyal piece of cannon fodder than this ultimate
warmonger, although he himself won’t be the one going overseas –
it will be the young men in his neighborhood who will be sacrificed
for the state.
And then there
are those who say the troops are not responsible because we are
at war. As
Rush Limbaugh
recently said: "When our nation is at war, your duty is to
support it, not offer your precious little opinion." War not
only makes for strange bedfellows (like the United States and Soviet
Russia in WWII), it can used to cover a multitude of sins. In fact,
under the cloak of war, the vilest crimes can be covered up or excused.
In the minds of many Americans, a soldier in a uniform is a sanctified
individual. In his review of My
Battle of Algiers in National
Review, Christopher Levenick makes a chilling observation
about military uniforms and those soldiers guilty of torturing their
opponents: "Indeed, it is not uncommon to learn that such men
are capable of living out the rest of their lives without any sense
of guilt for their actions. It remains a basic truth of human nature
that a uniform is all that many men need to dissociate themselves
from the evil they commit."
Although the
U.S. government and the general public don’t hold the troops responsible
for their actions (unless they do something particularly evil that
becomes an embarrassment), U.S. soldiers need to realize that it
is they themselves who will ultimately be held responsible when
they stand before God Almighty and give account of their deeds.
U.S. soldiers fighting in Iraq need to recognize some things that
are true and some things that are not true:
- The war
is a crime against the Iraqi people.
- The war
violates every just war principle ever formulated.
- U.S. military
interventions are detrimental to world peace.
- U.S. foreign
policy creates enemies and terrorists.
- God never
appointed the United States to be the world’s policeman.
- The war
is not in the best interests of the United States.
- U.S. forces
in Iraq are not retaliating for 9/11.
- U.S. forces
in Iraq are not defending our freedoms.
- U.S. forces
in Iraq are not fighting terrorism.
- U.S. forces
in Iraq are not defending the United States.
Until U.S.
soldiers concede that the war was a grave mistake, they will keep
on fighting. Until U.S. soldiers accept responsibility for their
actions, they will keep on killing. Until U.S.
soldiers understand that the state is a lying, stealing, and killing
machine they will continue their state-sanctioned death and destruction.
Until U.S. soldiers realize that they are but cannon fodder for
the state, they will keep dying for a lie. And until young men and
women acknowledge that the U.S. military has become – through its
wars, interventions, and occupations – the greatest force for evil
in the world, they will keep joining the military to get that enlistment
bonus or that money
for college.
No one is holding
a gun to the head of any soldier and commanding him to fight. Yes,
it is true that U.S. soldiers who refuse to continue to participate
in the state’s interventions, invasions, and occupations might be
dishonorably discharged, court-martialed, sent to prison, mistaken
for a left-wing anti-war activist, called a coward, branded as anti-American,
labeled a traitor, shunned by family, termed a quitter, ridiculed
by veterans, or ostracized by fellow soldiers. Perhaps all of the
above. But doing what’s right is oftentimes not an easy thing to
do. There are frequently adverse consequences to doing the right
thing.
But even if
a gun was held to a soldier’s head and he was commanded to fight,
does that mean he should give in? Don’t the negative consequences
of refusing to fight that I mentioned above pale in comparison to
losing one’s life? My answer is still the same: Do what’s right.
If it’s not right to invade and occupy another country, then don’t
do it. If it’s not right to kill people and break things, then don’t
do it. The consequences be damned.
I
have prescribed a bitter pill, and some will have a hard time digesting
it. I am afraid that Christopher Levenick is right. The illicit
love affair that many Americans – and especially many conservative,
evangelical, and fundamentalist American Christians – have with
the U.S. military means that it all comes down to a uniform. God
help us when the absence or presence of a uniform is all that it
takes to hold or not hold someone responsible for the destruction
of person and property. God help us.
September
25, 2006
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
is a freelance writer and an adjunct instructor in accounting at
Pensacola Junior College in Pensacola, FL. He is also the director
of the Francis Wayland
Institute. His new book is Christianity
and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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