 |
Fri Dec 05 2008
|
|
|
Departments War in Iraq
Gorilla suit
by Robert C. Koehler
July 3, 2007
For all the noise and carnage of war — especially this unnecessary war, which seems to possess a life of its own as it barrels forward uninterrupted on two fronts — our language of condemnation remains remarkably polite.
Thus a new CBS news poll shows that Americans are “increasingly dissatisfied” with the Iraq operation, with 77 percent telling pollsters they think it’s “going very badly” — as though the public were turning thumbs down on a reality TV show. Our formerly bellicose media now seem to be doing their best to reduce the national mood to a whisper. Shhh! We don’t want to hurt the president’s feelings, do we?
Meanwhile, the headlines scream “Incoming!”
About the same time that a thundering yet strangely irrelevant majority of Americans were telling CBS they want this war to stop, the U.S. military and NATO were churning up evil publicity in both Iraq and Afghanistan — and in the process ensuring that the war on terror will not run out of enemies — simply by waging the war they have waged from the start.
That war, no matter what the Pentagon flaks say afterward, can be summed up thus: No civilian shall ever come in the way of America’s intention to kill its perceived enemies.
From Iraq, the Associated Press reported on Saturday, regarding two pre-dawn raids on Sadr City in which 26 Iraqis died: “But residents, police and hospital officials said eight civilians were killed in their homes and angrily accused U.S. forces of firing blindly on the innocent.” Later in the story, unnamed Iraqi officials were quoted as saying that “all the dead were civilians.”
And from Afghanistan, the UK Observer reported that a three-hour NATO air strike on a village in the southwest province of Helmand killed between 50 and 80 civilians, many of them, we are told in an almost ritualistic reminder of what that term means, women and children. The Observer continued: “. . . more than 200 (civilians) were killed by coalition troops in Afghanistan in June, far more than are believed to have been killed by Taliban militants.”
This is the war that has started to play badly to the couch potato public the media perceive us to be: A lumbering superpower in a gorilla suit somehow finds itself battling tiny, hate-filled fanatics in two exotic, incomprehensible Middle Eastern countries. The freaked-out superpower (bewildered by all the hate it has encountered) stomps heavily at the scurrying fanatics wherever it encounters them, thinking once all the bad people are dead these two societies will be nice places to live.
The hate-filled fanatics, meanwhile, are fighting essentially a public-relations war, baiting the superpower with their crude explosive devices into retaliatory tantrums that inevitably wipe out women and children, making the superpower more and more hated and more and more bewildered. The fanatics, of course, kill civilians too. Whichever side kills the fewest feels entitled to claim the survivors’ allegiance.
While it’s not clear who is actually winning the nice-guy war — who, objectively, is responsible for the fewest innocent casualties (with both sides holding the other responsible even when it’s their explosives that do the killing) — it’s becoming increasingly clear that the superpower-baiting fanatics are winning the public relations war.
In both countries, even the proxy governments want the superpower to stop killing their people. In Afghanistan, according to the Observer — where the new head of NATO operations, American Gen. Dan McNeill, is nicknamed “Bomber McNeill” — President Hamid Karzai has condemned the coalition’s careless use of extreme force and its attitude that Afghan lives are “cheap.” And a British officer, commenting on the carnage of the Helmand Province air strike, said, “Every civilian dead means five new Taliban.”
In Iraq, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said the U.S. had no business raiding Sadr City and, as AP reported, declared: “The Iraqi government totally rejects U.S. military operations . . . conducted without a preapproval from the Iraqi military command. Anyone who breaches the military command orders will face investigation.”
And here we are, back at home with our poll numbers and our consciences. The political process is broken; the war and the undisclosed agenda — permanent U.S. occupation of a strategic region — have, if not complete political immunity, then at least what seems like indefinite opportunity to pursue a failed strategy. Maybe things will turn around!
On the same day that coalition bombers were pummeling the Afghan village for three hours, children in nearby Zabul Province added another dimension to the drama. Three were killed and a fourth was injured when an old rocket they were playing with exploded. Their deaths reminded some of us, perhaps, that wars never end and that the reality TV show that’s “going very badly” for us is going a lot worse on location.
---
Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, is an editor at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated writer. You can respond to this column at bkoehler@tribune.com or visit his Web site at commonwonders.com.
© 2007 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Email this article to a friend
|
|
 | |
Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008War in Iraq
"Pentagon cover up: 15,000 or more US deaths in Iraq war?" December 17, 2007 Mike Whitney
"Iraq's million" December 6, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Talking with two who walk the walk" November 29, 2007 David Swanson
"Baghdad in middle America" November 15, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Understanding the next war money vote" November 10, 2007 David Swanson
"Jonesborough justice" October 31, 2007 David Swanson
"Ann Wright’s conscience: former colonel and diplomat against Iraq war" October 29, 2007 Seth Sandronsky
"Open letter to the government from an AWOL soldier" October 21, 2007 James Circello, Iraq Veterans Against The War
"Constitution, flag, and leaving Iraq" October 7, 2007 David Swanson
"Whistleblowers on tape" September 30, 2007 David Swanson
"Observing our government through Blackwater" September 26, 2007 David Swanson
""Funding the war is killing the troops": interrupting the empire 30 seconds at a time" September 26, 2007 Mike Ferner
"We have nothing but fear itself" September 24, 2007 David Swanson
"Sanity in tiny nibbles" September 21, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Can we talk? Day one of IVAW's "Truth in Recruiting" campaign" September 20, 2007 Mike Ferner
"New day in the anti-war movement?" September 19, 2007 Mike Ferner
"Bush’s fake sheik whacked: the Surge and the Al Qaeda bunny" September 18, 2007 Greg Palast
"Iraq: the people's report" September 11, 2007 Sue Udry
"Questions for General Petraeus" September 10, 2007 David Swanson
"My son, back from Iraq, lives on tower on National Mall" September 1, 2007 Mary Hanna
"Creative destruction" August 16, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"300 towns, cities, states oppose Iraq occupation" August 1, 2007 David Swanson
"Reparations" July 30, 2007 David Swanson
"Democrats as Leviathan: another step toward war with Iran" July 23, 2007 Joshua Frank
"We will sit in for impeachment" July 5, 2007 David Swanson
"Gorilla suit" July 3, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Peace movement comes to US Social Forum" June 29, 2007 David Swanson
"The hearts of all sane men" June 21, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Belief and doubt" June 15, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"Sen. Clinton wants troops in Iraq for at least 10 years" June 13, 2007 David Swanson
"This is not a story about Cindy Sheehan" June 5, 2007 Sunsara Taylor
"The holy occupation of Iraq" May 29, 2007 David Swanson
"Why I voted "no"" May 27, 2007 Sen. Barbara Boxer
"For five years we've called it blood for oil" May 16, 2007 David Swanson
"Collateral genocide" May 12, 2007 Mike Ferner
"Please don’t throw me in that veto patch" May 7, 2007 Mike Ferner
"Anti-U.S. uproar sweeps Italy" May 5, 2007 David Swanson
"Knee-deep blood in the land of make-believe" April 26, 2007 Carla Binion
"Tax day protests and refusing to pay for war" April 16, 2007 Ruth Benn
"You can't hurt a troop by defunding a war" April 12, 2007 David Swanson
"Iraq veterans speak in Columbus, OH 3-17-07" April 11, 2007 Veterans
"Iraq @ 4: It's Not About the Troops - Either Way " March 26, 2007 David Caploe
"Progressives stand strong against funding war" March 23, 2007 David Swanson
"No mo money for war" March 16, 2007 David Swanson
"Sacrificing our children on the altar of corporate greed" March 15, 2007 David E. Washburn
"Only nonviolence will end the war" March 14, 2007 David Swanson
"The war money can be stopped" March 10, 2007 David Swanson
"How will you end this war?" March 10, 2007 Tina Richards
"Congressman Obey says "Idiot Liberals" need to support war money" March 9, 2007 David Swanson
"Former Pentagon staff speaks out on crimes of Doug Feith, Dick Cheney, and planning of Iran War" March 6, 2007 David Swanson
"I'm more pro-troop than you are" March 3, 2007 David Swanson
"Only nonviolence will end the war" February 28, 2007 David Swanson
"Cindy Sheehan, George Will, and loving your enemies" February 26, 2007 David Swanson
"No, seriously, why did we invade Iraq?" February 22, 2007 David E. Washburn
"Lord knows we've suffered enough already: keep them out of Ohio!" February 18, 2007 Mike Ferner
"Murtha only intends to undo the escalation" February 17, 2007 David Swanson
"Shut up and stop the war" February 14, 2007 David Swanson
"100 Senators quietly vote: majority oppose escalation" February 10, 2007 David Swanson
"Dems change the gas and claim it's a new car" February 9, 2007 David Swanson
"A world that works for everybody" February 7, 2007 Robert C. Koehler
"D.C. demonstration" January 30, 2007 John Conyers, Jr.
"How we can end the occupation of Iraq" January 23, 2007 David Swanson
"Dear Mr. President: Send Even MORE Troops (and you go, too!) ...from Michael Moore" January 22, 2007 Michael Moore
"The Kucinich Plan for Iraq" January 17, 2007 Dennis J. Kucinich
"An Iraq jobs program?" January 16, 2007 Seth Sandronsky
"Waist deep in the big muddy" January 12, 2007 Greg Palast
"Out of Iraq and back to the American city" January 11, 2007 Dennis J. Kucinich
"If not now, when?" January 10, 2007 Mike Ferner
"Mr. President, surge this" January 10, 2007 David Swanson
"3,000 lights delivered to Rep. Marcy Kaptur" January 5, 2007 Northwest Ohio Peace Coalition
"3,000 lights for 3,000 killed in Iraq" January 1, 2007 Peggy Daly-Masternak
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

All content © 1970-2008 The Columbus Free Press Disclaimer |