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http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/082404A.shtml

 

Your Children are Burning

By William Rivers Pitt

t r u t h o u t | Perspective

 

Tuesday 24 August 2004

 

Ladybug! Ladybug!

Fly away home.

Your house is on fire,

And your children all gone.

 

- Children's nursery rhyme, author unknown

 

The presidential campaigns of George W. Bush and

John Kerry are at each other's throats like dogs in a

fighting pit over a war that ended 29 years ago. The

mainstream news media, along with the alternative news

media, have enjoyed watching the show, dutifully

reporting every detail and nuance of the fiery

exchanges between the camps.

 

Somewhere in these last 24 days of August, however,

while arguing over a three-decades-old war, we managed

to forget that another war is happening. Here are some

details that have been missed:

 

Army Spc. Armando Hernandez, age 22; Army Spc.

Anthony J. Dixon, age 20;Marine Cpl. Dean P. Pratt,

age 22; Army Spc. Justin B. Onwordi, age 28; Marine

Sgt. Juan Calderon Jr., age 26; Army Pfc. Harry N.

Shondee, Jr., age 19; Marine Capt. Gregory A Ratzlaff,

age 36; Army Sgt. Tommy L. Gray, age 34; Marine Lance

Cpl. Joseph L. Nice, age 19; Marine Gunnery Sgt. Elia

P. Fontecchio, age 30; Army Spc. Donald R. McCune, age

20; Marine Sgt. Moses D. Rocha, age 33; Army Pfc.

Raymond J. Faulstich Jr., age 24; Marine Sgt. Yadir G.

Reynoso, age 27; Marine Lance Cpl. Larry L. Wells, age

22; Army Spc. Joshua I. Bunch, age 23; Marine Cpl.

Roberto Abad, age 22; Army Pfc. David L. Potter, age

22; Marine Lance Cpl. Jonathan W. Collins, age 19;

Army Capt. Andrew R. Houghton, age 25; Marine Lance

Cpl. Tavon L. Hubbard, age 24; Marine Staff Sgt. John

R. Howard, age 26; Army Capt. Michael Yury Tarlavsky,

age 30; Marine Lance Cpl. Kane M. Funke, age 20;

Marine Lance Cpl. Nicholas B. Morrison, age 23; Army

1st Lt. Neil Anthony Santoriello, age 24; Marine Corps

Pfc. Geoffrey Perez, age 24; Marine Corps Pfc.

Fernando B. Hannon, age 19; Army Spc. Mark Anthony

Zapata, age 27; Army 2nd Lt. James Michael Goins, age

23; Army Sgt. Daniel Michael Shepherd, age 23; Army

Pfc. Brandon R. Sapp, age 21; Army Sgt. David M.

Heath, age 30; Army Spc. Brandon T. Titus, age 20;

Marine Lance Cpl. Caleb J. Powers, age 21; Army Spc.

Jacob D. Martir, age 21; Marine Sgt. Harvey E.

Parkerson III, age 27; Marine Lance Cpl. Dustin R.

Fitzgerald, age 22; Army Pfc. Henry C. Risner, age 26;

Pfc. Kevin A. Cuming, age 22; 1st Lt. Charles L.

Wilkins III, age 38; Pfc. Ryan A. Martin, age 22.

 

That is the list of dead American soldiers in Iraq

from the last 24 days. That is August, so far. Two

other American soldiers - Army Sgt. Bobby E. Beasley,

age 36, and Army Staff Sgt. Craig W. Cherry, age 39 -

were killed in Afghanistan by an improvised explosive

device on August 7th. We don't talk about that war

anymore, either. 964 dead American soldiers, 52 since

August 1st.

 

522 days ago, the administration of George W. Bush

began the 'Shock and Awe' bombing campaign in Iraq, an

opening salvo that has broadened into a conflict which

has left well over ten thousand innocent Iraqi

civilians dead. According to the rhetoric that loosed

those bombs 74 weeks ago, we went into Iraq because:

 

* Iraq was in possession of 26,000 liters of

anthrax, 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin, 500 tons of

sarin, mustard and VX gas, 30,000 munitions to deliver

these agents, unmanned aerial drones to deliver these

agents, mobile biological weapons labs, and uranium

'yellowcake' from Niger for use in the development of

nuclear bombs.

 

* The Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein enjoyed

operational relationships with Osama bin Laden and his

al Qaeda terrorists, and were involved in the attacks

of September 11. Because of this relationship, Hussein

would happily hand over the aforementioned weapons of

mass destruction for bin Laden to use against the

United States.

 

* The Iraqi people desperately want a democratic

government, and will welcome the United States as

liberators.

 

* Saddam Hussein was a bad man.

 

Let's take these one at a time.

 

* No weapons of mass destruction have been found.

The few 'unmanned aerial drones' were pathetic

model-airplane specimens apparently made from tongue

depressors and Q-tips, none of which had a prayer off

getting off the ground. The 'mobile biological weapons

labs' were in fact helium weather balloon launching

platforms sold to Iraq by the British in the 1980s.

The 'yellowcake' story was based upon fabricated

evidence, and has led to a political scandal involving

the exposure of a deep-cover CIA agent whose husband

had the gall to call Bush a liar in the public prints.

 

* No relationship whatsoever has been established

between Hussein and bin Laden. In fact, bin Laden

despised Hussein because Hussein was a self-styled

Socialist, Godless to the core, who killed every

Islamic fundamentalist he could get his hands on. The

U.S. has, in fact, done bin Laden a great service by

disposing of his Iraqi enemy. Now, the stage is set

for an Islamic fundamentalist takeover of Iraq,

something bin Laden would very much like to see. As

for Hussein giving bin Laden weapons of mass

destruction, well...you can't give what you don't

have.

 

* It is entirely possible the Iraqi people would

have embraced democracy, if that is what Bush's plan

actually had in mind. Unfortunately for them, the

whole push for democracy was a farce to begin with;

Bush wanted to establish a

government-by-remote-control in Iraq, so as to

maintain control of the oil fields and the development

of military bases. In a nation where the Shia enjoy a

60% majority, a democratic vote would have elected a

Shia government, which would have then had the

temerity to act as it pleased, regardless of American

desires. It was never going to happen, and it never

will happen, so long as Bush's people man the stick.

 

* Saddam Hussein was indeed a bad man, whose

fortunes were created and augmented by the U.S.

government over a period of 20 years. We knew he was

developing and using chemical weapons. We helped him

do it. We didn't care, so long as he was gassing

Iranians. Beyond that, the math is pretty

straightforward. If the U.S. is going to adopt an

Invade Every Country Run By A Bad Man foreign policy

doctrine, everyone reading these words who approves of

the notion better haul ass down to their local

military recruiting office. We're going to need every

warm body we can get. How about you, and right now.

Go.

 

These guys went:

 

Army Spc. Armando Hernandez, age 22; Army Spc.

Anthony J. Dixon, age 20;Marine Cpl. Dean P. Pratt,

age 22; Army Spc. Justin B. Onwordi, age 28; Marine

Sgt. Juan Calderon Jr., age 26; Army Pfc. Harry N.

Shondee, Jr., age 19; Marine Capt. Gregory A Ratzlaff,

age 36; Army Sgt. Tommy L. Gray, age 34; Marine Lance

Cpl. Joseph L. Nice, age 19; Marine Gunnery Sgt. Elia

P. Fontecchio, age 30; Army Spc. Donald R. McCune, age

20; Marine Sgt. Moses D. Rocha, age 33; Army Pfc.

Raymond J. Faulstich Jr., age 24; Marine Sgt. Yadir G.

Reynoso, age 27; Marine Lance Cpl. Larry L. Wells, age

22; Army Spc. Joshua I. Bunch, age 23; Marine Cpl.

Roberto Abad, age 22; Army Pfc. David L. Potter, age

22; Marine Lance Cpl. Jonathan W. Collins, age 19;

Army Capt. Andrew R. Houghton, age 25; Marine Lance

Cpl. Tavon L. Hubbard, age 24; Marine Staff Sgt. John

R. Howard, age 26; Army Capt. Michael Yury Tarlavsky,

age 30; Marine Lance Cpl. Kane M. Funke, age 20;

Marine Lance Cpl. Nicholas B. Morrison, age 23; Army

1st Lt. Neil Anthony Santoriello, age 24; Marine Corps

Pfc. Geoffrey Perez, age 24; Marine Corps Pfc.

Fernando B. Hannon, age 19; Army Spc. Mark Anthony

Zapata, age 27; Army 2nd Lt. James Michael Goins, age

23; Army Sgt. Daniel Michael Shepherd, age 23; Army

Pfc. Brandon R. Sapp, age 21; Army Sgt. David M.

Heath, age 30; Army Spc. Brandon T. Titus, age 20;

Marine Lance Cpl. Caleb J. Powers, age 21; Army Spc.

Jacob D. Martir, age 21; Marine Sgt. Harvey E.

Parkerson III, age 27; Marine Lance Cpl. Dustin R.

Fitzgerald, age 22; Army Pfc. Henry C. Risner, age 26;

Pfc. Kevin A. Cuming, age 22; 1st Lt. Charles L.

Wilkins III, age 38; Pfc. Ryan A. Martin, age 22.

 

Now they are dead. They never found weapons of mass

destruction, they never found a connection between

Saddam and 9/11, they never got the chance to create a

democracy, and they were never fully informed that

part of their mission was the removal from power of a

former employee of the United States government.

 

In Iraq today, 780,000 cubic yards of human and

industrial waste is dumped into the Diyala River every

day by one sewage plant. The Diyala joins the Tigris

seven miles downstream. There isn't anything the plant

can do about it; it is shattered from the war. Power,

water, road, health care and educational

infrastructures are completely wrecked. The World Bank

estimates that it will cost $55 billion to repair all

of this damage, and it will take over four years to do

it.

 

$24 billion in U.S. tax money has been allocated to

'rebuild' Iraq. According to Christian Parenti, who

has reported from Iraq on the reconstruction process

for The Nation magazine, " Only $5.3 billion had been

allocated to specific reconstruction contracts as of

late June 2004. According to a report from the White

House Office of Management and Budget, of the $18.4

billion reconstruction honey-pot approved last fall

only $366 million had been spent by late June - that

is, invested in Iraq. Instead of creating 250,000 jobs

for Iraqis, as was the original goal, at most 24,000

local workers have been hired. "

 

" Most amazing of all, " writes Parenti, " the OMB

report showed that not a single cent of US tax money

had been spent on Iraqi healthcare, water treatment or

sanitation projects - though $9 million was dithered

away on administrative costs of the now defunct

Coalition Provisional Authority. Most of the little

that has been invested in healthcare, water treatment

and sanitation has come from Iraqi oil revenues,

managed for most of last year by the Development Fund

for Iraq, a US controlled successor to the UN-run Oil

for Food program. In all, the CPA spent roughly $19

billion of Iraqi oil money - on what exactly is not

quite clear. "

 

And we wonder why there is an 'insurgency.' We

wonder why a nobody named Moqtada al-Sadr has emerged

as an Iraqi version of Thomas Jefferson, fighting the

good fight against imperial usurpers. We wonder why so

many Iraqis flock to his banner, pick up a weapon, and

shoot Americans.

 

Sit in the dark for a year, be unemployed because

all the jobs have gone to non-Iraqis, have no place to

see your children schooled, have no place to bring

your children if they get sick, drink water that

tastes like something you squeezed into your toilet,

and stand a good chance whenever you step outside of

being shot by a sniper, blown up by a laser-guided

bomb, or run down by a Bradley Fighting Vehicle, and

you might think about picking up a weapon, too.

 

This is how terrorists and suicide bombers are

created. Desperation is the seed, time is the

fertilizer, and rage is the crop reaped by American

soldiers sent far from home to die because they were

lied to, as were we all.

 

This is, perhaps, the most galling aspect of the

whole Swift Boat Veterans nonsense. It has distracted

us from realizing that our children still burn in

Iraq, while simultaneously insulting every veteran who

was given a medal for service in action. It implies

that medals awarded for service in Vietnam somehow do

not count, which when taken to the end of the

argument, implies that medals awarded for service

anywhere do not count.

 

In a recent and eloquent truthout essay, Vietnam

veteran John Cory wrote the following words: " There

are veterans of all conflicts, who fall in love with

the terrible sweet beauty of war. Men who polish their

armor long after the parades have faded. Their glory

is not in duty, honor, and country; but in the

carnival mirrors of their own warped reflections.

These are veterans who march with swagger and blaring

brass, like small boys struggling to be seen and

heard. There are veterans who have paid passage

through the heart of darkness; who dedicate their

lives to eliminating the horrors that hide behind

their eyes at night, when they dream. These veterans

testify to the unreal and repulsive acts of war that

forever wound the soul. And there are veterans who let

it go and never look back again. Not that they forget,

they simply choose not to dwell in those memories.

They seek peace of mind and hope. "

 

The men who have foisted this rending open of old

wounds upon us are the ones who polish their armor,

who revel in their own warped reflections. They insult

fellow veterans everywhere. My father earned a Bronze

Star in Vietnam. Should he give it back? The men and

women serving and dying in Iraq have earned thousands

of medals, many of them Purple Hearts to replace

missing legs or faces. Should they give theirs back?

 

How many medals did George W. Bush earn to allow him

to make this frontal assault upon those who served in

his stead a generation ago, and those who serve now in

the free-fire zone he placed them in with his

deceptions?

 

When a person puts on the uniform of the United

States military and swears an oath, that person is

promising to sacrifice their life for their country.

The only promise they expect in return is that their

life not be spent for no good reason. That promise was

broken.

 

Do not forget your dying children. They wear the

uniform of your country, they live and die for all of

us. Some lie still, wrapped in your flag. Some walk

the land trying to remember, or trying to forget, how

they got their scars so long ago. Some yet fight, in a

war of choice that was not their doing. Do not forget

them. Do not insult them. They are your children.

 

William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and

international bestselling author of two books - 'War

on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You To Know' and

'The Greatest Sedition is Silence.'

 

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