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US military atrocities and the moral choice facing the American
people
By David North and David Walsh
24 May 2005
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A New York Times editorial May 23 accused the president
of the United States, along with other members of his administration,
of grave crimes in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba.
Patterns of Abuse first takes note of a comment
by George W. Bush to the effect that the American governments
handling of the brutality at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq would
be a model of transparency and accountability and that those responsible
would be punished. This made for a fine photo opportunity, comment
the Times editors, Unfortunately, none of it is true.
In other words, the president is a liar.
The editorialpublished in conjunction with a two-part
series detailing the horrifying murder of two Afghans at the Bagram
prison by US military personnelproceeds to accuse the administration
of withholding reports and stonewalling inquiries. Moreover, The
administration has prevented any serious investigation of policy
makers at the White House, the Justice Department and the Pentagon
by orchestrating official probes so that none could come even
close to the central question of how the prison policies were
formulated and how they led to the abuses.
The Times asserts that what happened at Abu Ghraib
was no aberration, but part of a widespread pattern. It showed
the tragic impact of the initial decision by Mr. Bush and his
top advisers that they were not going to follow the Geneva Conventions,
or indeed American law, for prisoners taken in antiterrorist operations.
The administration then is guilty of war crimes, contravening
international law.
A policy that officially mandated humane treatment, but only
when it suited military necessity, leading interrogators
to believe that they could deviate slightly from the rules,
created a situation in which the US militarys slight
deviations included killing prisoners, and then covering up the
reason they died.
The Times, although it does not care to spell this out,
is charging the president, vice president, secretary of defense
and various military officials with sanctioning torture and murder.
The facts are unambiguous. In reality, the entire political and
media establishment (including the Times itself), which
endorsed and supported the invasion of Iraq, is implicated.
Everyone knows that the murders at Bagram and abuse at Abu
Ghraib are only the tip of the iceberg. One can say without fear
of contradiction that crimes are being committed on a daily basis
in Iraq, Afghanistan and the US internment camp in Cuba. If there
is not more exposure of the atrocities, and outrage at their commission,
that must be explained by the general support such methods find
within the American ruling elite.
The greatest fiction, which the Times editors continue
to maintain, is that the truly savage treatment of ordinary Afghans
and Iraqis can be considered apart from the character of the war
as a whole. As though systematic and homicidal cruelty, part of
a widespread pattern in the newspapers own words,
were a mere blemish on the face of an otherwise noble, democratic
cause.
On the contrary, the episodes at Bagram provide the most appropriate
basis for evaluating the character of US policy. They sum up one
of the central aims of the American project in Afghanistan and
Iraq: to terrorize subject, colonial peoples.
The US invasion and occupation of Central Asia and the Middle
East have been criminal enterprises from the beginning, in all
their aspects. The lies justifying the ongoing conflicts and the
lies covering up their crimes flow from the same source: the attempt
by American imperialism to bring the entire world under its reactionary
sway. Resistance, or even in some cases the mere presence of a
conquered population, will be met with brute force.
Prior to the Iraq war any serious investigation would have
proven that the Bush administrations claims about Saddam
Husseins regime were lies. If there was anyone in the American
media who didnt know, it was because he or she chose not
to know. They were all in on the crime, from the neo-fascist base
of the Republican Party and the ultra-right Murdoch press to John
Kerry, the Democratic Party and the liberal Times
and Washington Post.
Now the lies are unraveling, as monstrous lies always do, as
they especially do in America. The horrors at the Bagram Collection
Point and Abu Ghraib confront the American people with a stark
moral choice.
The first responsibility, and the first step toward addressing
the problems, is to tell the truth about the present state of
affairs.
The honorable US military has been unleashed on
defenseless peoples in the Middle East and Asia with horrifying
consequences. Much of what is foul and backward in American society
has been encouraged and cultivated in the armed forces, inviting
or producing a considerable crowd of sadists, psychopaths and,
frankly, perverts. These are often lumpenized elements of the
population, given nothing culturally or morally, exposed to the
most reactionary influencesreligious fundamentalism, nationalism,
the cult of blood and guns.
The description of the physical and psychological torture of
the prisoners at Bagram renders one physically ill. And one encounters
the same porno-sadism over and over again in the exploits of this
military all over the world!
Administration personnel are confident that they will never
be held to account for their crimes. This confidence rests on
the fact that a broad consensus of support exists for such conduct
within the ruling elite. Both government spokesmen and liberal
pundits like Alan Dershowitz, Ted Koppel and Michael Ignatieff
have been explicitly or tacitly advocating torture since the events
of September 11, 2001. Genuinely democratic consciousness has
almost entirely disintegrated within the upper echelons of American
society. Today, anything goes.
The argument that barbaric methods are needed to combat terrorism
and extract information that could save lives, the
time-honored claim of every authoritarian regime, is both spurious
and illegal, especially given that the US government had considerable
prior knowledge about the 2001 terrorist hijackings and refused
to act on it. Moreover, this argument ignores the political reality:
torture is never about specific pieces of information, it is one
element of an overall policy. It is meant to break the will of
a resisting movement or population. So it was with the Nazi authorities,
so it is today with the American military.
The absence of widespread and loudly voiced revulsion to the
crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq is shameful. It speaks to the degraded
state of American public opinion.
There is no shortage of blame for this. Political structures
entirely dominated and, in fact, strangled by corporate power
have polluted the air. The filthy atmosphere is the moral, political
reflection of the workings of American capitalism in the 1990s
and 2000s, pervaded by parasitism, corruption, criminality.
The current wave of politicians is the inevitable product of
these processes: individuals such as Rick Santorum, the ultra-right
Catholic senator from Pennsylvania, considered a contender for
the 2008 Republican presidential nomination. A recent piece in
the New York Times Sunday magazine brought out the fact
that when their first child, months premature, died at birth,
Santorum and his wife, in an act the articles author notes
timidly some might find discomforting, strange, even ghoulish,
refused to let the morgue take the corpse of their newborn;
they slept that night in the hospital with their lifeless baby
between them. The next day, they took him home for their
other children to hold. (The Believer, May 22, 2005)
This is clearly an individual who needs to be pursuing psychiatric
help, not public office.
In their commitment to the interests of big business, the Democratic
Party and its leading constituencies cede nothing to the Republicans.
The so-called labor movement, the AFL-CIO trade unions, is a principal
culprit. The union bureaucracies have done all that lay within
their power to deaden class consciousness, promote chauvinism
and create a climate inhospitable to humane and progressive ideas.
Nowhere in the advanced capitalist world has the working class
been left so unprepared for the assault of big business, nowhere
has the official labor movement left behind it a greater cultural
and political wasteland.
The right-wing media is a cesspool of political violence and
pornography; the publication of photographs of Hussein in his
underwear in the Sun and the New York Post, two
Murdoch-owned tabloids, sums up the mentality of these people.
The appearance of the photos, obviously leaked by American military
officials, is a violation of the Geneva Conventions against degrading
treatment of prisoners. Even the Nazi leaders, guilty of the greatest
crimes in history, were accorded basic rights by their captors.
Confronted with the photographs illegality and inflammatory
character, Graham Dudman, managing editor of the Sun, vociferously
defended their publication. They are a fantastic, iconic
set of news pictures that I defy any newspaper, magazine, or television
station who were presented with them not to have published.
No one seriously challenges him.
The notion also that such images, which disgusted Arab and
world public opinion, will deal a serious blow to the anti-US
insurgency in Iraq simply reveals something about the unreality
that dominates the American political and military mind.
Meanwhile, cowed and insincere, the liberal media endlessly
retreats in the face of the rights provocations. One might
say that the Times, what remains of liberalism on the television
networks and the various organs of Democratic Party opinion are
the congealed expression of such a retreat. Convinced that the
extreme right is invincible, the population hopelessly reactionary,
the liberal press gives a mile for every inch taken by the right-wing
forces. The latter have the upper hand at present, above all,
by default.
There is great disgust, registered in private conversations,
encountered accidentally on the street, but people keep this largely
to themselves. To whom should they turn? The political establishment,
every wing of it, is impervious to genuine popular sentiment and
concerns.
Black and Hispanic politicians, still comically dubbed civil
rights leaders, along with other sections of the post-1970s
radical and liberal middle class, have jumped on the
corporate and stock market gravy train, enriching themselves while
the inner cities have decayed into near Third World conditions.
The culture industry has played its deplorable part. Films,
popular music, video games promote, or, rather, embody brutalization
and desensitization. Confused by events, unaware of social and
historical realities, too many permit themselves to be pacified
by the mind-numbing products of Americas entertainment industry.
In the post-September 11 world Hollywood has turned increasingly
to torture and bloody revenge as key themes or motifs, lending
legitimacy to the ravings of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and the rest
of them. The average studio action blockbuster is
as indifferent to body counts as the Pentagon.
As part of its ideological rationale for colonial subjugation
of uncivilized peoples, the American media loves to
declare that life is cheap in Baghdad or the West
Bank or the mountains of Afghanistan. Can life anywhere be much
cheaper than it is in American popular culture? Killing, torture
and other forms of mayhem are simply not taken seriouslythey
are no big deal. And this has had an impact.
This is the culture that has been produced by American capitalism
in its crisis. Behind this lies the industrial decline, the vast
social inequality, the obscene pile of wealth that has been created
at one pole of society at the expense of the lives and conditions
of everyone else.
Appalling crimes are being committed in Afghanistan, Iraq and
Guantánamo in the name of the American people. The working
class has to choose a different course, a different policy, one
based on solidarity, compassion and an understanding of the need
for a socialistic reconstruction of society.
See Also:
One year since the torture revelations
at Abu Ghraib
Mistrial in reservist's court martial
[6 May 2005]
US rights group calls for
criminal probe of Rumsfeld
[27 April 2005]
New evidence of US torture
in Iraq and Afghanistan
[23 February 2005]
Washingtons
hypocrisy over Iraq torture
[5 May 2004]
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