The Death
Mask Of War
American Marines and soldiers have become
socialized to atrocity.
By Chris Hedges
07/28/07 "Adbusters" -- -All troops, when they occupy
and battle insurgent forces, as in Iraq, or Gaza or Vietnam,
are placed in "atrocity producing situations."
In this environment, surrounded by a hostile population,
simple acts such as going to a store to buy a can of Coke
means you can be killed. This constant fear and stress
pushes troops to view everyone around them as the enemy.
This hostility is compounded when the enemy, as in Iraq, is
elusive, shadowy and hard to find.
The rage soldiers feel after a roadside bomb explodes,
killing or maiming their comrades, is one that is easily
directed over time to innocent civilians who are seen to
support the insurgents. It is a short psychological leap,
but a massive moral leap. It is a leap from killing -- the
shooting of someone who has the capacity to do you harm --
to murder -- the deadly assault against someone who cannot
harm you. The war in Iraq is now primarily about murder.
There is very little killing.
After four years of war, American Marines and soldiers have
become socialized to atrocity. The American killing project
is not described in these terms to a distant public. The
politicians still speak in the abstract terms of glory,
honor, and heroism, in the necessity of improving the world,
in lofty phrases of political and spiritual renewal. Those
who kill large numbers of people always claim it as a
virtue. The campaign to rid the world of terror is expressed
with this rhetoric, as if once all terrorists are destroyed
evil itself will vanish.
The reality behind the myth, however, is very different. The
reality and the ideal clash when soldiers and Marines return
home, alienating these combat veterans from the world around
them, a world that still dines out on the myth of war and
the virtues of the nation. But slowly returning veterans are
giving us a new narrative of the war -- one that exposes the
vast enterprise of industrial slaughter unleashed in Iraq
for a lie and sustained because of wounded national pride
and willful ignorance. "This unit sets up this traffic
control point and this 18 year old kid is on top of an
armored Humvee with a .50 caliber machine gun," remembered
Geoffrey Millard who served in Tikrit with the 42nd Infantry
Division. "And this car speeds at him pretty quick and he
makes a split second decision that that's a suicide bomber,
and he presses the butterfly trigger and puts 200 rounds in
less than a minute into this vehicle. It killed the mother,
a father and two kids. The boy was aged four and the
daughter was aged three."
"And they briefed this to the general," Millard said, "and
they briefed it gruesome. I mean, they had pictures. They
briefed it to him. And this colonel turns around to this
full division staff and says, 'if these fucking Hadjis
learned to drive, this shit wouldn't happen.'"
Those who come back from war, like Millard and tens of
thousands of other veterans, suffer not only delayed
reactions to stress, but a crisis of faith. The God they
knew, or thought they knew, failed them. The church or the
synagogue or the mosque, which promised redemption by
serving God and country, did not prepare them for the
betrayal of this civic religion, for the capacity we all
have for human atrocity, for the lies and myths used to mask
the reality of war. War is always about betrayal, betrayal
of the young by the old, of idealists by cynics and of
troops by politicians. This bitter knowledge of betrayal has
seeped into the ranks of American troops.
It has unleashed a new wave of embittered veterans not seen
since the Vietnam War. It has made it possible for us to
begin, again, to see war's death mask.
"And then, you know, my sort of sentiment of what the fuck
are we doing, that I felt that way in Iraq," said Sergeant
Ben Flanders, who estimated that he ran hundreds of convoys
in Iraq. "It's the sort of insanity of it and the fact that
it reduces it. Well, I think war does anyway, but I felt
like there was this enormous reduction in my compassion for
people, the only thing that wound up mattering is myself and
the guys that I was with. And everybody else be damned,
whether you are an Iraqi, I'm sorry, I'm sorry you live
here, I'm sorry this is a terrible situation, and I'm sorry
that you have to deal with all of, you know, army vehicles
running around and shooting, and these insurgents and all
this stuff.
"The first briefing you get when you get off the plane in
Kuwait, and you get off the plane and you're holding a
duffle bag in each hand," Millard remembered. "You've got
your weapon slung. You've got a web sack on your back.
You're dying of heat. You're tired. You're jet-lagged. Your
mind is just full of goop. And then, you're scared on top of
that, because, you know, you're in Kuwait, you're not in the
States anymore … so fear sets in, too. And they sit you into
this little briefing room and you get this briefing about
how, you know, you can't trust any of these fucking Hadjis,
because all these fucking Hadjis are going to kill you. And
Hadji is always used as a term of disrespect and usually,
with the 'f' word in front of it."
War is also the pornography of violence. It has a dark
beauty, filled with the monstrous and the grotesque. The
Bible calls it "the lust of the eye" and warns believers
against it. War allows us to engage in lusts and passions we
keep hidden in the deepest, most private interiors of our
fantasy life. It allows us to destroy not only things but
human beings. In that moment of wholesale destruction, we
wield the power to the divine, the power to revoke another
person's charter to live on this earth. The frenzy of this
destruction -- and when unit discipline breaks down, or
there was no unit discipline to begin with, frenzy is the
right word -- sees armed bands crazed by the poisonous
elixir our power to bring about the obliteration of others
delivers. All things, including human beings, become objects
-- objects to either gratify or destroy or both. Almost no
one is immune. The contagion of the crowd sees to that.
Human beings are machine gunned and bombed from the air,
automatic grenade launchers pepper hovels and neighbors with
high-powered explosive devices and convoys race through Iraq
like freight trains of death. These soldiers and Marines
have at their fingertips the heady ability to call in air
strikes and firepower that obliterate landscapes and
villages in fiery infernos. They can instantly give or
deprive human life, and with this power they became sick and
demented. The moral universe is turned upside down. All
human beings are used as objects. And no one walks away
uninfected. War thrusts us into a vortex of pain and
fleeting ecstasy. It thrusts us into a world where law is of
little consequence, human life is cheap and the
gratification of the moment becomes the overriding desire
that must be satiated, even at the cost of another's dignity
or life.
"A lot of guys really supported that whole concept that, you
know, if they don't speak English and they have darker skin,
they're not as human as us, so we can do what we want," said
Josh Middleton, who served in the 82nd Airborne in Iraq.
"And you know, when 20 year old kids are yelled at back and
forth at Bragg and we're picking up cigarette butts and
getting yelled at every day to find a dirty weapon. But over
here, it's like life and death. And 40-year-old Iraqi men
look at us with fear and we can -- do you know what I mean?
-- we have this power that you can't have. That's really
liberating. Life is just knocked down to this primal level
of, you know, you worry about where the next food's going to
come from, the next sleep or the next patrol and to stay
alive."
"It's like you feel like, I don't know, if you're a
caveman," he added. "Do you know what I mean? Just, you
know, I mean, this is how life is supposed to be. Life and
death, essentially. No TV. None of that bullshit."
It takes little in wartime to turn ordinary men into
killers. Most give themselves willingly to the seduction of
unlimited power to destroy, and all feel the peer pressure
to conform. Few, once in battle, find the strength to
resist. Physical courage is common on a battlefield. Moral
courage is not.
Military machines and state bureaucracies, who seek to make
us obey, seek also to silence those who return from war to
speak the truth, to hide from a public eager for stories of
war that fit the mythic narrative the essence of war which
is death.
Camilo Mejia, who eventually applied while still on active
duty to become a conscientious objector, said the ugly side
of American racism and chauvinism appeared the moment his
unit arrived in the Middle East. Fellow soldiers instantly
ridiculed Arab-style toilets because they would be "shitting
like dogs." The troops around him treated Iraqis, whose
language they did not speak and whose culture was alien,
little better than animals. The word "Hadji" swiftly became
a slur to refer to Iraqis, in much the same way "gook" was
used to debase the Vietnamese or "rag head" is used to
belittle those in Afghanistan.
Soon those around him ridiculed "Hadji food," "Hadji homes,"
and "Hadji music." Bewildered prisoners, who were rounded up
in useless and indiscriminate raids, were stripped naked,
and left to stand terrified and bewildered for hours in the
baking sun. They were subjected to a steady torrent of
verbal and physical abuse. "I experienced horrible
confusion," Mejia remembers, "not knowing whether I was more
afraid for the detainees or for what would happen to me if I
did anything to help them."
These scenes of abuse, which began immediately after the
American invasion, were little more than collective acts of
sadism. Mejia watched, not daring to intervene, yet
increasingly disgusted at the treatment of Iraqi civilians.
He saw how the callous and unchecked abuse of power first
led to alienation among Iraqis and spawned a raw hatred of
the occupation forces. When army units raided homes, the
soldiers burst in on frightened families, forced them to
huddle in the corners at gun point, and helped themselves to
food and items in the house.
"After we arrested drivers," he recalled, "we would choose
whichever vehicles we liked, fuel them from confiscated
jerry cans, and conduct undercover presence patrols in the
impounded cars.
"But to this day I cannot find a single good answer as to
why I stood by idly during the abuse of those prisoners
except, of course, my own cowardice," he also notes.
Iraqi families were routinely fired upon for getting too
close to check points, including an incident where an
unarmed father driving a car was decapitated by a 50-caliber
machine gun in front of his small son, although by then,
Mejia notes, "this sort of killing of civilians had long
ceased to arouse much interest or even comment." Soldiers
shot holes into cans of gasoline being sold alongside the
road and then tossed incendiary grenades into the pools to
set them ablaze. "It's fun to shoot shit up," a soldier
said. Some open fire on small children throwing rocks. And
when improvised explosive devices go off the troops fire
wildly into densely populated neighborhoods, leaving behind
innocent victims who become, in the callous language of war,
"collateral damage."
"We would drive on the wrong side of the highway to reduce
the risk of being hit by an IED," Mejia said of the deadly
roadside bombs. "This forced oncoming vehicles to move to
one side of the road, and considerably slowed down the flow
of traffic. In order to avoid being held up in traffic jams,
where someone could roll a grenade under our trucks, we
would simply drive up on sidewalks, running over garbage
cans and even hitting civilian vehicles to push them out of
the way. Many of the soldiers would laugh and shriek at
these tactics."
At one point the unit was surrounded by an angry crowd
protesting the occupation. Mejia and his squad opened fire
on an Iraqi holding a grenade, riddling the man's body with
bullets. Mejia checked his clip afterwards and determined
that he fired 11 rounds into the young man. Units, he said,
nonchalantly opened fire in crowded neighborhoods with heavy
M-240 Bravo machine guns, AT-4 launchers and Mark 19s, a
machine gun that spits out grenades.
"The frustration that resulted from our inability to get
back at those who were attacking us," Mejia writes, "led to
tactics that seemed designed simply to punish the local
population that was supporting them."
He watched soldiers from his unit abuse the corpses of Iraqi
dead. Mejia related how, in one incident, soldiers laughed
as an Iraqi corpse fell from the back of a truck.
"Take a picture of me and this motherfucker," one of the
soldiers who had been in Mejia's squad in third platoon
said, putting his arm around the corpse.
The shroud fell away from the body revealing a young man
wearing only his pants. There was a bullet hole in his
chest.
"Damn, they really fucked you up, didn't they!?" the soldier
laughed.
The scene, Mejia noted, was witnessed by the dead man's
brothers and cousins. Senior officers, protected in heavily
fortified compounds, rarely saw combat. They sent their
troops on futile missions in the quest to be awarded Combat
Infantry Badges. This recognition, Mejia notes, "was
essential to their further progress up the officer ranks."
This pattern meant that "very few high-ranking officers
actually got out into the action, and lower-ranking officers
were afraid to contradict them when they were wrong." When
the badges, bearing an emblem of a musket with the hammer
dropped, resting on top of an oak wreath, were finally
awarded, the commanders immediately brought in Iraqi tailors
to sew the badges on the left breast pockets of their desert
combat uniforms.
"This was one occasion when our leaders led from the front,"
Mejia noted bitterly. "They were among the first to visit
the tailors to get their little patches of glory sewn next
to their hearts."
The war breeds gratuitous and constant acts of violence.
"I mean, if someone has a fan, they're a white collar
family," said Phillip Chrystal, who carried out raids on
Iraqi homes in Kirkuk. "So we get started on this day, this
one, in particular. And it starts with the psy ops
[psychological operations] vehicles out there, you know,
with the big speakers playing a message in Arabic or Farsi
or Kurdish or whatever they happen to be saying, basically,
saying put your weapons, if you have them, next to the front
door in your house. Please come outside, blah, blah, blah,
blah. And we had Apaches flying over for security, if
they're needed, and it's also a good show of force. And we
were running around, and we'd done a few houses by this
point, and I was with my platoon leader, my squad leader and
maybe a couple other people, but I don't really remember.
"And we were approaching this one house, and this farming
area, they're, like, built up into little courtyards," he
said. "So they have like the main house, common area. They
have like a kitchen and then, they have like a storage
shed-type deal. And we were approaching, and they had a
family dog. And it was barking ferociously, because it was
doing its job. And my squad leader, just out of nowhere,
just shoots it. And he didn't -- mother fucker -- he shot it
and it went in the jaw and exited out. So I see this dog --
and I'm a huge animal lover. I love animals -- and this dog
has like these eyes on it and he's running around spraying
blood all over the place. And like, you know, the family is
sitting right there with three little children and a mom and
a dad horrified. And I'm at a loss for words. And so, I yell
at him. I'm like what the fuck are you doing.
"And so, the dog's yelping. It's crying out without a jaw.
And I'm looking at the family, and they're just scared. And
so, I told them I was like fucking shoot it, you know. At
least, kill it, because that can't be fixed. It's suffering.
And I actually get tears from just saying this right now,
but -- and I had tears then, too, -- and I'm looking at the
kids and they are so scared. So I got the interpreter over
with me and, you know, I get my wallet out and I gave them
20 bucks, because that's what I had. And, you know, I had
him give it to them and told them that I'm so sorry that
asshole did that. Which was very common. I don't know if
it's rednecks or what, but they feel that shooting dogs is
something that adds to one's manliness traits. I don't know.
I had a big problem with that.
"Was a report ever filed about it?" he asked. "Was anything
ever done? Any punishment ever dished out? No, absolutely
not. He was a sycophant down to the T."
We make our heroes out of clay. We laud their gallant deeds
and give them uniforms with colored ribbons on their chest
for the acts of violence they committed or endured. They are
our false repositories of glory and honor, of power, of
self-righteousness, of patriotism and self-worship, all that
we want to believe about ourselves. They are our plaster
saints of war, the icons we cheer to defend us and make us
and our nation great. They are the props of our civic
religion, our love of power and force, our belief in our
right as a chosen nation to wield this force against the
weak and rule. This is our nation's idolatry of itself. And
this idolatry has corrupted religious institutions, not only
here but in most nations, making it impossible for us to
separate the will of God from the will of the state.
Prophets are not those who speak of piety and duty from
pulpits -- few people in pulpits have much worth listening
to -- but it is the battered wrecks of men and women who
return from Iraq and speak the halting words we do not want
to hear, words that we must listen to and heed to know
ourselves. They tell us war is a soulless void. They have
seen and tasted how war plunges us to barbarity, perversion,
pain and an unchecked orgy of death. And it is their
testimonies alone that have the redemptive power to save us
from ourselves.
Chris Hedges, who
graduated from seminary at Harvard Divinity School, was a
foreign correspondent for nearly two decades fo The New York
Times and other publications. In his book, War Is a Force
That Gives Us Meaning (Public Affairs, 2002), Hedges gives
an account of the ‘intoxication’ of war, which he covered in
regions around the world, including El Salvador, Guatemala,
Nicaragua, Colombia, Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, the
Iraq, Bosnia and Kosovo. His most recent book is American
Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America (Free
Press, 2007).
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