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Winter Soldier
Hearings
By Aaron Glantz
10/03/08 "ICH"
-- - Get ready for the
horrible, honest reality of the American occupations of Iraq and
Afghanistan like you haven’t heard it before. For four days,
from March 13 through March 16, hundreds of U.S. veterans of the
two wars will descend on Washington and testify in the “Winter
Soldier” hearings about what they really did while they were
serving their country in Iraq. And their experiences aren’t
pretty.
The event is inspired by the Winter Solider tribunal held in
1971 by Vietnam War vets, including John Kerry. The name comes
from a quote from Thomas Paine, the revolutionary who rallied
George Washington’s troops at Valley Forge, saying: “These are
the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and sunshine
patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his
country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks
of man and woman."
Paine was trying to keep Washington’s army from deserting in
the face of a bitter winter and mounting defeats at the hands of
the British. Members of Iraq Veterans Against the War say the
same type of courage is needed to confront the evils unleashed
by the U.S. occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Lawless Atmosphere
"The problem that we face in Iraq is that policymakers in
leadership have set a precedent of lawlessness where we don't
abide by the rule of law, we don't respect international
treaties, argued former U.S. Army Sergeant Logan Laituri, who
served a tour in Iraq from 2004 to 2005 before being discharged
as a conscientious objector. “So when that atmosphere exists it
lends itself to criminal activity."
Laituri explained that precedent of lawlessness makes itself
felt in the rules of engagement handed down by commanders to
soldiers on the front lines. When he was stationed in Samarra,
for example, he said one of his fellow soldiers shot an unarmed
man while he walked down the street.
"The problem is that that soldier was not committing a crime
as you might call it because the rules of engagement were very
clear that no one was supposed to be walking down the street,"
Laituri said. "But I have a problem with that. You can't tell a
family to leave everything they know so you can bomb the shit
out of their house or their city. So while he definitely has
protection under the law, I don't think that legitimates that
type of violence."
Not Just Numbers
Aaron Hughes, a former member of the Illinois National Guard
who spent a year running convoys in Iraq, is getting involved
too. “We’re trying to create a space for veterans to speak out
and change the rhetoric around the war,” he said. “There are
human beings on both sides. There are not just numbers. That's
what missing in our culture.”
Hughes grew up in a basement apartment in Chicago and joined
the National Guard when he saw how successfully it provided
relief during heavy flooding on the Mississippi River.
But after being sent to Iraq, he came to see the military in
a different way. An art student at the University of Illinois at
the time he was called up, Hughes went back over the photos he
took while deployed in Iraq and altered them in an "attempt to
interpret the posture assumed as a soldier/tourist in the
surreal space of Iraq." Hughes' work was been shown at the
National Vietnam Veterans Art Museum in Chicago.
"I think it's wrong, looking back at it," he said. "How can
you not perceive it as a step away from your humanity? They
automatically start isolating you. They tell you your girlfriend
or your husband is not going to be there. They tell you not to
trust anyone but the military and they really start fostering
that as your sole relationship in life."
Equally Criminal Wars
The veterans also want to stress the similarities between the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"The exact same units that are getting the exact same
training and the exact same orders are getting sent to both Iraq
and Afghanistan," explained Perry O'Brien, a former U.S. Army
Medic who became a conscientious objector after his tour in
Afghanistan. "What we're seeing is a lot of similarities between
practices in both countries and both are equally criminal."
O’Brien even witnessed the abuse of dead bodies during his
tour. "When a patient would die, we would hear over the PA
system an announcement through the clinic saying 'Who wants to
learn how to do a chest tube?' or 'Who wants to know what a
human heart looks like?,'” he said. “Rather than giving the
proper treatment of the dead, the body would become a cadaver
for medical practice with no consent from the victim."
First Winter Soldier
When the first Winter Soldier hearings were held 37 years ago
in 1971, the United States had reached a point in the war that
was very similar to what’s going on today. Public opinion had
moved decidedly against the war. Coalition partners like
Australia and New Zealand were withdrawing their troops. The
Pentagon Papers had just been released showing a long list of
official deception from Washington. And yet, the war continued
with President Richard Nixon pushing ahead with an expansion of
U.S. intervention in Southeast Asia, which included the invasion
of Cambodia.
Vietnam Veterans Against the War were determined to play a
role in changing that. They gathered in Detroit to explain what
they had really done when they were deployed overseas serving
their countries. They showed, through their first-person
testimony that atrocities like the My Lai massacre were not
isolated exceptions.
Among those in attendance was 27-year-old Navy Lieutenant
John Kerry, who had served on a Swift Boat in Vietnam. Three
months after the hearings, Kerry took his case to Congress and
spoke before a jammed Senate Foreign Relations Committee
hearing. Television cameras lined the walls, and veterans packed
the seats.
Then and Now: Kerry and Mejia
"Many very highly decorated veterans testified to war crimes
committed in Southeast Asia," Kerry told the committee,
describing the events of the Winter Soldier gathering. "It is
impossible to describe to you exactly what did happen in Detroit
- the emotions in the room, and the feelings of the men who were
reliving their experiences in Vietnam. They relived the absolute
horror of what this country, in a sense, made them do."
In one of the most famous antiwar speeches of the era, Kerry
concluded: "Someone has to die so that President Nixon won't be
- and these are his words - ‘the first president to lose a war'.
We are asking Americans to think about that, because how do you
ask a man to be the last man to die in Vietnam? How do you ask a
man to be the last man to die for a mistake?"
Members of Iraq Veterans Against the War intend to play a
similarly historic role.
“We have given a blanket invitation to Congress,” said Camilo
Mejia, the Chair of the Board of Iraq Veterans Against the War.
”We hope the Congress will give these hearings the same
attention they did during the Vietnam era.”
But action from politicians is only one possible outcome.
Mejia says IVAW also hopes Winter Soldier will increase the size
and strength of GI Resistance against the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
"This event is going to empower soldiers to follow their
conscience whatever that means for them," said Mejia, who
deserted the military after five months in Iraq. "The kinds of
things we're talking about are non-partisan. They're
non-political. They have to do with human being trapped in this
atrocity producing situation."
Breaking Point
Many observers believe the Army is already close to its
breaking point. Last week, top Army officials told the Senate
Armed Services Committee that it’s is under serious strain and
must reduce the length of combat tours as soon as possible.
Gen. George Casey, the Army chief of Staff said, "The cumulative
effects of the last six-plus years at war have left our Army out
of balance."
Casey told the Senate Armed Services Committee Tuesday that
cutting the time soldiers spend in combat is an integral part of
reducing the stress on the force. Last year, Senate Republicans
and President George W. Bush sabotaged Democratic attempts to
ensure troops as much rest time at home as they spent on their
most recent tour overseas. Cycling troops through three or four
tours in Iraq and Afghanistan has been the only way Bush has
been able to maintain a force of over 140,000 US soldiers in
Iraq.
For most Americans, “this war has been statistics, it's been
rhetoric,” said Hughes, the former member of the Illinois
National Guard. “But for the American soldiers who've served
there it is personal, and for the Iraqi people who live there,
it's personal. That's why our testimony is important."
Streaming Video and
Audio
Video and photographic evidence will also be presented, and
the Winter Soldier testimony and panels will be broadcast live
on nationally Pacifica Radio and satellite television station
Free Speech TV Channel 9415. Streaming video on ivaw.org, as
well as audio at KPFA.org and warcomeshome.org will enable
people to tune in across the world.
The War Comes Home site, which I edit and is associated with
the San Francisco Pacifica radio station KPFA, will also feature
bios, photos, and videos of the speakers. Online audio clips of
the testimonials will be posted as the hearing progresses.
Space at the National Labor College in Silver Spring,
Maryland, the Washington, DC suburb where the hearings will
occur, is limited. Antiwar activists are not being encouraged to
show up, but are instead being asked to have listening or
viewing parties in their own communities.
Independent journalist Aaron Glantz, a Foreign Policy In
Focus contributor, has reported extensively from Iraq throughout
the U.S. occupation. He is author of How America Lost Iraq
(Penguin). He will co-host the Pacifica radio broadcast of the
Winter Soldier hearings, along with veteran Aimee Allison and
both of them will blog from the hearing at
www.warcomeshome.org ,
where listeners will be able to leave their comments.
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