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Iraq and
Endless War
By Robert C. Koehler
August 15, 2014 "ICH"
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Our kills are
clean and secular; theirs are messy and religious.
“In their
effort to create a caliphate across parts of Iraq
and Syria,” CNN tells us, “ISIS fighters have
slaughtered civilians as they take over cities in
both countries.
“In Syria, the
group put some of its victims’ severed heads on
poles.”
Stomach-churning as this is, the context in which it
is reported – as simplistic maneuvering of public
opinion – numbs me to its horror, because it quietly
justifies a larger, deeper horror waiting in the
wings. To borrow a phrase from Benjamin Netanyahu,
this is telegenic brutality. It’s just what the U.S.
war machine needs to justify the next all-out
assault on Iraq.
“In another
instance caught on camera,” the CNN report
continues, “a man appears to be forced to his knees,
surrounded by masked militants who identify
themselves on video as ISIS members. They force the
man at gunpoint to ‘convert’ to Islam, then behead
him.”
This is
positively medieval. In contrast, when we kill
Iraqis, it’s quick and neat, as emotionless as a
chess move. The same CNN story informs us: “Iraqi
officials said U.S. airstrikes Saturday killed 16
ISIS fighters, and an Iraqi airstrike in Sinjar
killed an additional 45 ISIS fighters, Iraq state
media reported.”
That’s it. No
big deal. The dead we’re responsible for have no
human qualities whatsoever, and our killing them is
as consequence-free as cleaning out the
refrigerator. It’s simply necessary, because these
guys are jihadists, and, well . . .
“The main U.S.
strategic priority now should be rolling back and
defeating ISIS so it can’t establish a terrorist
caliphate,” the Wall Street Journal editorialized
several days ago. “Such a state will become a mecca
for jihadists who will train and then disperse to
kill around the world. They will attempt to strike
Americans in ways that grab world attention,
including the U.S. homeland. A strategy merely to
contain ISIS does not reduce this threat.”
And here’s
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, saying the same
thing with more hysteria on Fox News, as quoted by
Paul Waldman in the Washington Post: Obama’s
“responsibility as president is to defend this
nation. If he does not go on the offensive against
ISIS, ISIL, whatever you want to call these guys,
they are coming here. This is not just about
Baghdad. This is not just about Syria. It is about
our homeland. . . .
“Do you really
want to let America be attacked? . . . Mr.
President, if you don’t adjust your strategy, these
people are coming here.”
The
belligerence that passes for patriotism has never
been more reckless. I was stunned by these arguments
a decade ago; the fact that they’re coming back
pretty much intact, rising from their own ashes to
call for a new war to quell the horrors created by
the old one, pushes me to a new level of incredulous
despair. Fear springs eternal and can always be
summoned. War devours its own lessons.
As Ivan Eland
wrote recently at Huffington Post: “In war, the most
ruthless groups grab the weapons and use them on
everyone else. If doubt exists about this
phenomenon, when ISIS recently invaded Iraq, it
disarmed the better-equipped Iraqi military and sent
it on the run. In its current air campaign against
forces of the now renamed IS, American airpower is
fighting its own weaponry.”
He added:
“With such a great recent track record, one would
think that American politicians would be too
embarrassed to get re-involved militarily in Iraq.
But they now think they need to fight the monster
that they created. But if IS is more ferocious than
its ancestor, al Qaeda in Iraq, what more formidable
creature are they now creating in opposition to U.S.
bombing?”
Let’s let this
sink in. We completely destabilized Iraq in our now
officially forgotten “war on terror,” displacing
millions of people, killing hundreds of thousands
(and by some estimates more than a million),
shattering the country’s infrastructure and
polluting its environment with war’s endless array
of toxins. In the process of doing all this, we
stirred up unimaginable levels of animosity, which
slowly militarized and became the present Islamic
State, which is viciously and ruthlessly taking the
country back. Now, with our ignorance about Iraq’s
socio-political complexity intact, we see no
alternative but to jump back into a bombing campaign
against it, if not a far wider war.
President
Obama and the moderate Democrats see this as a
limited, “humanitarian” intervention, while the
Republicans and the hawkish Dems are clamoring for a
major killfest in order, once again, to protect “the
homeland,” which otherwise they would prefer to
abandon for tax purposes.
And the
mainstream analysis remains as shallow as sports
commentary. Military intervention, whether
full-bore, boots-on-the-ground, or limited to bombs
and missiles, is always the answer, because war
always looks like a solution. What’s missing above
all else is soul-searching of any sort.
Meanwhile,
Iraq and its people continue to suffer, either
directly at our hands or at the hands of the
monsters we’ve created. As the arms dealers would
say, mission accomplished.
Robert Koehler is an award-winning,
Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated
writer. His book, Courage
Grows Strong at the Wound (Xenos
Press), is still available. Contact him at
koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at
commonwonders.com.
© 2014 TRIBUNE
CONTENT AGENCY, INC.
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