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Immoral: Ignoring the Routine Killings of Civilians in Terror Wars

By Adil E. Shamoo and Bonnie Bricker, AlterNet. Posted April 5, 2008.


Imagine the world's reaction if Palestinians had killed 120 Israelis, or if the Iraqi "insurgents" had killed 120 Americans.

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The recent killing of six Iraqis by a U.S. helicopter calls into question, yet again, our policy of killing suspected insurgents from the air. Our military has admitted that those killed were members of a U.S.-funded group and that it was "a mistake." Air strikes such as these are often the safest way for a military force to strike a possible enemy, but the routine nature of these actions has another insidious and ultimately self-defeating consequence: the unintended but frequent killing and maiming of an innocent populace.

A suspected terrorist link -- especially when officials try to establish an Al-Qaeda affiliation -- seems to be a sufficient justification for any military action, however immoral it might otherwise be.

The most disturbing aspect of this news is that most American journalists, political analysts, and politicians do not dare to question the morality of dropping bombs or missiles on the hideouts of suspected -- but not demonstrated -- terrorists. It has become routine; it is the norm in Iraq. The U.S. arsenal of so-called "precision weapons" creates an impression that the bombs kill only terrorists, but the number of civilian deaths in these "precise" actions usually exceeds by many multiples the number of actual terrorists killed. And, on not a few occasions, the whole thing has turned out to be a disastrous mistake. American apologies for those civilian deaths begin to sound hollow when these actions are repeated again and again.

Israel's systematic use of "targeted assassinations" by dropping missiles and bombs on civilian homes has not resolved its current crisis; instead, the anger whipped up by the deaths of 120 Gazans in late February and early March resulted in a repugnant bloodbath in a Jerusalem seminary. In a Fox News report about the incident, the accused killer was described "as being transfixed in recent days by the news of bloodshed in Gaza," by his sister who said he was unable to sleep as a result of his grief. A lack of morality breeds more acts of immorality, in an endless and bloody cycle.

We rightly condemn suicide bombings that specifically target civilians. But while American forces do not specifically target civilians, we accept their killing in large numbers as a routine event in our military actions. It is the "routine" nature of this killing that fuels the perception that the United States and its closest allies are fighting a war against the entire Muslim world.

The number of civilians killed in proportion to those targeted is astounding. For each intended "target," many more innocents are killed and maimed. The number of Iraqi deaths since the invasion in March 2003 is staggering no matter whose numbers you believe. The Iraqi Body Count gives the low estimate of nearly 100,000 Iraqi deaths while the British Opinion Research Business gives the estimate of about 1 million Iraqi deaths since the beginning of the war. The World Health Organization and the Iraqi Ministry of Health estimates 151,000 deaths. The original study from Johns Hopkins University published by Lancet gave the estimate of 600,000 deaths. Reviewing these numbers, it would be fair to estimate deaths in the hundreds of thousands.


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Adil E. Shamoo, born and raised in Baghdad, is a professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus. Bonnie Bricker is a teacher and freelance writer.

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View:
The biography of Norm
Posted by: talkville on Apr 6, 2008 1:07 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The tragic and unfortunate fact, evidenced from the smallest details to the most general, is that the vast majority of US citizens not only ignore but outright deny, to self and others, any distinctions as to status (civilian, military, worker, merchant, etc) of Others outside the borders of this country (great numbers even constrict themselves even more to their towns, cities, states and neighborhoods!). Not understanding such events as war, terror, atrocity, cruelty, misery by means of Experiencing but only by means of Imaginations, this citizenry can afford to tailor and edit The Story to its own satisfaction -- which is all that matters. The value of the concept and the reality of "an Iraqi" beside the value of a concept and reality of "an American" is reflected in the thoroughly, utterly complete and barbaric Ratio of Counted and Calculated and Tabulated deaths of US soldiers and the Estimated, Statistical and almost certainly Under-counted deaths, maimings, exiles and immiserations of Iraqis.

Any post-WWII Proxy Conflicts perpetrated by this country has the same contours.

And here, in this country, all of this is maintained not in experiencing but in imaginations -- nourished from birth on Stories much like this one. That's why it's more popular in this country to seek Escapes rather than Liberations.

Reality and Truth are no Friends of Happiness, Success, Excellence, or Virtue or of that weirdly self-annihilating concept contrived by the Right: "Moral Clarity", a hypocrisy of Monsters-- they bring tidings of "the Right to Life" to the benighted and un-civilized and thoroughly sub-human Iraqi People. From Above and Pushing Buttons. That is Justice and Liberty their God is Speaking raining down upon them!!

A first step in recognition of Animality and Barbarism is self-critique. What do we do? Ignore and deny and go to the movies or discuss things in a Koffee Klatch. By means of Imaginations.

And Norm goes about his or her business, buying, selling, working, paying, playing, laughing, crying, eyes up-lifted and beholding The American Dream always the same distance away as before.

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The price paid
Posted by: carbon-based on Apr 6, 2008 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem with this kind of war, or any war for that matter, is civilian deaths.

Ridding the world of Saddam will go down as a noble cause. The subsequent killing of Iraqi civilians will forever overshadow it.

In the end , it's better to leave the Iraqi's and Iranians alone and in what ever form of society they, as a population, want. The price paid for their "freedom" from Saddam isn't worth it in their eyes.

Like Vietnam, they'd rather live under abusive rule then fight for freedom and we shouldn't care at all - it's not our country!

As an aside, the world doesn't seem to concerned with Israeli deaths as much as they do about Palestinian deaths. The Palestinians can , and do send rockets into Israel all day every day and no one seems to notice, except Israel.

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Stand for Something
Posted by: Bailey Reason on Apr 6, 2008 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
War Without End

As we enter the sixth year of this immoral undertaking, what is most frustrating is the lack of intellectual curiosity that my educated, white friends display about the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. They completely discount the $1 trillion price tag for the Iraq war, they refuse to accept that 1 million Iraqi civilians have perished and they dismiss the resurgence of the Taliban in the tribal areas of Northwest Pakistan. When confronted with factual information, they question the sources.

Perhaps our country's mental incapacity to accept the reality of what we have wrought lies in the individual's denial of having been taken for a sucker. The classic line of, "I just can't believe it's that bad," is rarely followed by a promise to delve into the issue more deeply. Information provided to support a point of view rarely provokes comments or feedback.

I find the dynamics of this equation to be completely dysfunctional. They have become a mirror image of our national lack of leadership and a sad commentary on what constitutes personal responsibility.

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I'm sorry to break the news to these authors
Posted by: Earthian on Apr 8, 2008 4:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They wrote:

"We are a nation with a long history of taking the high moral ground."

Sadly, we also have a long history of war crimes. The 1818 invasion of Florida; the attack on Mexico in the 1840s and annexing half the country; attacking the Philippines at the end of the 19th century killing over 600,000 civilians are some of the early war crimes of the US. Then it only got worse. The mass fire-bombing of European and Japanese cities; the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; and invading Vietnam and killing over 2 million—these actions are not the high moral ground. They are war crimes. The US has killed millions *since* WWII. The solution is the morality these authors call for. And also an adherance to existing international laws, starting with the UN Charter, the Convention on Torture, and the standards of the Nuremberg Tribunal. And to do that, it doesn't help to distort the record by suggesting some high moral ground idea. The US was born amid brutal European powers and genocide against the New World, along with the horrors of slavery. To change this pattern, to live by a compassionate, lawful foreign policy, we need to see our history clearly, not idealize it.

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