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War on Iraq

How the U.S. Military Turned Me into a Terrorist

By Aaron Glantz, Haymarket Books. Posted October 10, 2008.


A powerful excerpt from 'Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan' lays bare the racism at the core of the Iraq occupation.
michaelprysner
Corporal Michael Prysner, Aerial Intelligence Specialist, U.S. Army Reserve
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In March of this year, a courageous group of veterans brought the war home, at a historic event held in Silver Spring, Md., inspired by Vietnam veterans a generation before. "Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan" convened more than 200 soldiers who have served in the so-called "War on Terror;" like their fellow soldiers before them, who shared stories that laid bare the nightmare of Vietnam, these veterans bore witness to the crimes that have been committed in Americans' names during the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. The hearings lasted four days; in their testimony, soldiers described how the discarding of the military's rules of engagement and its systematic dehumanization of Iraqi and Afghan civilians has led to horrible acts of violence against innocent men, women and children. "These are not isolated incidents," was a common refrain, even as the episodes they described seemed exceptionally brutal. For many of the veterans, it was the first time they had told their stories.

Now, the searing testimony has been compiled in an important new book:

Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupation, edited by Aaron Glantz and published by Haymarket Books. I strongly encourage you to buy the book, preferably though the Web site of Iraq Veterans Against the War, which organized the Winter Soldier hearings and continues to hold similar events in cities across the country. All proceeds of books purchased through IVAW will go to support its crucial work.

The following excerpt comes from Michael Prysner, a corporal in the Army Reserve who came home in February 2004.

-- Liliana Segura, Editor, War on Iraq Special Coverage

When I first joined the army, I was told that racism no longer existed in the military. A legacy of inequality and discrimination was suddenly washed away by something called the Equal Opportunity Program. We would sit through mandatory classes, and every unit had an EO representative to ensure that no elements of racism could resurface. The army seemed firmly dedicated to smashing any hint of racism.

Then September 11 happened, and I began to hear new words like "towel-head," and "camel jockey," and the most disturbing, "sand nigger." These words did not initially come from my fellow lower-enlisted soldiers, but from my superiors: my platoon sergeant, my first sergeant, my battalion commander. All the way up the chain of command, these viciously racist terms were suddenly acceptable.

When I got to Iraq in 2003, I learned a new word, "haji." Haji was the enemy. Haji was every Iraqi. He was not a person, a father, a teacher, or a worker. It's important to understand where this word came from. To Muslims, the most important thing is to take a pilgrimage to Mecca, the Hajj. Someone who has taken this pilgrimage is a haji. It's something that, in traditional Islam, is the highest calling in the religion. We took the best thing from Islam and made it into the worst thing.

Since the creation of this country, racism has been used to justify expansion and oppression. Native Americans were called "savages," the Africans were called all sorts of things to excuse slavery, and Vietnam veterans know the multitude of words used to justify that imperialist war.

So haji was the word we used. It was the word we used on this particular mission I'm going to talk about. We've heard a lot about raids and kicking down the doors of people's houses and ransacking their houses, but this was a different kind of raid.


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Aaron Glantz is the author of two upcoming books on Iraq: The War Comes Home: Washington's Battle Against America's Veterans (UC Press) and Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan (Haymarket). He edits the Web site WarComesHome.org.

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View:
The Real Clash of Civilizations
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Oct 11, 2008 12:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The real conflict isn't between Christians and Jews on one side and Muslims on the other. It's between the majority of people of all faiths, or none at all, who value peace, tolerance and goodwill and the radical, fundamentalist minority of all faiths, and some atheists as well, who value violence, bigotry and hatred toward those who are different. One sees more and more of these angry, spiteful people at McCain/Palin rallies and hears them on talk radio.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Have to disagree.... Posted by: donl51
» These guys deserve a medal Posted by: donl51
Still proud?
Posted by: maestra on Oct 11, 2008 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shame!

I respect your bravery in telling this story, and correctly feeling shame and disgust. What about the others? When will it stop?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

I applaud
Posted by: LOVELYT. on Oct 11, 2008 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This soldier for telling the truth. I haven't even read the article. But I've spoken to over 100 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. Most of them feel like they are creating more attacks on us by blowing up these people in front of their small children. Or dragging them out of their homes, stripping them down and much worse.

I asked anyone reading this;
What would you do if you know you've lived your life exactly the way you were raised. Believing the way you were taught to believe. Then someone comes to your door pointing a gun at your father's head and/or your mother's pregnant belly and orders you outside?

It sounds like living black and dealing with law enforcement. What's the face of Terror again?

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» RE: I applaud Posted by: umrayya
Israel's FedEx to America
Posted by: weathered on Oct 11, 2008 5:41 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another invoice for $$ Billions, a cd-rom of problems we never had before and a jar of Vaseline.

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» Do you live under a ROCK? Posted by: stellabloo
Guilt
Posted by: taxidriver on Oct 11, 2008 7:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The soldier should not feel guilty--he was doing his duty to the best of his ability. It's the people who sent him there who are guilty--but the sad thing is that these people feel absolutely no guilt, because they always think they're right.

When you think America is the greatest force for good in the world--and you believe in American exceptionalism--you simply dismiss such stories as either dishonest, misguided, or unpatriotic.

But it is patriotic to speak the truth to power, even when those in power ignore you or attempt to squelch you.

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» His duty Posted by: EinMD
» RE: His duty Posted by: umrayya
» Clarification Posted by: EinMD
» On the contrary Posted by: harryf200
» trials of Nazis Posted by: Tom Tele
I'm sorry ...
Posted by: stellabloo on Oct 11, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... but I have to confess that I was moved to tears by that article.

The current american administration has been part and parcel of this since 2001. The least hint of moderation was painted as TREASON. Now I hear finger-pointing and talk of "voting independent".

Right now, the canadian people are coming together to stop the pro-american Harper government from taking a majority vote in our upcoming election.

Not because the economy melted down, not because we can't pay our medical bills, not because of the escalating and horrific cost of armed conflict, not the energy crisis - but because of the government's poor record on environmental issues (!).

And if WE can do that, then surely - dear neighbours, you can come together for the love of this PLANET and vote the warmongering GOP bastards out.

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» So was I . . . Posted by: Scientz
» RE: I'm sorry ... Posted by: Joni50
These individuals offer comment on the society from which they come from...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Oct 11, 2008 8:58 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...rather than on the military, as a subsegment of that society. Yes, people in our society commit nasty, criminal acts. Yes, some folks with those tendencies will find themselves in uniform.

American citizens chose a group of leaders who wanted to use the military to gift Afghani's and Iraqi's with "freedom" and "democracy", as if a) the two ideas were related in any form or fashion, and b) it was something you can give a peoples under the best of circumstances.

So, hooray--civilian leadership sent in troops to establish a democracy under which switching religion/cult beliefs is punishable by death, and the appropriate punishment for a woman who has been raped is, not uncommonly, death--for the woman. Better than the Taliban? Probably so, even still. The difference is that teaching foreign nationals to value human life and liberty is NOT worth the lives our folks, and that even if it was, our military--the one we let our leaders send abroad--is not trained nor equipped to carry out that mission.

So, fellow citizens, we've deployed an arm of our society overseas and they did exactly what they were trained to do: engage an organized army, eliminate it, and crush its ability, real or perceived(!!!) to attack or menace us.

And then we let our leadership forget about them--gave them no valid mission, just an open-ended spiel about freedom, democracy, insurgents, and stability. Small wonder that some of the more loony-tunes inclined individuals in our society go quite bonkers under such conditions. Add bullets and car bombs, and not knowing moment-to-moment whether the next moment will come or not, and some individuals will snap faster than others. Folks get killed over forty ounces of beer here in the states; you put a guy who watched the guy next to him get turned into goo the day before in a similar situation the next day, and he's apt to have a hindered ability to judge a credible threat. Only difference being that we as a nation placed that individual in that situation with a forty caliber weapon, while Joe on the corner decided for himself that forty ounces was worth killing over.

Actually, its a small wonder that such a small number of the hundreds of thousands that have rotated through the M.E. in the last few years haven't gone lost it. It speaks volumes about the maturity, discipline, and restraint of our people in uniform that we have tasked sacrificing themselves for a never-ending pipe-dream mission that our electorate has delegated our civilian leadership to have them perform.

For us.

Think about your role in facilitating this nastiness before you denigrate the whole of the armed forces because a few individuals end up doing things there that happen every day in our own neighborhoods, bombing runs and tanks going after armed targets aside.

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Disingenuous sympathy
Posted by: Ladydog on Oct 11, 2008 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I agree that the first poster is a nonsensical crackpot, this conflict is NOT only about oil, and is disingenuous, after all we know, to claim otherwise.

Also, do your purported sympathies for the Palestinians only extend to them provided they meekly resettle outside of their ancestral homeland, and give up their claims for return or at the very least restitution, as all refugees are entitled to under international law? Or is the only "good" Palestinian a silent one?

The biggest injustice in the Middle East, an area filled with them, one worse than the other, is that most of the world, including Arab states and so-called progressives like yourself, ultimately wish they would just go away and disappear.

To claim that the war in Iraq is in no way historically or politically connected with this injustice is just plain wrong, and is one big reason why we are going to be continued to be mired in bloody, expensive and futile conflicts in that region for a long time to come, regardless of who is elected in November.

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» Oil, Oil, Oil, Oil Posted by: EinMD
» Believe what you want. Posted by: EinMD
» basic fallacy Posted by: Tom Tele
Oops!
Posted by: Ladydog on Oct 11, 2008 10:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I meant to post this under "Israel's FedEx" and in response to stellabloo. Apologies.

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Prosecute the real terrorists
Posted by: Pop on Oct 11, 2008 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We've had the very same thing in every war the US (routinely instigated by lies)for pure greed for wealth and power. The citizens fall for the government/corporate media every time and are suckered in when it is twisted into a Patriotic issue, and for our flag. Now we "support" our troops knowing the heinous criminal lies that our leaders committed to get us into killing the innocent people of the Middle East, rather than demanding that all of our troops be taken back home.
We can only get our country back on track by demanding that our leaders be held to account for their tyranny. Impeach the Bush regime and prosecute them for their crimes agains humanity and our constitution!

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Racism was not why the soldiers were sent to Iraq. OIL is the reason !
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 11, 2008 11:54 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This one should be obvious. If it weren't for oil in Iraq, do you people really think the neocons would have planned this out? They've been planning this since the late 1990s even before 9/11/2001. 9/11/2001 just happened to give them an "easy" pass because they had a ripe time period to cash in on people's fears and grief and turn that anger in the wrong direction all the while silently drawing up their oily plans. It's the business stupid, not race !

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Stanimal
Posted by: drfun on Oct 11, 2008 5:26 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The military must make a name of the enemy in order to brainwash the soldier into believing they are evil.

Nip for Japan, Chinc for China, Charlie for Viet-Cong, Hun for German, Spic for a Mexican. Over the course of decades of war the US has embroiled itself in the names and places change, but its core reason is the same.

What will the 3rd Birgade be calling innocent US citizens when they begin firing upon the masses?

The Bu$h cabal has been using the term, unpatriotic. Though it best describes the fascist's Goon's & Thug's that make up Bu$h & Co.

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susie spf
Posted by: susiespf on Oct 11, 2008 8:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
dear aaron,
thank you for your comments, and your reflections,
my son served 2 tours in iraq as well -
of course, you don't tell your family much, so they won't look at you, that way.
we will accept and love you ,
whatever you have done, and whatever you have seen, but you all don't want to chance it,
and some way, what you all have done and seen,

it is better if we don't see and accept it,
so that it is not acknowledged,
by those who will know you for the rest of your life.
we have never been put in that circumstance, and have never had to made that kind of decision.
myself, i will not judge you, or blame you.
we all are made up of good and bad decisions.
each day, we wake up,
and decide how we want to live our day.

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» RE: susie spf Posted by: maestra
Regarding Wars...
Posted by: jlowelld on Oct 13, 2008 11:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Resolve then that on this very ground, with small flags waving and tinny blasts on tiny trumpets, we shall meet the enemy, and not only may he be ours, he may be us."
--Walt Kelly, The Pogo Papers, 1953

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Apologies due
Posted by: Tom Tele on Oct 13, 2008 11:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think we owe the ex-Soviets a huge apology for not allowing them to attempt a secular government in Afghanistan. They probably would have failed but arming Osama et al to humiliate the USSR worked out great for us ,didn't it?

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