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War on Iraq

Brilliant Soldiers' Dissent

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted October 17, 2007.


The Iraq war has produced brilliant messages of dissent from the ranks that should cause us to stop in our tracks and reconsider what we have wrought.
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When will we listen to the troops? I'm not talking about soldiers used as props for a George Bush photo op, telling reporters what Washington wants to hear. The military is disciplined and thus accustomed, from Gen. David Petraeus on down, to toeing the official line.

But the Iraq war has also produced brilliant messages of dissent from the ranks that should cause us to stop in our tracks and reconsider what we have wrought. First, a group of sergeants came forward, and on Tuesday it was the captains' turn to speak out.

In "The War as We Saw It," an eloquent Op-Ed article published in The New York Times in August, seven sergeants summarized the futility of their 15 months of fighting in Iraq: "To believe that Americans, with an occupying force that long ago outlived its reluctant welcome, can win over a recalcitrant local population and win this counterinsurgency is farfetched." After penning that crie de cour, two of the soldiers died in Iraq and a third was severely wounded.

On Tuesday, The Washington Post printed "The Real Iraq We Knew," by 12 former Army captains, all of whom served in Iraq. It begins: "Today marks five years since the authorization of military force in Iraq, setting Operation Iraqi Freedom in motion. Five years on, the Iraq war is as undermanned and under-resourced as it was from the start. And, five years on Iraq is in shambles. As Army captains who served in Baghdad and beyond, we've seen the corruption and the sectarian division. We understand what it's like to be stretched too thin. And we know when it's time to get out."

How come those brave veterans know it's time to get out, but leading Democrats, who voted for the war to be authorized, are still pussyfooting about quickly removing the troops from this ever-deepening quagmire? They're jockeying for political advantage, knowing that drawing out the war hurts the Republicans. It is a deeply cynical ploy that works only because with our all-volunteer military, most Americans don't have to face the choice of sacrificing themselves or their loved ones in a futile and losing war.

Yes, it costs the taxpayers, but so do the "Halo 3" video games they are purchasing in record numbers, and for most Americans, Iraq is a make-believe war. Even the cost seems unreal, as Bush is the first president in U.S. history to cut taxes in a time of war, with the result that more than a trillion dollars in long-term obligations will not come due while his administration has to foot the bills.

If there was a draft, people would be in the streets demanding an end to this carnage, which now threatens to go on for decades. That is precisely what the neocon ideologues who got us into this mess built their fantasies on: a volunteer force, supplemented by hundreds of thousands of contractors (including 50,000 mercenary troops like those from Blackwater) and the purchase of largely irrelevant but highly profitable high-tech weaponry, although they forgot about simple armor for the troops.

The most fraudulent neocon claim was that pro-Western, even pro-Israel Iraqis, like their favorite, the now totally discredited Ahmed Chalabi, would police the country as surrogates for the U.S., and that Iraqi oil sales would pay for it all. The 12 captains, who worked with the locals, are very clear as to the forlorn outcome of that plan: " ... many of us witnessed the exploitation of U.S. tax dollars by Iraqi officials and military officers. Sabotage and graft have had a particularly deleterious impact on Iraq's oil industry which still fails to produce the revenue that Pentagon war planners hoped would pay for Iraq's reconstruction."

As for that other ongoing illusion -- that we are turning power over to Iraqi forces we have trained -- the captains write: "Iraqi soldiers quit at will. The police are effectively controlled by militias. And ... corruption is debilitating. U.S. tax dollars enrich self-serving generals and support the very elements that will battle each other after we're gone."

Building an empire on the cheap and by proxy doesn't work. If you want one, and of course most of us don't, since only a few fat cats benefit from such imperial adventures, you need a vast conscript army.

As the captains put it: "There is only one way we might be able to succeed in Iraq. To continue an operation of this intensity and duration, we would have to abandon our volunteer military for compulsory service. Short of that, our best option is to leave Iraq immediately." Enough said.

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See more stories tagged with: iraq war, soldiers, veterans, dissent

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.

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A Simple Solution
Posted by: AlexLawyer on Oct 17, 2007 6:51 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe the troops should emulate the Vietnam-era Air National Guard record of their Commander in Cheif, the Great Prevaricator, and desert. Bush bailed out of the guard when drug testing was introduced, got away with it and lied about it; this despite his and his family's support for the Vietnam war. Now he is prosecuting Watada for his principled refusal to fight. But if the troops deserted en masse, and the Congress granted them the same sort of immunity they've already granted to torturers and war criminals, we'd be out in a flash.

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

» the only solution Posted by: Constitutionalist75
» RE: A Simple Solution Posted by: dmb8762
» Lt. Watada Posted by: Slmncty
» RE: A Simple Solution Posted by: Unite1
Keep speaking, troops
Posted by: hagwind on Oct 18, 2007 5:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cannon fodder isn't supposed to have brains or hearts. "Grunts" aren't supposed to have voices. Usually it's only their family and friends who know better. But in time of war they know the truth better than anybody. Speak to Congress, speak on the op-ed page of the New York Times and your hometown paper, speak in the kitchens and living rooms of your homes. If you go down and speak at the local American Legion or VFW hall, you should get a Medal of Honor.

I learned Buffy Sainte-Marie's great song "The Universal Soldier" during the Vietnam War. It's been echoing through my head ever since:

He's five feet two and he's six feet four
He fights with missiles and with spears
He's all of 31 and he's only 17
He's been a soldier for a thousand years

He's a Catholic, a Hindu, an atheist, a Jain,
a Buddhist and a Baptist and a Jew
and he knows he shouldn't kill
and he knows he always will
kill you for me my friend and me for you. . . .

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» RE: Keep speaking, troops Posted by: Unite1
How about Jesse Macbeth?
Posted by: pammers on Oct 18, 2007 6:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You know, the guy who "witnessed atrocities in Iraq". He was "awarded a purple heart". He was another of these dissenters paraded around. Turns out he flunked out of boot camp after only 44 days, never going to Iraq to witness the atrocities that he claimed like American soldiers hanging up dead Iraqi's in a mosque.
Or Adam Kokesh, now there's another "phony soldier".

What a bunch of crappy crap crap.

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» RE: How about Jesse Macbeth? Posted by: mnascimento
» RE: How about Jesse Macbeth? Posted by: mountainmama
Courage to Resist
Posted by: ilene on Oct 18, 2007 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This just re-inforces why I don't contribute to any of my elected representatives' coffers nor to the Democrats. They're all self serving cowards.
My monetary contributions go to "Courage to Resist", supporting the real heros who have served, refuse to continue serving and speak out for an end to this madness.

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12 GameBoy Warcrims, far from 'Brilliant'
Posted by: Bl4ckP0pe on Oct 19, 2007 3:53 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
@ Robert Scheer, will you ever tire of suckling Pentagone Schlongster?

How many murders does each of these dozen bastards have on his consciensce already? I'd be very surprised if it were less than 100 Iraqis apiece.

You venerate these cowardly serial killers, racist psychopaths, sadistic mercenary butchers who kill and rape defenceless people for sport?

You are, at best, a morally diseased political cretin, and the society which produced both you and them is sociopathic in the extreme. Also, you fools are the authors of your own downfall -- enjoy!!

---

Unity and Victory to the heroic Iraqi Resistance!

Everyone has a part to play, Rome wasn't burnt in a day!

*w* See funny cartoon HERE *w*

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Anastas
Posted by: alterstate on Oct 19, 2007 5:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
WE should realize that Evil exists and it resides in the White House. The Iraq war was never about three numbers, (9/11) but about three letters (oil). I will not believe that justice exists, if Bush,Cheney and the macabre group of war lovers are not hauled away to the Hague and tried for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

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The military troops know what this is all about - and are banned from talking about it
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Oct 21, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A few key points in support of the rank and file:

1) The only reason we know anything about the Abu Ghraib / Guantanamo / Kabul / CIA black site torture programs (which are still ongoing) is because military members leaked the photos to the press. The generals and their boss, Rumsfeld, (the ones who ordered the torture) got away without any punishment, while claiming it was all carried out by a few "bad apples." General Sanchez and Rumsfeld should be thrown in jail for their actions.

2) The troops unofficially named the first two forward bases in Iraq Camp Exxon and Camp Shell - yes, this is all about the oil, despite Rumsfeld's claims that "this has nothing to do with oil."

3) The troops, just like the U.S. public, were lied to by the head honchos in the military and the Bush Administration - they were led to believe that Saddam had nukes and bioweapons, and that he was somehow involved in the 9/11 suicide hijackings - all lies.

Bush is our new Pinochet - and he and Cheney are not going to walk away from responsibility for their actions after the 2008 presidential election. They will be hounded by legal suits for the rest of their natural lives, along with all of thier followers.

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Really, Bob
Posted by: badkitty on Oct 21, 2007 8:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Honestly. Bob, I'd think you'd have something good to say about soldiers who refused to serve in this illegal war, rather than good things to say about soldiers who served and then came home and criticized. It would have been way more effective if they had said, like Lieutenant Watada, that they couldn't serve in this illegal war.

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