Iraq, The Vets' View:A Reckless Minority of Troops Has Declared War On All Iraqis.
After four years of war, most Americans still remain sheltered from the day-to-day realities of the occupation of Iraq, especially its effects on Iraqis. With reporter Laila Al-Arian, I spent the last few months interviewing 50 combat veterans, and in thousands of pages of transcripts, they told a brutal story.
With extraordinary honesty, these veterans - medics, MPs, artillerymen, snipers, officers and others - revealed disturbing patterns of behavior by American troops: innocents terrorized during midnight raids, civilian cars fired on when they got too close to supply convoys and troops opening up on vehicles that zip past poorly marked checkpoints, only to discover that they'd shot a 3-year-old or an elderly man. The campaign against a mostly invisible enemy, many veterans said, has given rise to a culture of fear and even hatred among U.S. forces, many of whom, losing ground and beleaguered, have, in effect, declared war on all Iraqis.
The interviewed vets, who served in 2003, 2004 and 2005, emphasized that indiscriminate killing of civilians was carried out by a minority within their ranks. But most also agreed that such killings rarely spark investigations and almost never incur punishment.
Checkpoints, according to more than two dozen troops who manned them, have become particular flashpoints for violence.
"This unit sets up this traffic control point, and this 18-year-old kid is on top of an armored Humvee with a .50-caliber machinegun," said Geoffrey Millard, 26, of Buffalo, N.Y., who served in Tikrit as assistant to a general and often sat in on high-level briefings on such actions. "This car speeds at him pretty quick, and he makes a split-second decision that that's a suicide bomber, and he ... puts 200 rounds in less than a minute into this vehicle. It killed the mother, a father and two kids. "They briefed this to the general," Millard said, "and they briefed it gruesome. I mean, they had pictures.... And this colonel turns around to this full division staff and says, 'If these [expletive deleted] hajjis learned to drive, this [expletive deleted] wouldn't happen.' "
Sgt. Camilo MejÃÂa, 31, of Miami, told a similar story: An unarmed man driving a car was decapitated by a .50-caliber machine gun in front of his young son. Such accidents of war happen, but in MejÃÂa's experience - he served in Iraq for six months starting in April 2003 - they weren't rare: "This sort of killing of civilians had long ceased to arouse much interest or even comment."
Speeding American convoys and patrols, manned by troops who are terrified of becoming targets, have become another consistent source of civilian casualties.
"We'd be cruising down the road in a convoy and all of the sudden, an IED blows up," said Spc. Ben Schrader, 27, of Ft. Collins, Colo. "You've got these scared kids on these guns, and they just start opening fire. And there could be innocent people everywhere. And I've seen this, I mean, on numerous occasions, where innocent people died because we're cruising down and a bomb goes off."
Worse yet were home raids, or "cordon and search" operations. Twenty-four vets who participated in the raids described them as a relentless reality of the occupation. Generally on little evidence, Iraqis were rousted in the night, their homes turned upside down, the family patriarchs humiliated and sometimes arrested.
Staff Sgt. Timothy Westphal, 31, of Denver, said that he'll never forget one on a hot summer night in 2004. He and more than 40 other soldiers raided a farm near Tikrit and, pointing their rifles and lights at a group of sleepers, woke them up.
"The man screamed this gut-wrenching, blood-curdling, just horrified scream," Westphal recalled. "I've never heard anything like that."
It turned out the people weren't insurgents but a family sleeping outside to escape the heat.
"I just remember thinking to myself, I just brought terror to someone else under the American flag," Westphal said, "and that's just not what I joined the Army to do."
Soldiers and Marines who carried out hundreds of such raids said they rarely turned up anything of consequence - a small piece of wire or a detonating cord might be considered a major find. The troops also told me that many members of their units viewed Iraqis as little better than animals. "Hajji," an Arabic term for those who've made the hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, has become the slur of choice for U.S. troops. The troops regularly denigrate "hajji food" and "hajji homes" and throw around terms like "camel jockey." Two veterans reported seeing the corpses of dead Iraqis grotesquely abused by American troops.
The antipathy toward Iraqis was confirmed in a survey released in May by the Pentagon. Just 47% of soldiers and 38% of Marines agreed that civilians should be treated with dignity and respect. Only 55% of soldiers and 40% of Marines said they would report a unit member who had killed or injured "an innocent noncombatant."
The veterans who were interviewed had little good to say about senior military officers, many of whom encouraged reckless behavior - even though they spent most of their time in heavily fortified compounds and rarely saw combat. MejÃÂa said that, before deploying to Iraq, his battalion commander announced that he would not return home without a Combat Infantry Badge, awarded only after a unit has received enemy fire.
"This badge is a great honor," MejÃÂa said, "but going out of one's way to engage in combat, just to get a badge, is something few service members would accept. Yet once in Iraq, that is precisely what many soldiers believed our commanders to be doing."
The war in Iraq is leaving thousands of young men and women who have returned home deeply disturbed by what they have done and witnessed. It is also turning huge swaths of the Arab and Muslim world against us.
We need to muster the moral courage to face the reality of the war. To wallow in a myth that trumpets our goodness, denies our irresponsible rules of engagement and demonizes those who oppose us will leave us unable to end the occupation and begin the long, slow process of reconciliation.
Chris Hedges, who graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly two decades a foreign correspondent for The New York Times, is the author of "American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America."
© 2007 The Los Angeles Times
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
31 Comments so far
Show AllWar is about killing. Killing is easier when you hate the enemy. Hate is easier when you are afraid all the time and anyone can be the enemy. Why we expect our soldiers to behave any differently in a war is beyond me.
When my brother joined the Army, all this was in my mind. Knowing my compassion and desire for peace, my own family threatened me with expulsion if I did not support him. How can we start working for peace when our government keeps harming our young people by sending them to war? When will violence really be the last option?
People talk to me about how scary the world is now. How at any time we could be attacked by terrorists. But this isn't any different now that it has ever been -- what has changed is our perception of the risks of real life.
I tell them to STOP BEING AFRAID. Hope is the only antidote to fear. When will we teach our children to bring hope, instead of war?
Here's Philip Zimbardo talking about this very thing -
http://www.edge.org/q2006/q06_index.html
and scroll down the list at the left to the link to Zimbardo at the end. Piece is called "The Banality of Evil."
More war is inevitable as populations expand and compete for resources. People don't simply do with less they want more.
The creator first tried large animals with small brains and, currently, small animals with large brains. Despite the illusion that we are creatures of choice we're still mired in the primordial ooze.
When all is done, the earth will shake us off like a bad case of fleas.
I think that the AP story (linked to as part of Yahoo News by an earlier commentator) says it all. In testifying, the US Marine corporal simply admits war crimes as routine battlefield conduct and states that the US Marines regard all Iraqi men as the enemy. Therefore, killing any of them, and then framing the innocent if necessary, is not only standard operating procedure, it's apparently the right thing to do.
Americans should pay attention to this. You can bet that the rest of the world is paying attention.
This article broke the back of this camel.
I Was planning to leave this country, which I have accepted with the whole of my heart 30 years ago, after I escape from the Soviet Union, the Evil Empire.
ANd it was diffiult decision. It is no more.
But leaving or not, nightmare of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Iran, Chile, Cuba, now Iraq will be always with me as my responsibility. I have sinned by contributing 30 years of my work to the technological prowess of this machine, by being part of duped, by living way better that those whom I left behind anywhere in the world.
I am sick to my stomach when I hear "our heroes" from both Reps and Dems, from pro-wars and anti-war crowds. Soldiers killing 7 thousand mile s from their homeland cannot possibly be heroes, period. Jp is absolutely right: it is inconceivable to cry 'I am shocked, shocked'; kind of self-indulgence, even if understandable. We are all shocked; forget about minority/majority justifications.
The great German nation with centuries was put down for centuries to come by not that big group of people, may be quarter of one generation, miniscule number of people compared to hundred millions walking on German soil, speaking German language, creating great music, literature, philosophy, science, architecture for last millennia… How sad it is that such a reputation was lost in mere 12 years for generations to come.
We, citizens of this once great country should not expect better fate. Evil never was, is and will be justifiable by good, never. All people, posting on this site will have to live with it. Alas, it is inescapable. We all have to live with that.
Here's a depressing suggestion - look back over your own lifetime and check history a bit and see how many days there have been that were free of war or genocide everywhere in the world at once (a lot of it caused by US actions.)
Humans just can't stand peace.
I said it was depressing -
I just reread this article and others that have appeared this past week. I am perplexedd by the responses of people who are shocked or sickened by this behavior. This is what war is all about. War is massive dehumanization. Do you think the behavior of these young soldiers and marines is any worse than the impersonal incineration of homes and neighborhoods in bombing raids? Do you think land mines and cluster bombs are "nicer"? What do you think "shock and awe" means? I am sorry if I am offending anyone here, because I know that we all want to think that "our boys" are all about kindness and fairness and justice and democracy. Unfortunately war, and especially a war of colonial occupation such as this, is not the arena in which "our boys" exhibit their more sterling American qualities.
To Ronald White - You say:
"The fact that the military is the 'most repected institution in the country' bears out the fact that most Americans believe that brutality and killing are acceptable means for getting what we want.
Read that,everbody and comprehend the shortest and most accurate assessment of the occupation , Americans 'bought' the lies because they wanted to."
Right on, Ronald White - the fact is, Americans love war - and any other kind of rough conflict and violence. Just look at our most popular movies and TV programs (if you can stand them).
I do admire the soldiers who dared to speak up after they were sufficiently sickened by their own and others' brutal actions. But I also have to realize that they signed on for this, ie, they willingly became hired killers iin the first place. No draftees, remember? One way or another, they all signed on.
We are sometimes compared to the ancient Romans - I think of how they mobbed the stadiums to watch the gladiators hack each other to bits.
Would we do that? Please don't tell me -
This and the other article on CD by Chris Hedges make me sick to read.
keep calling it a "war." fools. Keep saying we should recover American values. Recover what - these are the values - kill, exploit, manipulate.
disband the american military
problem solved
ken
"BABYKILLER" was an apt term for returning Vietnam Vets that should be resurrected today to describe these returning war criminals.
When their commander in chimp is the world's biggest war criminal, promoting torture and murder to satisfy his BIG OIL BUDDIES, how do you expect these children to behave?
They should all be made an example of so future generations of soldiers have a vivid demonstration of what happens to those who BETRAY THE HONOR OF THEIR COUNTY
I offer up Exhibit B:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070715/ap_on_re_us/marines_iraq_shooting
I know I know, I'm a day late again, but geez I only get here on the weekends...
nationalpud
Hilarious
The "little red and brown people joining forces".
To do what?
Overthrow "whitey"?
Your shade of bigotry and hatred is no different then what we have now.
The only thing people should hate is hypocrisy, especially yours.
"The fact that the military is the "most repected institution in the country" bears out the fact that most Americans believe that brutality and killing are acceptable means for getting what we want."
Read that,everbody and comprehend the shortest and most accurate assessment of the occupation , Americans "bought" the lies because they wanted to.
"Camel Jockey" and "Haji" are not the slurs that reveal most about this war. The term "Sand Nigger" tells you everything you need to know anout the US armed forces.
Whatever happened to "Drop, Roll, Observe, Target, Fire", by the way? Opening up with automatic weapon fire without identifying a target is a sign of troops that have not been trained.
UMMM, proportunanitly, the death, serious injury rate between officers an enlistd in Vietnam ws about 54% higher for the officers, up to the grade of Major.
It's all about dehumanization. "Raghead" has become this decade's equivalent of "gook". One thing that frightens me is that at some point, members of this "reckless minority" will be coming home. Who knows what these guys will be like after having witnessed let alone committed such atrocities, atrocities made under the guise of protectionism and liberation? Can you imagine the disillusionment they may already being experiencing compounding with the fact that the whole war was built on lies?
Iraqi to me reeks of nothing but pure hate right now. The Iraqis hate the American troops, seeing them as an invading force. American troops, thinking they'd be treated like shining knights and cowboys now resent and fear the Iraqis for not wanting them around and making it known through words and violent action. Then you have Iraqis splitting up into factions warring against one another.
Poor and disenfranchised have gone to another country to kill and be killed by other poor and disenfranchised people. The class war has gone global for sure.
This sounds a bit of what I had heard going on during Nam. The officers were back in Saigon at the Officers Club, while the grunts were on point in the jungle getting shot at. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
As graphically horrible as these descriptions of day-to-day atrocities are, they are common to any occupation that is facing resistance from a smart, well-armed and motivated guerrilla force: see Southeast Asia from WWII to 1975, Algeria post-WWII,the Phillipines during Japanese' and US occupations,etc.
What is missing here are interviews with pilots and operators of un-piloted drones who are committing massive slaughter of civilians with powerful explosives and cluster-bombs, creating massive amounts pollution, spreading radioactivity with the use of DU ammunition, and continually destroying what is left of the Iraqi infrastructure.
And all of that was preceded by massive bombings during the so-called Gulf War and more than a decade of bombings during the UN-enabled sanctions regime.
While grunts on the ground are always faced with a multitude of moral dilemmas once they a thrown into a war zone or occupation zone (as described in these interviews), the use of air power against a people without an air force, or any other means of defending themselves against air attacks, is inexcusable on any grounds: moral, military or whatever.
Everyone involved in the US/UK air forces, at all levels, are war criminals and commit crimes against humanity with every action and breath they take.
In many ways, we may be approaching a turning point in our nation's history. The vast majority of our country has ignored for decades that their government has been the greatest enemy to world peace and the largest state sponsor of terrorism in the world. Many are now being forced to look beyond their private worlds and are discovering the ugly facts they have heretofore ignored. This knowledge will lead to activism. And activism can bring about a real change.
The immediate action that I believe is incumbent on this nation is the impeachement of those responsible, followed immediately with indictments and trials for war crimes and treason, followed by maximum penalties for those found guilty. This is a must, in order to demonstrate to the rest of the world that we are attempting to become a nation of laws and a nation of peace. This must include not only the executive branch, but all branches. This system has been corrupted for a very long time, and (hopefully) we will be able to survive this treatment as a nation to eliminate the cancer we have allowed to infect us.
This is not about Republicans or Democrats. It's not about Christians, Muslims, Jews, Conservatives, or Liberals. It's about doing the right thing. And the time is now.
Viet Nam all over again, free fire zones and all. The two pieces of human filth in the White House who unleashed this catastrophe must be immediately be removed from office, tried for treason and war crimes, and, if found guilty, punished to the fullest extent of the law.
JP: I certainly don't believe brutality and killing are acceptable, and I "was" learnng the truths before the invasion took place. I did believe the lies, as did most Americans and our congress, prior to the start of the war. Read Chris Hedges article on today's Common Dreams and my response. It is without a doubt, the most disturbing thing I have ever read about Americans.
Evelyn Smith: The war was lost the minute we declared we had the "right" to invade and occupy a country as a preemptive measure to protect us from WMD. There were no WMD; that was a lie and the Downing Street memos provided further evidence that the war on Iraq had already been decided upon by this vicious administration. It would be sold to the American people using whatever lie it took to drum up the fear necessary to gain their approval.
This is and always has been an imperial grab for oil resources. The rest of the world understands that. Like most imperialist powers and the young deluded thugs they employ as occupiers, we deserve what we get in retaliation for the horrendous damage we have done. The fact that the military is the "most repected institution in the country" bears out the fact that most Americans believe that brutality and killing are acceptable means for getting what we want.
The truth is, when Cheney/Bush and the current administration, which once included Rummy and Colin Powell, told us why we had to invade Iraq, I was one of the vast majority who believed the lies. I went so far as to write a letter to Rummy, asking if I could be of any use as a volunteer for the military, even though I had retired from the service in 1974. He didn't reply. (Thank You Sir).
It does not surprise me at all, that so many in Congress and in the Senate supported the war, even with some reluctance. After all, the people who put them inio office supported it.
What amazes me now is, they won't support impeachment___ for a whole bunch of murdering, thieving, crazy, greed consumed liars, who probably hate their parents and don't love Jesus.
Using military forces should be a last resort to resolve differences because military action always results in unnecessary civilian deaths.
But since the people in power, Bush and Company, don't place a value on civilian deaths, or more correctly, feel that the civilian deaths are an acceptable cost to doing business, it continues unchecked.
http://www.wordsareimportant.com/notonemore.htm - Not One More unnecessary death.
Mark most of the Dems and, especially, Pelosi as complicit in war crimes. The Commander in Chief is head of the troops. The Commander is using the troops to perpetrate crimes against humanity in a war of aggression for control of middle-eastern OIL and Congress, especially Pelosi, refuse to IMPEACH. Hell, most of them signed on to the war in the first place - true jingoists.
I think the title is an odd choice when compared to the body of the story.
"minority within their ranks. --- rarely spark investigations and almost never incur punishment.
How can some one be certain it is just a minority if there are no actual investigations?!
The allegation that the violence is carried out by "minority within their ranks" is contradicted by the article itself. Hedges' article actually indicates a amazing percentage of soldiers think Iraqi people should be treated differently ...than other humans?
"the antipathy toward Iraqis was confirmed in a survey released in May by the Pentagon. Just 47% of soldiers and 38% of Marines agreed that civilians should be treated with dignity and respect. Only 55% of soldiers and 40% of Marines said they would report a unit member who had killed or injured "an innocent noncombatant."
Command decisions to create war and conflict doesn't come off as a minority event, but rather systematic when,
"but going out of one's way to engage in combat, just to get a badge, is something few service members would accept. Yet once in Iraq, that is precisely what many soldiers believed our commanders to be doing."
I'm beginning to think the idea that it is just a few bad apples or a minority group is a psychological assist one needs to have in place to reassure ourselves that we are not part of the violence, that we are individually different. that the real monster is somebody else.
and yet, roughly 50% of the Army and 40% of the Marines think Iraqis don't deserve respect, and 1 out of 2 Army soldiers and 4 out of 10 Marines would turn a blind eye when innocent humans are injured and killed.
When I think of a minority in terms of violent crimes, I tend to think in terms of 1 to 2% of the total population and not 40 to 50%.
Silly me.
I believe this is the most disturbing article I have ever read.
There are a few things preached in Christian churches I tend to agree with. One is, our country is losing it's morality. After reading the above aticle, I wonder if we shouldn't repace the word losing___ with lost.
The troops state that the atrocities are committed by a minorty, but if it only happened once, it should be a matter of grave concern. It sounds like terror and murder are a daily occurance, has become routine and some of our higher ranking officers approve.
It is very troubling and a bit difficult too believe. I would like to see the troops who were interviewed by the author, testify before a Congressional comittee.
I saw a survey recently that rated the U. S. military as the most respected institution in the nation. I don't understand why the endless series of lies and cover-ups like the Pat Tillman cover-up, the Jessica Lynch lies, Abu Ghrib, Gitmo, the bombing of "high value human targets" that killed hundreds of civilians without killing s single "high value human target" and the sloppy way this war and occupation have been waged, haven't had an impact on public opinion.
Madhoosier - you say you "don't understand why the endless series of lies and cover-ups like the Pat Tillman", Jessica Lynch, Abu Ghrib, Gitmo, etcetera, "and the sloppy way this war and occupation have been waged, haven't had an impact on public opinion."
Hey Mad one, who is on Larry King tonight? Get it yet? Watch the news and will you see any of this on it tonight? No. People are being lied to and information is being held from the public by the NEWS MEDIA itself as well as ourt own government. Before everyone goes crazy with the accusations of the soldiers and wants to ressurect 'Baby Killers' and such name calling, remember it was not the troops who gave the orders to go to war. many of them have been about to leave the hell of Iraq when they got last minute extensions too.
If you read this correctly you will see how the brass once again, is to blame for most of this shit. When a Colonel blames an 18 year old kids fears and badly overreacting on bad driving by the victim who took over 200 .50 cal rounds we have a major F'ing problem. If Officers were to actually hold the few loose cannons who act like this accountable immediately after such atrocities occur, then the message is sent to the troops loud and clear that these types of actions will not be tolerated. When the Officers blame the drivers and victims in these incidents the message to the troops is don't worry you have free reign to act as you want without reprisals.
Officers are looking for CIB's and other career enhancing "atta boys" at the expense of the lives of their own troops also. Troops know this and it does nothing for their morale. If you want to go back to Vietnam to reference this, realize that when I was in the military we could not have any live ammo unless we were at a firing range. If we did have live ammo it needed to be in a magazine with duct tape over it locked away in our ammo pouches. This is why in 1983 when terrorists drove an explosive laden jeep into the Marine barracks in Beirut Lebanon, the guards on duty could only throw their empty M-16's at the jeep. Officers who survived Vietnam had learned that giving the wrong orders (thereby getting their troops killed needlessly) could get them "fragged". This is why soldiers can not keep live ammo on guard duty outside of combat zones.
You have a real serious conflict here and the soldiers are caught in the middle. You have a government (our so called leaders - every one of whom is a yellow bellied chicken shit) that believes in war as a solution to problems. We also keep a standing military full of fine young soldiers trained to kill and confront the toughest of enemies. Then we send them into combat and want them to behave like upstanding choir boys. You cannot have it both ways. War is the most depraved and abhorrent of human conditions. To put people in such a condition and expect their best behavior is a fools errand. The reality is that you can train a military for winning wars and killing or you can train them for nation building and humanitarian aid, but not both. That is the lesson the US is being taught in Iraq that is being missed here. How the military is used, is ultimately the responsibility of the elected "leaders". If they choose to look the other way when bad things happen like this, then it is the officers who have become responsible for the culture of killing which seems to inevitably follow.
Once the people demand change it will come, but not until then. I recently marched in a war protest in Atlanta and was chastised by the organizers for not staying within the approved area of protest (I was attempting to impede traffic by walking into the lanes). When I asked if this was really a protest then if we had to follow instructions from the very government we were protesting I got blank stares. I then reminded the organizers that when protests were held in the 60's and 70's the people were demanding action and took to the streets and shut them down. That is a protest. Following instructions from the very govt. we are protesting is a far cry from that.