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Steel Rain
"Civilian casualties have been a continuing issue in Afghanistan, and President Karzai has rebuked American and NATO forces for what he has called carelessness in their military operations."
This is the genteel, bloodless language of geopolitics, spoken by the Gray Lady and the heads of state and makers of policy whom she serves. You wouldn't know that "carelessness" referred to killing a bride (and twenty-some guests) on her wedding day, except that the observation comes at the end of the New York Times' account of our July 6 bombing of an Afghani wedding, which followed a Fourth of July missile strike in that country -- look at the fireworks, Mom! -- that killed 15 innocent civilians. Careless superpower indeed.
What you would never guess is that "carelessness" meant a deliberate U.S. policy of waging the war on terror from the air. But that has been our policy all along, from "shock and awe" and "mission accomplished" to "the surge is working." It is undebated, unreported, unquestioned, this policy conceived with the vacuous single-mindedness of serial killers. The death it has caused has not been calculated and is perhaps incalculable, especially when you factor in the time-bomb effects of depleted uranium and other deadly substances that bombing spreads both locally and around the world.
To my mind, nothing, not even the torture we practice at Guantanamo and throughout the war on terror gulag, exemplifies the disconnect between U.S. policy and the American people like the sanitized horror of the air war.
When the Nazis dropped 50 tons of explosives on the Spanish city of Guernica in 1937, the world called it barbaric. Today, such a pummeling of some hapless Third World region is routine, transformed by an embedded and co-opted media into "humdrum ordinariness," as Tom Engelhardt has pointed out. (You'll recall, of course, that Colin Powell, when he lied before the U.N. General Assembly about Iraqi WMD shortly before we invaded, had the tapestry reproduction of Picasso's "Guernica" covered up to avoid any awkward triggering of conscience.)
That we have lost control of our government, money-dominated and obsessed with secrecy as it is, is less surprising to me than the extent to which we have lost our watchdog media, which can't even rouse itself awake long enough to spot the patterns in its own routine coverage of the war. Shall we take a stroll down Memory Lane?
"Ooh, that's gotta hurt," I recall a colleague of mine saying back in mid-March of '03, as the invasion got under way and the shock-and-awe campaign played nonstop on the tube. The relentless air assault on Baghdad killed untold Iraqis but utterly failed in its intended purpose of "decapitating" the Saddam Hussein regime, killing not a single high government official.
In April 2003, we got word that Hussein and his two sons were meeting in a building in the Mansur district of Baghdad. Within 45 minutes, we flattened the building with four high explosive bombs, creating a crater 40 feet deep and killing an unknown number of people, but not Hussein or his sons.
"They found one boy's body on the roof of that house over there," an Iraqi later told a reporter. "I heard that the father went out for ice cream and wouldn't let his children come with him. When we came back, they were dead. He must be dying of grief."
Shortly before Christmas 2003, USA Today, in a rare instance of independent war coverage, published the results of its four-month investigation of cluster bomb usage in the first months of the war.
"Although U.S. forces sought to limit what they call 'collateral damage' in the Iraq campaign, they defied international criticism and used nearly 10,800 cluster weapons; their British allies used almost 2,200," reporter Paul Wiseman wrote. Describing the "steel rain" that devastated the central Iraq city of Al Hillah, he noted that images of the aftermath, "including footage of a baby torn in half, were so gruesome that Western television networks refused to air them."
Back to Afghanistan, where Taliban-hunting with bombs and missiles has been commonplace. University of New Hampshire professor Marc Herold, who monitored the early phases of the war, wrote in 2002 that "the documented high level of civilian casualties" is caused by "the apparent willingness of U.S. military strategists to fire missiles into, and drop bombs upon, heavily populated areas of Afghanistan."
One example, from about a year ago: We bombed a school in eastern Afghanistan; seven children died. A Pentagon spokesman explained: "If we knew that there were children inside the building, there was no way that that air strike would have occurred."
We can't wage war without a wide moral latitude. The public has limited capacity for collateral damage even in the abstract, and none at all for actual details, such as babies torn in half by cluster bombs. But this is the war on terror, which we will never win until we face the truth about what we're doing and stop doing it. Forever. Robert Koehler, an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist, is an editor at Tribune Media Services and nationally syndicated writer. You can respond to this column at bkoehler@tribune.com or visit his Web site at commonwonders.com.
© 2004 Tribune Media Services, Inc.



31 Comments so far
Show AllIn 1868 G.A Custer and his command attacked a camp of Southern Cheyenne, on Sand Creek (Colorado), under the leadership of White Antelope who was flying an American Flag over his lodge. He survived, but most of his family, and over one third of the members of the camp were killed----elderly, women and children----few "warriors" were killed since most of them were away on the winter buffalo hunt.
The affair was treated with the same fan fare that a victory over a fierce group of suicide bombers would be treated now in Afghanistan---
In 1876,(June 25) Custer met some of those same people at the "Little Big Horn Battle", this time he was greeted by the warriors who were not away-----he died along with 168 of his men, over two thirds of his command. The news reached the American people on the 4th of July and was immediately treated as a "tragic massacre" of "our brave soldiers"-----things haven't changed much since then----every war that the US has been engaged in since the "Revolutionary War" (where the "rebels" killed as many as one thousand Native people who were either loyal to the treaties they had with the crown, or neutral)----to the present wars in Afghanistan and Iraq----for the Americans there are no innocent bystanders--------even women and babies, and other helpless individuals-------"kill em all and let God sort em out"--------- "these people NEED Democracy, and if we have to kill em all we'll give them Democracy"
How much longer the world will tolerate the USA, depends upon how much time the world believes they may have left............becasue those Americans will come to bring Democracy even if you don't ask them to................
It's not careless. It is the result of deliberate policies. The New York Times and other media are master wordsmiths of the Orwellian type. The words are bland and proper. "Careless". "Collateral Damage".
And we don't have pictures. -- Describing the "steel rain" that devastated the central Iraq city of Al Hillah, he noted that images of the aftermath, "including footage of a baby torn in half, were so gruesome that Western television networks refused to air them."
Western television networks refuse to air images of collateral damage and even damage to our own children, unless it is one who has two artificial legs and is dancing a tango. The permanently disabled are ignored.
from CNN today :
"From a desert outpost NW of Las Vegas, elite fighter pilots journey to a war zone in Afghanistan, never leaving the air-conditioned comfort of their command center"
They are piloting the remote-controlled "Reaper", which "can carry the same bomb load as an F-16 fighter plane, but it's pilots are not put in harm's way."
" 'Seeing bad guys on the screen and watching them possibly get dispatched, and then going down to the Taco Bell for lunch, it's kind of surreal,' says Captain Matt Dean."
Such brave guys, fighting the good fight and finishing in time for a number 9 meal at the local Taco Bell.
"The success of this new concept of aerial power has created a huge demand for the aircraft. Every commander wants one, but there aren't nearly enough to go around. But not for long : the Air Force is shifting its budget toward buying dozens more remote-controlled killer Reapers."
Our tax dollars at work.
I feel absolutely sick.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/07/09/remote.fighters/?iref=mpstoryview
There's too much money to be made, look at DRS-C3 Systems, bathing in huge revenue as their massive PA factory churns out war machinery for the US Reich. Killing, surveilliance, you name it, big mafia will define the need, do the paper work, and suckle from the US ATM. If you aren't part of the Pentagon's long reaching tentacles you're more likely to be in prison or just another "worthless feeder".
These people NEED Democracy, and American Democracy has always been delivered from the barrel of a gun.
Progress = war by playstation, any one can play. No PTSD, no wounded, no dead, the worst that can happen is a case of RSI. The media blab about colleteral damage, terrorists dressed up as children, pregnant women, old people to sanitize the whole affair. The only sad part is: you can't really be a hero anymore, which is so important for many Americans. Ah well, you've got your guns and can always shoot up a local mall, school, or just the neighbours.
War is nothing more than the detonation of high explosives. The US feels that it has an advantage over any rival in this area and therefore it struts its ability to blow anybody or anything up. Whether it is a suicide bomber walking into a building or a B-52 dropping its payload from 30,000 feet up, the results are indiscriminate and devastating.
I've said before, but once again, not a day goes by lately that I don't learn some new thing to be ashamed about being an american. The only way for other countries to fight back against the constant imperialist aggression of the US is in ways that the government considers terrorism. Killing is wrong, no matter who does it, but, after a fashion, we deserve everything we get.
WMD's We Got'em and We Drop'em
Hey David.peace you must be pro-life then, welcome to the movement, Obama is not your man then..
alexnosal join the 21st century a tomahawk missle from a sub three thousand miles away is a better way to kill the so called innocent.
NativeSon I will give up my land in Kansas, another stolen property state, if your tribe gives me the rights to the casino's, duty free shops, and free college education. Why would you post on the internet, it supports this nation that took you land.
Har Davids, stop being so glum dave, the progressive view of heroes abound, save a whale, blow up an SUV, say your gay, ride the bus. Us current and former soldiers can't compare to that type of amazing bravery
NativeSon July 10th, 2008 12:25 pm
We may disagree on your opinion of who stole what from whom, but here we certainly agree. And don't forget all those "brave" volunteers from Colorado that were there. More than shameful. Sand Creek was another glorious victory. They were a disgrace.
They also pretty much destroyed the Cheyenne as a people I remember because of that, but I don't remember why.
You of all people should know that when the Indian won it was a massacre, when the Calvary, Mexicans or whites won it was a glorious victory.
There were plenty of massacre's by both sides, but the Indians had the reason of defending their homes and they seldom had any other way but guerilla warfare.
Its a shame the good Col. and his bravehearts didn't run into the Dog soldiers coming back.
"Texas—also an illegal state"
oops! we're not illegal we stole it fair and square from the Mexicans and commanche's who stole it first. Texans just took it from the thieves.
What hurts most is this has been going on without letup since 2001.And there never was any real reason to bomb Afghanistan in the first place.
Bombing a country with no air defense at all is fundamentally immoral, war crime or not. And cowardly- whether it's done from Nevada, or 30,000 feet over Afghanistan.
here's how John Pilger ends his new book Freedom Next Time:
"The U.S. military in Afghanistan has revealed that six children died in a raid on suspected militants...News of the deaths came shortly after the U.S. apologized for killing nine children in a separate raid in the neighboring province...However, the U.S. warned it would not be deterred by civilian casualties. A U.S. spokesman said the dead children were partly to blame for being ata site used by militants"
(BBC News quote)
I watched the report on CNN. It made me think that Goering or Himmler would have been jealous if they could have seen these good "Germans" reporting so dispassionately about these machines of death.
After all, they only had the Vengeance weapons, the V-1 and V-2 with which to rain death on the innocent.
If we keep this up, somebody is going to send an ICBM with a nuke on it to end the "steel rain."
I feel compelled by so much misinformation --to speak up once more.
1) Indians come from India---the reason why most Americans use the misnomer of "Indian" is because of Columbus (Chris) he thought he was in India hence the "West Indies" etc---to carry the tradition is foolish but if being foolish makes you feel better---we don't care how you refer to us.
2) Those "Casinos": Not all tribes have a casino (Texas has deprived two tribes of theirs the Tigua and the Alabama-Coushatta.
The Casino owning tribes pay out 63% of the revenues in Taxes-to the US GOV-the tribe at the corporate level of 35%---and individuals who receive "per capita payments"----similar to dividends for stock holders pay 28% of those payments--- separate from their regular income--even if their regular income is at the poverty level-there is a special IRS form just for this purpose.......all of this while Exxon and many other corporations enjoy Tax exemptions.
3) There are no college funds that allow Native Americans to go to college FREE-----
4) Texas belonged to the Comanches as well as fourteen other tribes in 1800 by 1860 those that were not extinct---were in Oklahoma---and the three remaining the Kickapoo, Tiqwa, Alabama-Coushatta-remained.
If someone were to want to "steal Texas" from the USA---they would end up with a polluted, mangled mess---where much of the Ground water is unfit even for animal consumption, and the air quality in most of the large cities comes with a daily warning for humans during most months of the year.
I hope this small lesson in history has been useful for those who truly desire to have knowledge instead of Hollywood hyperbole.
Thank you for your valuable time.
And for those of you who pray---pray for more intelligent life somewhere else in outer space---there is not very much here on earth.
Thanks NativeSon for some good posts. Whether you want to call it Karma (Hinduism/Bhuddism)or the law of sowing and reaping (Judaism/Christianity) the citizens of the US are setting themse4lves up for some major grief and their own terror by such deliberate and evil conduct.
From Native American genocide and African-American slavery to these latest attrocities, our progeny will pay for the sins of their ancestors.
A P.S.
The 1860 date was supposed to read 1880, and the Comanche never recognized Texas other than the source of Texans----who Tom Horn* referred to as "the worst form of white man there is"...... as a Republic or a State but a great place to steal Horses and take Captives for ransom-----------which is why they never killed women and children----they were worth much more alive than dead.
*Tom Horn was the Army scout that talked Geronimo into a final surrender---and was later "framed for murder and hanged"--------ya just gotta love those Americans.
I nor any other Native American I know wish for the progeny of the Americans to suffer what has been delivered to us or the African Americans from slavery------just do their best to learn from the mistakes of the past---by studying History----sans the revisionists
twists--------it really is much more interesting in the truthful form anyway.
Thanks........
People use violence to get what they want. That is the fact about humans. It is even a basic fact about animals. We are just animals.
That is all we are.
American predatory capitalism has always ripped of an killed the darker skinned races along with the poor and working class whites that it sends to do the dirty work. Gen Smedley Butler had it right, "War Is A Racket." Military recruiters are very successful on the reservations for reasons of poverty and lack of opportunity. Same as in the black and latino ghettos and the white south. All these kids should be given a copy of "War Is A Racket." Always has been a racket, always will be. The more people of all races who realize this, no matter how many lifetimes it takes, the closer we get, if only on an individual soul level to becoming peaceful beings.
The fact that we can even imagine such a state of mind gives the lie to twistoflex's cynical statement.
Military recruiters are very successful on the reservations as well as in the black and latino ghettos as well as among poor white kids in the south. Cannon fodder for the Empire always comes from the ranks of the underprivileged and hopeless. If all young people read "War Is A Racket," some of them would see the truth in it and there would be fewer Imperial Storm Troopers. The ones who are on the animal level that twistoflex ascribes to all people would still want to go and kill and be killed. We don't need them in the gene pool anyway.
So you guys are saying that the Commanches just used Texas to take slaves and steal from?
Where did the Commanches and the other tribes you mention obtain the land here? They weren't indigenous to the area.
Speaking of revisionists have you ever explored what it was like to be a slave to the Commanche? Not very pretty sometimes and I know the ability to steal horses was prised by Native Americans but it was frowned on by Americans. White man is not exactly correct for Americans, not even then.
As to Texas, I'll stack us up against any other state for water and air. We sure are growing to be such a pit as you describe.
The other thing I'd say is history is just that, history. And you really can't change it. So wouldn't it be better to move on?
"The other thing I'd say is history is just that, history. And you really can't change it. So wouldn't it be better to move on?"
You can change how history is remembered and that is what's important for us today.
Only a person comfortable with or unaffected by the sexist, ethnocentric, racialized and racist documentation of the past asks others (to whom the documentation is offensive) to "move on".
Only a person disinterested in understanding the "other side to a story" asks others to move on.
Only a fool would seek to move on, and doom herself to repeat past mistakes.
Nice to hear my Brothers' words.
"Move On (.org )" indeed.
But its OK for you to be offensive? I'm sure you think so. Do you sit around all day just hoping to find something to construe in a negative way?
"You can change how history is remembered and that is what's important for us today."
Only if you go back and change the facts or state facts that are merely opinions as you seem wont to do.
"Only a person comfortable with or unaffected by the sexist, ethnocentric, racialized and racist documentation of the past asks others (to whom the documentation is offensive) to "move on"."
Thats simply an asinine thing to say. So the past is offensive to some? Is that your point? Do you plan to live in the past? Are you too obtuse to understand what I said?
Only a person disinterested in understanding the "other side to a story" asks others to move on.
If you can't afford treatment, treatment will be provided for you.
Yep, your posting was fauirly offensive, arrogant, judgemental and frankly a little childish.
I've been as polite as possible, but allow me to suggest that you question your own motuives for what you said.
MoveOn.Org I'm sure is where you should both be.
Thomas More: Man, you're showing yourself to be an ignorant jackass more and more these days.
N A T I V E __ A M E R I C A N S
I owe you and _ a l l_ the downtrodden, that disgracefully we have made to suffer, to prop up our wicked American socio-economic quasi-slavery, avariciously insane killing ways, and fear and terror mongering. The husk of people that we create are ourselves in reflection, and I owe so far more than mere compassion.
The THEFT of LAND is significant beyond most measure, except for the incomparable worse THEFT of LIFE & SPIRIT, through insidiously wicked cultural genocide.
Our elitist American feet of clay will soon BE dissolving in the oblivion of floods of righteousness, and restitution -- that for so long has been denied and held back.
It is your steadfastness, and courageous marking of these and past egregious moments that become a needed but bitter pill to swallow. We ( separately, but more importantly together ) must look within OURSELVES to excise this cancer of hate and human usury.
What is it to become "more" human, when we need first to BECOME as one HUMANKIND ?
It is an illusion of illegitimate profit that drives the wedges deeper, and in the end separates man from himself ( his spiritual heart of hearts ), voiding the space of compassion and hope. The further we go away from the glowing center of LIFE — stressed to have MORE — the less there is and the more desolate our lives
American's cure is to become responsible ( INDIVIDUALLY ), and again BE able to BECOME whole _and_ to respond to all human needs with understanding, love, and equanimity. The beast of our psychic burden is totally within, and only accessible to each of us, in relation to our lives. There is no evil that really can be changed "out there", as we each have only the power to change ourselves -- no one else.
|_____ LEARN TO KNOW THYSELF, _____|
|_____ LEARN TO MAKE BETTER _______|
|_____ THOUGHTS AND CHOICES _______|
Thank you.
Our shared world depends upon this.
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
"Do you sit around all day just hoping to find something to construe in a negative way?"
Prior to writing this, you wrote:
"The other thing I'd say is history is just that, history. And you really can't change it. So wouldn't it be better to move on?" What did you mean by "move on"? I could only interpret it as your advising NativeSon to ignore the written, mainstream record of events (history)concerning HIS people, despite their own version of those events...in other words, "move on," "forget about it," or worse, "your version of events is irrelevant".
But to answer your question: No, though I do feel the need to respond when I read such dismissive nonsense adivising people to NOT seek out the truth.
"Only if you go back and change the facts or state facts that are merely opinions as you seem wont to do."
It's not about changing facts. It's about enriching our understanding of events that occured prior to our birth. For example if we know there are two parties in a war, X and Y, and we only learn of X's experiences during that war, we have an incomplete picture. Gaining an understanding of Y's experience enriches our understanding of their war. I hope you can now grasp the concept a little bit better.
"So the past is offensive to some? Is that your point? Do you plan to live in the past? Are you too obtuse to understand what I said?"
The past is offensive to some. People are offended by the actions that occurred in the past, hence their desire not to repeat them (Native American genocide, Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade & New World Slavery, the Holocaust among others comes to mind).
But that wasn't my point. The "past" should be differentiated from "history." The past is fixed and unchangeable; what is maleable is our understanding of it. History "changes" when more than one perspective is added to that understanding. As for "living in the past", well, as absurd and childish as that statement is (almost like "if you like the past so much, why don't you marry it"), we can not fully live in the present without an understanding of the past.
As to being offensive, arrogant and childish, (please state how my post was any of these), I would dismissed your post outright if I hadn't read so many of your other posts along the same lines. You have given a justification or an excuse to many attrocities committed by Western nations and when challenged with alternative (i.e. the other side's) viewpoints, you ask people to "move on." And I'm childish?
I find it funny that you're stuggling to be polite. It's funny because despite the words you've written here and elsewhere, words infuriating to some, YOU are the one struggling to be polite. Rest assured, I am not struggling to be courteous and treat you like a human being (however misguided about the relevance and importance of the past).
T W I S T O F L E X,
Consider that we can CHOOSE either to:think of ourselves as purely physical human BE'ings and existence,
nothing more than animals
( as you say above on 11th at 12:14 )
Although some believe that they've had spiritual experiences O Rthink of ourselves as primarily spiritual
or non-physical human BE'ings,
that exist through possession of a physical bodyFor myself, I choose the later perceptual point of reference, as there is much that human being have BEYOND the mere physicalness similarities to animals. In fact nature shows us many examples of more harmonious socio-cultural interaction, than evident often in humans.
There is a continuum of CHOICES of behavior and consideration, where it's all for me at one end ( don't care about anyone else ) <<==>> and altruism or self-sacrifice for the greater good of society, at the other end.
The degree of EACH of OUR OWN humanism, is well described by an old Cherokee chief's story "I heard this story a long time ago — of the tribal elder who was telling his grandson about the battle the old man was waging inside himself.
He said, "It is between two wolves, my son. One is an evil wolf: Anger, envy, sorrow, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego.
The other is the good wolf: Joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith." The boy thought this over for a minute, and then asked his grandfather:
"Which wolf wins?" The old Cherokee replied simply:
"The one I feed.""
Namaste « Presence »
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world » — Gandhi
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed » — Gandhi
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
It reminds me of the book 1984, where a generation that grew up with the reality of totally random terror strikes against civilians learned to simply live with them. We tend to think that we in the U.S. are callous simply because we are immune, but I don't think that's so. People in most of the world are fairly used to the idea that the U.S. or Israel might rain high explosives on them at any time depending on the political and economic situation of the world.