Now We See You, Now We Don’t
In early June, 2009, I was in the Shah Mansoor displaced persons camp in Pakistan, listening to one resident detail the carnage which had spurred his and his family’s flight there a mere 15 days earlier. Their city, Mingora, had come under massive aerial bombardment. He recalled harried efforts to bury corpses found on the roadside even as he and his neighbors tried to organize their families to flee the area.
“They were killing us in that way, there,” my friend said. Then, gesturing to the rows of tents stretching as far as the eye could see, he added, “Now, in this way, here.”
The people in the tent encampment suffered very harsh conditions. They were sleeping on the ground without mats, they lacked water for bathing, the tents were unbearably hot, and they had no idea whether their homes and shops in Mingora were still standing. But, the suffering they faced had only just begun.
UN humanitarian envoy Abdul Aziz Arrukban warned on June 22nd that the millions of Pakistanis displaced during the military’s offensive against the Swat Valley would “die slowly” unless the international community started taking notice of the “unprecedented” scope of the crisis. (Jason Ditz, Anti-War.com)
UN agencies and NGOs such as Islamic Relief and Relief International report that many of the persons now living in tent encampments, or squatting in abandoned buildings, or crowded into schools designated as refugee centers, may soon start dying from preventable disease.
Health teams note increasingly frequent cases of diarrhea, scabies and malaria, all deadly in these circumstances, especially for young children. With so many people living so close to each other, these diseases are spreading fast.
Relief groups are concerned that as the monsoon season approaches, in July, these problems will get considerably worse. Monsoons bring regional floods and cause escalating rates of malaria and waterborne diseases. The impact, this year, is expected to be much more severe because so many people are living in crowded and unsanitary conditions.
Pakistan’s already
rundown health care system, officials report, is now
near collapse. Hospitals in northern Pakistan have been overwhelmed,
with exhausted doctors, depleted medicine supplies and avalanches
of red tape blocking money and medicine for the crisis.
Writing for the Associated
Press on June 7th, Kathy Gannon described the men’s ward
in the Mardan District Hospital: “30 steel beds lie crammed together,
with two-inch mattresses and no pillows. Pools of urine spread on the
floor, and fresh blood stains the ripped bedding…The one bathroom
for 30 patients stinks of urine and faeces. The toilets are overflowing,
the door to one cement cubicle is falling off and a two-inch river of
urine covers the cement floor. In one corner, garbage is piled high.”
The annual budget for health care in Pakistan, this year, is less than $150 million, while Pakistan’s defense budget last year came to $3.45 billion, and is expected to reach $3.65 billion next year.
People in Shah Mansoor worry that the international community as well as their own government won’t notice the health care crisis they face. But villagers yet to flee their homes in Waziristan agonize under constant military scrutiny from lethally-armed U.S. surveillance drones.
A villager who survived a drone attack in North Waziristan explained that even the children, at play, were acutely conscious of drones flying overhead. After a drone attack, survivors trying to bring injured victims to a hospital were dumbfounded when a driver stopped, learned of their plight and then sped away. Then it dawned on them that the driver was afraid the drone would still be prowling overhead and that he might be targeted for associating with victims of the attack.
The U.S. drone aircraft can
see Pakistan - their pilots in air-conditioned Nevada trailers see the
terrain even though they are physically thousands of miles away.
Writing about U.S. Air Force efforts to “meet the voracious need for unmanned aircraft surveillance in combat zones,” Grace Jean notes, in the June, 2009 issue of National Defense Magazine, that the Air Force’s 432nd Air Expeditionary Wing, at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada, is expanding base operations. “We have 34 video feeds over the battlefield right now,” says Col. John Montgomery, the wing’s vice commander. When operating a drone, Montgomery says, “You are part of the battlefield.” Commenting on the hundreds of combat sorties he flew over Sadr City, in Baghdad, Montgomery said he even knew where people hung out the laundry and when they took out the trash. “I knew the traffic flow for the hours that I could see, and when that changed, I knew it. Once you know the patterns of life, when things are different or odd, that means something’s up, and that gives the battlefield commander, the joint commander on the ground, a heads up.”
On Tuesday, June 23rd, U.S. drones launched
an attack on a compound in South Waziristan.
Locals rushed to the scene to rescue survivors. The U.S. drone
then launched more missiles at them, leaving a total of 13 dead. The
next day, local people were involved in a funeral procession when the
U.S. struck again. Reuters reported that 70 of the mourners were killed.
Drone operators and their commanders at Creech Air Force Base will become increasingly well informed about the movements of Pakistani people, but meanwhile the U.S. people will have lost sight of war’s human costs in Pakistan.
Now, we're hearing of imminent army operations in South Waziristan
that have already forced about 45,000 people to flee the
region, joining about two million men, women, and children displaced
by fighting in the Swat Valley and
other areas. People from Waziristan who flee from their villages, trying
to save their lives, trying not to be seen by the omnipresent drones,
will likely join the unseen, the displaced people whose lives and hopes
escape international notice as they die slowly.
President Obama has taken us
into an expansion of Bush’s war on terror, presumably guided by the
rationale that his administration is responsible to root out Al Qaeda
terrorists. But the methods used by U.S. and Pakistani military
forces, expelling millions of people from their homes, failing to provide
food and shelter for those who are displaced, and using overwhelmingly
superior weapon technology to attack innocent civilians, -- these methods
will continue creating terrorist resisters, not defeating them.
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25 Comments so far
Show AllYou just prefer to have your head in the sand like most Americans, and just the way the mainstream corporate media wants it. Americans who love their country and want to be good democratic citizens for the common good must CHOOSE to know!
CIVILIZATION
I wondered some things the other day and shared with you what they were and today there is another thing to wonder about and that is: What is the civilization that everyone aspires to? It seems that throughout history that people who have been supposedly civilized the one thing that is common to all is that they acquired things and the more things they had the more they thought they were “more” civilized than any other people that they could have contact with. When they reached a point where there were not enough things they encouraged their leaders to raise an army so that they could go and get more things and they could show other peoples how civilized people do things and if they had no desire to learn how to be civilized they were removed and collateral damage was the norm. When the leaders saw how easy it was to sway the people with things it became easy to control them and push them into ideas and actions that were against their own self interest. Power corrupts.
War, civilization, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing
War, civilization, what is it good for absolutely nothing, say it again y’all
War, civilization good God what is it good for absolutely nothing, listen to me
Oooh war, civilization I despise because it means destruction of innocent lives.
War, civilization, it ain’t nothing but a heartbreaker
War, civilization, friend only to the undertaker
It’s an enemy to all mankind
The point of war, civilization blows my mind
Who wants to die?
War, civilization what is it good for?
As you can see I took some deep liberties with Edwin Starr’s song, hope he doesn’t mind. We are nothing new under the sun; are we going to have a short shelf life? Tony 6/25/2009
There is a lot to be said for those combatants who use to line up opposite each other, charge full speed ahead and fight hand to hand.... Yeah, I know, more fancy than fact, but we would be a whole lot better off if when we go to war, the sons of all Legislators would be forced to be in the front line combat units. Fighting from a secure site within our own boarder, the pilot never sees the results of his action, never experiences the empty feeling of knowing a buddy won't be going home to his wife and children, never see the lost look in the eyes of the local civilians, never experiences the risks, fears and heartaches of combat. At least now the drill instructors in boot camp don't have to instill hatred and bigotry in the recruits, the enemy is dehumanized by becoming a virtual computer enemy.... it's a sad commentary upon our society.....
The coming offensive in Waziristan will be a winner take all effort. Mehsud has dared us. Do it and Islamabad gets hit. Drones are ineffectual looking down on rooftops. Recent attacks have been of increased sophistication with car bombs, suicide entry teams, follow through attackers, support snipers and high value relatively hard targets. They are learning. And they will teach us well.
az, I'm just scrolling through the articles looking for your name. Call me and leave me your number so I can call you back! ~Garcias!~
Thanks Kathy. You are still the best.
the military guy says drone operators "are part of the battlefield"
well ok but to begin with "part of the battlefield" is exactly what the cowards hiding in Nevada and killing people in Pakistan are not.
and besides that what exactly is this "battlefield" anyway? could it be where the children are playing? A funeral for yesterday's victims? The peasant villages with no kind of defense? Is there, after all any battlefield in Pakistan? or Afghanistan either?
Or is it rather the most cowardly imaginable kind of "war" where one side has all the weapons and the other side has none?
WHO'S TERRORISM? That is the bumper sticker I have on the rear window of my car. Also a CA number plate "N02WARR". I get to church early to park near the front steps of the church. I wish I could do more! It creates more than a few puzzled looks from the clueless faithful.
The best of everything to you Kathy Kelly.
itsjustkarma:
you have shed sunlight on the seed-crystal of this monstrous concoction.
The OBJECTIVE of these strikes by the US drones and their surrogate armies in Af/Pak/Irq is NOT to kill terrorist, but to CREATE terrorists.
Our last rational for our bloated grotesque military budget was the Soviet Boogeyman. It was an easy "sell" to a dimwhitted public. Since its implosion you can see a concerted effort to replace that demon with a new and even more terrifying one - one that may be hiding in your neighbors basement... if he has a bit too much pigment in his skin and a funny sounding name.
Endless WAR and funhouse finance are the only things which prop up this charade of madness.
All thinking people know they must defend their homelands by killing Americans. Certainly the Iraqis and Afghans have found this out.
The American Principle - How To Breed A 'Terorist' and recruit 'enemy combatants'.
America is a perverted 'combat-addict'. Everything is combat. From Kindergarten to the limbless or brainless Vet. Driving around with licence plates that contain 'Combat Veteran', 'Iraq Veteran' and a few remaining 'Vietnam Veterans'. That's like having a sticker on Your car stating "I Am Stupid". Why would You be proud to have bought into the lies Your country has dished You out to ensure that You go and put Your live on the line to ensure a few parasites running the MIC a life like maggots in bacon?
How many of the disenfranchised Pakistanis, Afghanis, Iraqis, Palestinians et al will swear to bring down the West? I guess it was a premonition on behalf of the Moron in Chief that created the 'War On Terror'. Perpetually creating new 'terrorists' to sell the sheople the reason to waste 'their' money in weaponry.
"One cannot eat as much as one would like to vomit."
Max Lieberman about the Nazis marching through the Brandenburg Gate. Nothing has changed since.
May All Beings Be Blessed.
No Restrictions Or Limitations Shall Apply.
Ray Berthiaume
How can our congresspeople be oblivious of the terrible sufferings of the people at the other end of our missiles? Don't they have aides who are supposed to inform them of what is really going on? Aides with computers?
Kathy Kelley is one of the very few true American heros.
Let's not forget that this is our tax money at work, and that the working folk of this country are the primary source of taxes for our runaway government, the ultra-rich and the corporations having been largely cut loose from taxation. To quote the Irish nationalist leader, Michael Collins, we have our REFUSAL. Boycotts, non-cooperation, non-recognition and, finally, the general strike might return our government to constitutional legitimacy and reestablish taxation WITH representation. Let's begin now, individually, with a total boycott of the corporate media.
Tony Vodvarka
For me I'm dropping the rational of possible blow back terrorist attacks, and am focusing on Kelly's greatest contribution and most powerful caveat of humanitarian witness. The greatest threat of terrorism in this country comes from potential false flag events perpetrated by the likes of Richard Cheney. I have read stories that Gandhi would suffer the choking by an enemy until literally blue in the face until a humanitarian impulse reached a perception in the mind of his attacker, thus stimulating the release of the choke hold. For those engaged in The Story, the immorality of the situation can be stifling and suffocating. In order to breath freely again, and more so in the moment, I don't feel the increase of fear, and it's constriction, as can be sensed when one contemplates "the eyes and ears" of future terrorist attackers, is as effective for creating new thought and action as would be the passing on of the sense of "choke hold" of the entirely immoral behavior being perpetrated in the name of, and with the wealth of, those kneeling stoned on incense at the alter of the American Idol.
Help the people see, help the people be free.
Peace, stability, compassion.
Thanks Kathy.
It is so hard for me to acknowledge the inhumanity of our nation's policies. It is also difficult for me to understand how the so-called pilots stationed in Nevada can live with themselves. Thank you, Kathy Kelly, for doing what many of us wish we were doing, but haven't yet figured out how to do it! You are truly a hero to so many of us. Keep reporting the truth to us.
"... but meanwhile the U.S. people will have lost sight of war’s human costs in Pakistan. "
will? i doubt that most american sheople even consider war's human costs in pakistan. otherwise, a well-written and depressingly sad bit of information.
What a horrendous nightmare for the Pakistani people.
They are being killed by friendly fire.
Hi Kathy, thanks again for your needed work,the refugee situation in Pakistan must be a nightmare.As someone who has lived in a tent Monsoon season doesn't sound very healthy.
"They must be asking themselves ,who are the terrorists?" Your last line is a question we in the U.S. should have been asking every day since .....1492. Peace
indeed. i've been reading galeano's 'open veins of latin america' and wondering if obama's cracked open his copy he received from chavez yet.... i doubt such books that flesh out what's been going on since 1492 were required reading for him at university... as they weren't for me--- i felt aghast when, embarrassingly long after getting my (fairly useless) diploma, i read such work as kinzer & schlessinger's 'bitter fruit' or even susan b anthony's courtroom rant after her arrest for attempting to vote or mlk's declaration of independence from the vietnam war, so blind was i to the realities of who, indeed, the terrorists are. i left the teaching profession largely in disgust after taking part in adopting social studies textbooks for the district.... the dumbed down whitewashing in our 'choices' was so absurd and the testing industry such a monumental waste of time and resources, i still cannot begin to answer when friends ask me why i don't go back into teaching. kathy kelly's dispatches from these places of conflict is a much-needed touchstone for the healing that needs to take place if we are ever to assert our humanity and not just our neurotic (or psychopathic) territorial desires in this world. reading other articles on common dreams about obama's reluctance to release those photos reminds me of those lame textbooks and our wimpy fear of offending or losing face in a culture that is reeling from offensive/defensive camps that lack even elementary school skills in conflict mediation and encourage us to live in a world of appearances... of image management and phoniness because looking at the ethical disaster all around us is just too overwhelming and inconvenient. can't these so-called 'leaders' use some of that gargantuan war/imf supplemental to get some basic conflict mediation skills?.... isn't that a 'skill set' that should be required of people empowered with decision-making powers that wind up killing dozens of funeral-goers rather than just TALKING to them????? can't someone as bright and articulate as obama use his rhetorical talents to just politely SUGGEST that all that money and hardware ripping into the veins of not just latin america, but any far flung land where resources or territory is contested, might be better spent training us all to think more deeply about our conflicts and learn how to live more peaceably on this amazing planet? argh. didn't mean to go off on such a rant, but it's just so crazymaking sometimes. such a demented world. abuse of power is abuse of power and conflict avoidance through willful ignorance, misleading propoganda and terrorism are favorite strategies employed by those who lack the moral fiber ...oops, i mean skills.... it's not like moral fiber springs up naturally out of complacent conformity to a culture largely weighted to preserve the status quo... to respect and work with the actual realities of our interconnectedness in solving problems. what makes people desire power and strive to augment it to such excess? insecurity. fear of their own vulnerability and mortality, i guess. ignorance of 'the other' for sure. i'm in agreement with something i heard aung sun suu kyi say once about 'evil'....that what people term as 'evil' by and large is just ignorance, if you really think about it. thank goodness for people like kelly who tirelessly resist the temptation to settle into comfortable ignorance. thank you kathy for helping us to see.