The men and women of the National Guard shouldn’t be killing in
Iraq.
They should be helping in New Orleans and Biloxi.
The catastrophic hurricane was an act of God. But the U.S. war
effort
in Iraq is a continuing act of the president. And now, that effort is
hampering the capacity of the National Guard to save lives at home.
Before the flooding of New Orleans drastically escalated on
Tuesday,
the White House tried to disarm questions that could be politically
explosive. “To those of you who are concerned about whether or not
we’re prepared to help, don’t be, we are,” President Bush said.
“We’re in place, we’ve got equipment in place, supplies in place, and
once the -- once we’re able to assess the damage, we’ll be able to
move in and help those good folks in the affected areas.”
Echoing the official assurances, CBS News reported: “Even though
more
than a third of Mississippi’s and Louisiana’s National Guard troops
are either in Iraq or supporting the war effort, the National Guard
says there are more than enough at home to do the job.”
But after New Orleans levees collapsed and the scope of the
catastrophe became more clear, such reassuring claims lost
credibility. The Washington Post reported on Wednesday: “With
thousands of their citizen-soldiers away fighting in Iraq, states hit
hard by Hurricane Katrina scrambled to muster forces for rescue and
security missions yesterday -- calling up Army bands and
water-purification teams, among other units, and requesting help from
distant states and the active-duty military.”
The back-page Post story added: “National Guard officials in the
states acknowledged that the scale of the destruction is stretching
the limits of available manpower while placing another extraordinary
demand on their troops -- most of whom have already served tours in
Iraq or Afghanistan or in homeland defense missions since 2001.”
Speaking for the Mississippi National Guard, Lt. Andy Thaggard
said:
“Missing the personnel is the big thing in this particular event. We
need our people.” According to the Washington Post, the Mississippi
National Guard “has a brigade of more than 4,000 troops in central
Iraq” while “Louisiana also has about 3,000 Guard troops in Baghdad.”
National Guard troops don’t belong in Iraq. They should be
rescuing
and protecting in Louisiana and Mississippi, not patrolling and
killing in a country that was invaded on the basis of presidential
deception. They should be fighting the effects of flood waters at
home -- helping people in the communities they know best -- not
battling Iraqi people who want them to go away.
Let’s use the Internet today to forward and post this demand so
widely that the politicians in Washington can no longer ignore it:
Bring the National Guard home. Immediately.
Norman Solomon is the author of the new book “War Made Easy: How
Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.” For information, go
to:
www.WarMadeEasy.com
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