|
Now, I am the terrorist
go to article
Statement to the troops
We are veterans of the United States armed forces. We stand
with the majority of humanity, including millions in our own country,
in opposition to the United States all out war on Iraq. We span
many wars and eras, have many political views and we all agree that this
war is wrong. Many of us believed serving in the military was our duty,
and our job was to defend this country. Our experiences in the military
caused us to question much of what we were taught. Now we see our REAL
duty is to encourage you as members of the US armed forces to find out
what you are being sent to fight and die for and what the consequences
of your actions will be for humanity. We call upon you, the active duty
and reservists, to follow your conscience and do the right thing.
In the last Gulf War, as troops, we were ordered to murder from a safe
distance. We destroyed much of Iraq from the air, killing hundreds of
thousands, including civilians. We remember the road to Basra the
Highway of Death where we were ordered to kill fleeing Iraqis.
We bulldozed trenches, burying people alive. The use of depleted uranium
weapons left the battlefields radioactive. Massive use of pesticides,
experimental drugs, burning chemical weapons depots and oil fires combined
to create a toxic cocktail affecting both the Iraqi people and Gulf War
veterans today. One in four Gulf War veterans is disabled.
During the Vietnam War we were ordered to destroy Vietnam from the air
and on the ground. At My Lai we massacred over 500 women, children and
old men. This was not an aberration, its how we fought the war.
We used Agent Orange on the enemy and then experienced first hand its
effects. We know what Post Traumatic Stress Disorder looks, feels and
tastes like because the ghosts of over two million men, women and children
still haunt our dreams. More of us took our own lives after returning
home than died in battle.
If you choose to participate in the invasion of Iraq you will be part
of an occupying army. Do you know what it is like to look into the eyes
of a people that hate you to your core? You should think about what your
mission really is. You are being sent to invade and occupy
a people who, like you and me, are only trying to live their lives and
raise their kids.
They pose no threat to the United States even though they have a brutal
dictator as their leader. Who is the US to tell the Iraqi people how to
run their country when many in the US dont even believe their own
President was legally elected?
Saddam is being vilified for gassing his own people and trying to develop
weapons of mass destruction. However, when Saddam committed his worst
crimes the US was supporting him. This support included providing the
means to produce chemical and biological weapons. Contrast this with the
horrendous results of the US-led economic sanctions. More than a million
Iraqis, mainly children and infants, have died because of these sanctions.
After having destroyed the entire infrastructure of their country including
hospitals, electricity generators, and water treatment plants, the US
then, with the sanctions, stopped the import of goods, medicines, parts,
and chemicals necessary to restore even the most basic necessities of
life.
There is no honor in murder. This war is murder by another name. When,
in an unjust war, an errant bomb dropped kills a mother and her child,
it is not collateral damage, it is murder. When, in an unjust
war, a child dies of dysentery because a bomb damaged a sewage treatment
plant, it is not destroying enemy infrastructure, it is murder.
When, in an unjust war, a father dies of a heart attack because a bomb
disrupted the phone lines so he could not call an ambulance, it is not
neutralizing command and control facilities, it is murder.
When, in an unjust war, a thousand poor farmer conscripts die in a trench
defending a town they have lived in their whole lives, it is not victory,
it is murder.
There will be veterans leading protests against this war on Iraq and your
participation in it. During the Vietnam War thousands in Vietnam and in
the US refused to follow orders. Many resisted and rebelled. Many became
conscientious objectors and others went to prison rather than bear arms
against the so-called enemy. During the last Gulf War many GIs resisted
in various ways and for many different reasons. Many of us came out of
these wars and joined with the anti-war movement.
If the people of the world are ever to be free, there must come a time
when being a citizen of the world takes precedence over being the soldier
of a nation. Now is that time. When orders come to ship out, your response
will profoundly impact the lives of millions of people in the Middle East
and here at home. Your response will help set the course of our future.
You will have choices all along the way. Your commanders want you to obey.
We urge you to think. We urge you to make your choices based on your conscience.
If you choose to resist, we will support you and stand with you because
we have come to understand that our REAL duty is to the people of the
world and to our common future.
The above statement was signed by 698 people who had
served in the past or are currently serving in the armed forces. They
represent various branches of the military, and their terms of service
span from 1938 through the present.
back to top
Now, I am the terrorist
By William Rivers Pitt
Mar. 21 The city of Baghdad, founded in 762 AD under the name Madinat
as-Salam City of Peace is this day a lake of
fire. The opening stage of the Bush administrations Shock
and Awe attack plan began as night fell on Iraq, and lived terribly
up to its terrible name. CBS news is reporting that great swaths of residential
neighborhoods within Baghdad have been engulfed in flames. One can trust,
perhaps, the ability of a cruise missile to hit a bullseye from many miles
away. One cannot be so precise in predicting which way the resulting fires
will blow.
In the great earthquake in San Francisco in 1906, people were not killed
so much by the shaking. They were killed by the firestorm that sucked
the air from their lungs and reduced them to ash before they could flee.
So it seems to be today in Baghdad.
Baghdad is a city of five million people, half of whom are under the age
of fifteen, most of whom are too poor to flee. Now, a great many of those
people are dead, burned in their homes and on their streets.
The American television media provided all of us with a Dresden-eye view
of the attack. Huge mushroom clouds bloomed from the streets as buildings
blazed and fell. The thunder of the explosions was so loud that television
speakers became distorted with the sound of the concussion. The sky lit
up as though the sun was rising. It was a fitting image, for a new day
in world history has dawned.
Much has been made of the precision of our vaunted arsenal of bombs and
missiles, as if they can go into a building and find the second door on
the left before they explode. The truth is far more dire. When a B-2 bomber
drops a 2,000 lb. JDAM munition, everyone and everything within a 120
meter radius is instantly killed. Anyone within a 365 meter radius risks
severe shrapnel wounds. To be totally safe, one must be 1,000 meters away
from the epicenter of the explosion. Imagine how many homes can fit into
1,000 meters, and never mind the firestorm.
American Marines have died securing petroleum facilities, and in a helicopter
crash. If Iraqi forces do not surrender soon, American forces will attack
Baghdad from the ground. The loss of life among our people will grow exponentially
if a Stalingrad-style fight unfolds in Baghdad and Tikrit. On a CBS News
broadcast, the father of one of the soldiers killed in the helicopter
crash held a picture of his son to the camera and shouted, Take
a look, Bush. You killed my only son.
Those who stand against this attack are dunned as Not supporting
the troops. One might suggest the best way to support troops is
to see them brought home safely. One might also suggest that support continues
after the shooting stops. This does not appear to be on the agenda for
the Republican Party. A vote along party lines today in the House Budget
Committee slashed $9.7 billion from veterans disability compensation
programs, as well as from other programs. These cuts, pushed through the
committee by the majority-holding Republicans, are part of the plan to
see Bushs new $1.57 trillion tax cut through. Wave that flag, George.
Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld, when asked by a reporter whether the Iraqi
people would cheer Americans after this attack, stated that Baghdads
civilians would welcome us. This defies known history in Japan and Germany
and Vietnam; those populations, after absorbing saturation bombing, hardened
their resistance. American television purported to show Iraqi civilians
cheering a soldier who tore down a picture of Hussein, but a Sky News
reporter walking Baghdads streets reported that, to a man, everyone
he spoke with spat hatred and derision for this American attack.
On Sept. 11, I sat in numb horror as the images of carnage unfolded before
me on the television. On that day, I was the victim of terrorism, along
with every other American. Today, I sit in numbed horror as more carnage
unfolds. Hundreds of massive missiles have rained down on a city far away,
killing indiscriminately among the young, the infirm, the old and the
innocent. My government did this. My nation did this. My leaders did this.
Today, I am the terrorist.
So are you.
There is no justification for this attack. Saddam Hussein and his forces
had been effectively disarmed by the first Gulf War, by the UNSCOM inspections,
and by the more recent UNMOVIC inspections. According to Hussein Kamel,
son-in-law to Saddam Hussein whose comments to the UN in 1991 were recently
reported in a buried Newsweek story, Iraq was pretty much disarmed of
mass destruction weapons even before the first war. The Bush administration,
in pushing for this war, has foisted lie after lie after lie upon the
American people and the world. The world didnt buy it, but they
werent dependent upon lapdog media sources like ours for their data.
We are the terrorists now, stupid underinformed terrorists who dance to
the tune of a corporate media machine that will profit wildly from this
attack. NBC, MSNBC and CNBC are owned by General Electric, one of the
largest defense contractors on earth. They will be paid handsomely in
military contracts because of this, as they always have been. Yet GE gives
us the news we need to understand what is happening.
Americans are not often afforded the opportunity to witness a war crime
live on television. Todays actions bring to mind a war crime from
a generation ago: The shooting of a prisoner by Vietnamese general and
American ally Nguyen Ngoc Loan. General Loan put a pistol to the head
of this bound prisoner and blew his brains into the street, an image that
millions of Americans saw after it had taken place. We are here again
today. The poverty of the Iraqi people leaves them bound, unable to escape
the wave of steel. We have blown their brains out. We have incinerated
them in place. We will continue to do so, and you can watch it from your
couch. Today, you are the terrorist.
So am I.
Source: Truthout
back to top
|