Blame the white trash
By Gary Younge
May 17 Two young women have achieved iconic status in
US President George Bushs battle between good and evil currently
touring Iraq. And if the administrations propaganda machine is
to be believed, one of them is good and the other one is evil.
One the side of good there is Jessica Lynch. When we first met her,
in April last year, she was the plucky soldier who had been captured
after a valiant gunfight, slapped around and then rescued
on camera in a midnight ballet by a daring posse.
Representing evil is Lynndie England. When we first met her she was
smoking a cigarette and giving a thumbs up while pointing at the genitals
of a naked, hooded Iraqi prisoner. She appears to be laughing; he appears
to be masturbating.
Lynch was lauded as a national hero; England has been lambasted as a
national disgrace. While no one has yet to describe England as the anti-Christ
they have come close. In the words of one of her neighbors, she is the
anti-Jessica.
Lynch and England are real people - both young working-class women from
West Virginia, one of the poorest states in the union. But in the hands
of the Pentagon spinmeisters they are also constructs, rooted in gender
and class. Lynch, we now know, never fired a shot and was well cared
for while held captive. Of the Pentagons spin machine she complained:
They used me as a way to symbolize all this stuff ... Im
not about to take credit for something I didnt do.
Precisely the same is happening of England and, to a lesser extent,
the other soldiers who have been court-martialled as a result of the
atrocities at Abu Ghraib. They are being used to symbolize not all that
is wrong with the war but the only thing that is wrong with it. While
all the evidence, including new allegations that the defense secretary,
Donald Rumsfeld, authorized physical coercion and sexual humiliation
in Iraqi prisons, points to the American political establishments
active encouragement of the abuse, the White House keeps pointing at
England and her six colleagues to bear the moral burden for their immoral
war.
Englands brutality is explained away not as the logical continuum
of the occupation but as a contradiction to it. Increasingly, Bushs
best hope is to take out the trailer trash. They have cast
not only the actions as disgraceful but the people accused of carrying
them out as dispensable -- collateral damage in the propaganda war at
home, where the poor dont vote or contribute to any campaigns.
When Bush went on Arab television two weeks ago, he said the behavior
does not represent the America that I know. But then, thanks
to his connections, he has never had to serve in the army during a war.
And England and her friends were never going to pledge for the Skull
and Cross Bones, the elite fraternity to which both Bush and Democratic
challenger, John Kerry, belonged at Yale. They are neither wealthy nor
well connected - he doesnt need to know them, although the irony
is that if they did vote they would probably vote for him.
So long as the buck stops with England and her colleagues, the whole
episode can be reduced to soccer hooligans in uniform - - the white
working class (one African-American is accused, although he is featured
rarely and appears in no photographs) running amok. Like arresting the
Watergate burglars and leaving Nixon in the White House, convicting
only them would suggest the abuse can be understood as the sporadic
acts of a few offensive individuals. The higher up it goes, the clearer
it becomes that they were in fact the systemic actions of an occupying
institution.
There is no need to fetishize class in all of this. Their class on its
own does not carry any moral value, guilt or innocence. But it is relevant
to their agency in a top-down military command structure. In the words
of one of their attorneys: Do you really think a group of kids
from rural Virginia decided to do this on their own?
Like Lynch, England and her fellow abusers must, of course, take responsibility
what they did and did not do. The beatings, humiliations and possibly
murders carried out were vile, depraved and sadistic. Their claim that
they were only following orders finds its chilling echoes in postwar
Nuremberg. Similarly, Englands defense that she was made to pose
for the pictures is only relevant in so far as it implies more senior
people were involved. If and when a fair trial determines the extent
of their involvement -- given the pictures, it is difficult for them
to claim they were not involved -- they should be given the severest
of punishments.
Who they are is no defense for what they did. Indeed, who they are enabled
what they did. It is one of the hallmarks of colonialism that the poorest,
least powerful citizen of an occupying nation can wield enormous power
in an occupied territory. A former chicken-plant worker like England
can humiliate virtually any Iraqi she wants precisely and only because
she is American in Iraq. Once she returns to America she reverts to
the bottom of the pile.
But they have choices, however limited. It was the former car mechanic
from rural Pennsylvania, Joseph Darby, who blew the whistle after senior
brass had tried to hush the whole thing up by slipping a disc under
an investigators door.
However, who they are does explain what is now being done to them. Their
poverty has made them easier to dis miss. After viewing more pictures
and tapes of their actions Republican senator, Ben Campbell, said: I
dont know how these people got into our army.
To find out he need go no further than Sabrina Harman, one of the soldiers
under investigation. I knew nothing at all about the military
except the fact that they would pay for college, she told the
Washington Post. For the most part they joined to get paid, not because
they believed in the war on terror. Indeed the most over represented
demographic group in the military -- African-American women -- is the
same group least likely to support the war in Iraq.
In the case of England and Harman, their gender has also made them easier
to demonize. Last week, rightwing firebrand Ann Coulter told one radio
station: This is yet another lesson in why women shouldnt
be in the military ... Women are more vicious than men.
Others claim that their involvement in sexual abuse is deviant. Somehow,
I could more readily understand women committing physical torture against
prisoners of war, writes Jill Porter for the Philadelphia News
last week. But this kind of sexual oppression? It seems to me
like a kind of treason. I look at the smirking women in the photos and
wonder: how could they?
It is a good question. Where did these people get the idea that the
Arabs need not be treated humanely, that international law does not
apply to them and that humiliation and intimidation are the best way
to get what they want? This may not represent the America Bush knows.
Sadly, it is the one with which the rest of us are becoming all too
familiar.
Source: Guardian (UK)