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An
Act of Cowardice that Must Surely be Unrivalled in History: Challenging the
Assumption of Valour
by
Kim Petersen
July
29, 2003
Gandhi argued that the coward should take
to violence because non-violence requires a lot of courage. One could add that
the intellectually lazy fellow chooses violence before even thinking of
non-violent options.
-- Jan Oberg
Time
and again we heard about the brave US-UK troops fighting to liberate Iraq. The
way the adjective ‘brave’ was so liberally attributed, one might be forgiven
for thinking that ipso facto invocation of bravery made it so.
In
the Far East, communities that host military bases would scoff at this
automatic bestowal of valour in the military. There are plenty of civilian
victims of criminal acts by American servicemen.
The
Japanese government is loath to make public the statistics for crimes committed
by US military on its soil. (1) The situation in Japan hit
a decided sour point in 1995 when US marines raped a 12-year-old girl in
Okinawa. The public outrage on the tiny southern island of Okinawa, which
houses the brunt of US forces, was such that in a 1996 referendum Okinawans
voted overwhelmingly to have the US military presence reduced on the island.
The US and the Japanese authorities ignored this expression of democratic will.
The situation is equally grim across the sea in South Korea where about 37,000
US troops are stationed in nearly 100 installations. In the summer of 2002, two
Korean schoolgirls, Shim Mi-seon and Shin Hyo-sun, were killed when a US tank drove
over them and crushed them underneath. Nobody was convicted in the incident,
which exacerbated tepid US-South Korea relations. Angry demonstrations took
place and the tragic event may even have tipped the presidential election to
Roh Moo-Hyun who took a hard-line campaign stance against the US troop
presence. The history of the occupations of both Japan and South Korea offers
poignant parallels to present day Iraq.
Santanyana’s
wisdom unfortunately is relegated to the memory hole; consequently, history in
its malefic forms does repeat. Otherwise how can civilized people explain the
history of bloodshed and barbarity by Homo sapiens? Atrocities are
nothing new to the US. Knowledge of such atrocities is, however, mangled by
agitprop, the justice of the victors, chauvinism, and the subsequently skewed
rendering of history. As US historian Howard Zinn lamented: “Americans have
been taught that their nation is civilized and humane. But, too often, U.S.
actions have been uncivilized and inhumane.”
The
barbarism of Americans had its roots in European bloodletting. This
sociological institution saw US war crimes begin in the “homeland” with the
near annihilation of the Indigenous peoples (who in an extreme inversion of
language were deemed the “savages”), followed by the extirpation of Africans,
millions of who died en route to slavery in America. The Monroe Doctrine saw US
hegemony envelop the Americas as its backyard. The Spanish-American War
witnessed the beginnings of empire. Over a million Filipinos were slaughtered
for having the temerity to oppose empire. The killing spree includes terrible
massacres at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan, Nogun Ri in Korea, My Lai in
Vietnam, and the infamous “Turkey Shoot” and “Highway of Death” in the 1991
phase of the Persian Gulf Slaughter. Reports of the “Convoy of Death” have
emerged from Afghanistan detailing how US troops stood by and watched while
container-bound and suffocating Taliban prisoners-of-war were shot dead. The
juggernaut of US aggression continues unabated up to the latest phase of the
aggression on Iraq.
Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of
fear-not absence of fear. Except a creature be part coward it is not a
compliment to say it is brave. -- Mark Twain
In
this history of violence, a not-to-be-challenged given is the bravery of the US
military. President Bush made it known prior to unleashing “Shock and Awe” on
Iraqis that US valour was axiomatic: “The enemies you confront will come to
know your skill and bravery.” Mr. Bush affirmed his prognostication afterwards:
“They performed with great skill and great bravery.” Whereby Mr. Bush gets off
pontificating ex cathedra on bravery is a mystery. This selfsame
commander-in-chief ducked service in Vietnam by serving in the National Guard
from which he went AWOL. He compounded this inanity with his now infamous
“bring ’em on” retort. The remark was described by one ex-soldier “for its
counterfeit courage, for its puerility, for its utter hypocrisy and
insensitivity.”
The Progressive Editor Matthew
Rothschild treaded a cautious line to avoid calling into question the
unquestionable American bravery: “Not to detract at all from the bravery of
U.S. soldiers today, I only want to point out that the battles of World War II
were much bloodier and more dangerous than today's, when the United States
military maintains such overwhelming superiority.” (2)
“Politically
Correct” TV host Bill Maher found out first-hand the price to be paid for
questioning the sacrosanctity of the American fighter’s courage:
“Cowardice” as an epithet could be
disputed in its application to the September 11 attacks in New York and
Washington, he said. The term, in fact, was probably a more accurate
description of military operations which targeted innocent civilians through
cruise missiles fired from thousands of miles away. “We have been the cowards,”
said he, “lobbing cruise missiles from two thousand miles away. That’s cowardly.
Staying in the airplane when it hits the building, say what you want about it,
it is not cowardly.”
Maher’s reward was a prompt withdrawal of
sponsorship and a temporary suspension from the airwaves. Following this, the
broadcast company that hosted his programme issued a public apology. And the
presenter himself was obliged to don the robes of penitence when he next
appeared on TV. Bill Maher is unlikely in future to seek an objective
understanding of the terms “courage” and “cowardice,” that is, not unless he is
willing to give up his career as a TV personality in the US.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer
denounced the Maher program at a routine press briefing. Americans, he
warned ominously, “had to watch what they say and watch what they do.” This
menacing line was excised from the official transcript of Fleischer’s briefing,
on the rather feeble ground of “transcription error.” (3)
The
implications are palpable: US bravery is fact and is not subject to empirical
or speculative investigation. Yet by refusing to catechise this valour the
media finds itself paradoxically in the role of the coward.
Media
accounts, however, contain instances depicting something far less that valour.
Journalist
Mark Franchetti wrote a stirring account of US troops facing fierce resistance
from Iraqi fighters, who were sometimes out-of-uniform and mingled in with the
civilian population. Under fire, the mettle of US soldiers took shape.
Lieutenant Matt Martin was distraught over the death of an Iraqi child.
Corporal Ryan Dupre was otherwise affected. Said he, “The Iraqis are sick
people and we are the chemotherapy. I am starting to hate this country. Wait
till I get hold of a friggin' Iraqi. No, I won't get hold of one. I'll just
kill him.” According to Mr. Franchetti, the battle was “the turning point when
the jovial band of brothers from America lost all their assumptions about the
war and became jittery aggressors who talked of wanting to ‘nuke’ the place.” (4)
Mr.
Franchetti described bravery, fear, and hysteria. Without fear there is neither
bravery nor cowardice. Iraqi civilians would no longer be allowed close to the
US soldiers lest the now nervous fighters shoot them.
When valour preys on reason, It eats the
sword it fights with.
-- William Shakespeare
Indiscriminate
killing of civilians is a war crime devoid of bravery. Killing of
non-combatants illustrates fear gone amok. It might also express the racism or
insouciance of the killers.
Washington
Post writer Lyndsey Layton described the light-hearted banter among pilots
following bombing raids, the oblivion to the results of the bombing, and the
refusal “to consider whether bombs have killed civilians.”
“We know we're killing people,” said Lt.
Stan Wilson, 33, who enlisted in the Navy at 18, left to attend college and
then rejoined to become a pilot. “We don't talk about it, don't worry about it.
I don't know how this sounds, but we're more selfish than that. I worry about
my car payments; the other guys worry about their girlfriends and wives.”
… “My job is to hit whatever target I've
been assigned to hit,” Cmdr. Jeff Penfield, the commanding officer of the Super
Hornet squadron, said. “I don't think about it as human life. I aim at hard
things, and if there are people around, I don't think about it.”
Mr.
Layton did acknowledge that some pilots ponder the “moral dilemma of their
work.” As an example of this Mr. Layton curiously quoted Cmdr. Dale Horan, 39,
the squad’s top officer who offered: “I reflect on it on a daily basis, I want
to do well.”
But
Cmdr. Horan added: “I get excited when I'm successful and my bomb hits the
target. But we're expending precious treasure -- blood and lives as well as
equipment and money.” Seemingly the killing of people has been rationalized by
equating the price in human lives to the costly weapons of death. (5)
Medical
personnel on the ground have confirmed the civilian carnage. Samia Nakhoul of
The Daily Mirror reported:
Doctors who treated victims of the
1980-88 Iran-Iraq war and the 1991 Gulf War were taken aback by the injuries.
Dr Duleimi, 48, said: “This is the worst I've seen in the number of casualties
and fatal wounds.”
“This is a disaster because they're
attacking civilians.”
Dr Sadek al-Mukhtar said: “In the
previous battles the weapons seemed merely disabling. Now they're much more
lethal.”
“Before the war I did not regard America
as my enemy. Now I do. War should be against the military. America is killing
civilians.” (6)
British
coalition members also cited American disdain for Iraqis. Daniel McGory wrote: “The
Americans are still behaving like invaders, not liberators. They behave as if
they hate these people.”
British commanders are appalled at how
the Americans pulverise anything from afar before daring to set foot out of
their armoured vehicles. ... This was no better illustrated than in the first
skirmish of the land war, where the American 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit was
handed what should have been the easy capture of the port of Umm Qasr.
Royal Marine officers watched
incredulously as their US compatriots bombed and shelled the town for five
days. The experience of nearly 30 years policing Ulster has taught British
forces that the only way to root out gunmen is to patrol on foot, searching
house by house. (7)
It
is unlikely British forces would ever succeed in testing the US system of
eliminating gunmen in Ulster. Nevertheless, this does encapsulate the level to
which US public squeamishness about own-troop casualties has influenced tactics
on the battlefield. The Fabian approach to battle is a particularly inimical to
supposed US valour. US troops were instead witnesses from a safe distance to an
air barrage on the hapless denizens of Umm Qasr.
The
status of being a long-distance gladiator doesn’t seem to have punctured the US
bravado. Mr. McGory noted how, in the relative security afforded by great
distance, US soldiers acted as if war were a game:
The
rhetoric of US soldiers is often provocative. An American colonel, asked what
the role of the Fifth Corps would be, replied: “We are going in there. We are
going to root out the bad guys and kill them.” His men whooped and punched the
air as if they were watching a football match. (8)
Writer
George Orwell addressed this behavioural parallel: “Serious sport has nothing
to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness,
disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence. In other
words, it is war minus the shooting.” (9) Insightful US
foreign policy expert Noam Chomsky concurred on the domestic guise sports
assumes in inculcating patriotic attitudes to its warriors. “Sports plays a
societal role in engendering jingoist and chauvinist attitudes. They're
designed to organize a community to be committed to their gladiators.” (10)
Common experience shows how much rarer is
moral courage than physical bravery. A thousand men will march to the mouth of
the cannon where one man will dare espouse an unpopular cause. -- Clarence
Darrow
Gladiators
they were. No dime was spared for the Iraqi fighters. The US fighters were most
willing to wipe them out. General John Kelly, assistant commander, 1st Marine
Division, on Muslim fighters in Iraq was lucid.
“They stand, they fight, sometimes they
run when we engage them,” Brigadier-General John Kelly said.
“But often they run into our machine guns
and we shoot them down like the morons they are.”
... “They appear willing to die. We are trying
our best to help them out in that endeavour,” he said. (11)
The
killing wasn’t confined to Iraqi soldiers and civilians; the British coalition
partners were angry and bitter at casualties inflicted by “friendly fire.” The
violence had taken on a certain randomness. Desensitisation to killing seems
also to corrupt judgment or maybe it was the influence of drugs as in the case
of the pilot who killed four Canadians coalition fighters in Afghanistan.
British soldiers which came under “friendly fire” had criticism for their
coalition partners. UK soldier Lance Corporal Steven Gerrard, wounded by a US
pilot, charged: “He had absolutely no regard for human life. I believe he was a
cowboy.” Chris Foss of Jane’s Defence Weekly painted the Americans as “too
trigger happy.” (12)
Fear to do base, unworthy things is
valour. -- Ben Jonson
Not
only was the killing indiscriminate, but there seemed to be, at times, a
perverse pleasure derived from it. Like an athlete hankering after his first
score in the big leagues, the soldiers vied for their first kill.
During fierce street-to-street fighting
in the Shi'ite Muslim holy city of Kerbala this weekend, two soldiers picked
out two figures on a rooftop and quickly lined up their shot. Thankfully, First
Sgt. Eric Engram saw them and also saw their target. “No man, that's a kid and
a woman. It's a KID and a WOMAN,” he bellowed, and his soldiers lowered their
rifles.
“These guys are young and most just want
to get their first confirmed kill, so they're too anxious to get off shots. I
hate to say ‘bragging rights’ but they want that kill,” Engram said an hour
later, resting in a schoolyard as U.S. army troops finally established control
over the area. (13)
Racking
up kills is not valorous; especially, when the victims are unarmed women or
children. Indeed if represents some far more sinister -- a fog of killing that
has obfuscated morality.
Cowards
can never be moral. -- Mahatma Gandhi
Can
courage exist in the absence of morality? Can troops that unstintingly obey
morally reprehensible commands from higher-ranking officers -- which
essentially mimics the rejected defence of Adolf Eichmann -- properly be
portrayed as brave? Is not the greater fear that of disobeying an order? Is it
not rather the refusal to carry out orders denigrating humanity that is brave?
Something
every big moose in the schoolyard should be aware of is that fighting a small,
weak opponent is a no-win situation. If he wins then he is despised as a bully;
if he loses then he is humiliated. So why bother to fight? It just so happens
that many bullies are not sharp enough to figure this out.
Mr.
Bush is also unlikely to be accused of being the brightest cookie. The latest
bully-victim mismatch has breached the boundaries of absurdity. Indian activist
Arundhati Roy declared the Gulf War Slaughter to be “an act of cowardice that
must surely be unrivalled in history.” (14) Even NY Times
columnist Thomas Friedman was forced to admit: “With all due respect to the
U.S. military, and the brave men and women who fought here, this contest was surely
one of the most unequal wars in the history of warfare. In socioeconomic terms,
we were at war with the Flintstones.” (15) Given the
infinitesimal odds stacked against the war- and sanctions-ravaged Iraq, it is a
stunning leap of casuistry for Mr. Bush to declaim that Iraq was an imminent
threat to the US hyperimperion.
When
the Ba’ath hierarchy and Revolutionary Guard fled, the way was clear for the US
military to stride virtually unopposed into Baghdad and establish its
occupation. Immediately thereafter the lack of moral clarity in the Washington
leadership became most telling. There was no willingness to halt the looting.
Some members of the US military even aided the looters and partook themselves.
Iraqi society was pillaged to its very core. Its rich history, religious
manuscripts, hospitals, schools, and institutions were plundered. For many
scholars, especially disturbing was the destruction of Iraq’s irreplaceable
ancient treasures and testaments to its heritage as the cradle of civilization.
The US-UK occupiers shamefully abrogated their legal obligations under the
Geneva Conventions to protect the citizenry and the institutions of society --
with the notable exception of the oil sector. It was patently obvious to most
observers that oil was the US cynosure, to the detriment of Iraqis who saw
their country devolve deeper into chaos. Iraqi goodwill could hardly be
expected from greed for their oil.
The
occupation soldiers later vented their wrath on the defenceless media that had
exposed the US ignominy and on the crowds of Iraqis urging them a quick trip
back home. A number of Iraqi civilians demonstrating against the occupation in
cities like Fallujah and Mosul were shot dead by US forces.
Shooting
of civilians opens US forces to ridicule. Mark Steel wrote:
For example, one American soldier,
interviewed after his regiment shot dead 14 demonstrating Iraqis, said his
regiment was under attack, adding: “It was like the Alamo out there.” Yet not a
single US soldier or US thing of any nature was dented by a bullet.
Or maybe the soldier was telling the
truth, and at the Alamo the Americans came under siege from a terrifying horde
of Mexicans carrying placards. And their leader cried: “Abandon the fort,
amigo, or you leave us with no choice but to chant slogans. And I warn you, I
have the fastest megaphone in Texas.” (16)
Do that which you fear to do, and the
fear will die.
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson
The
military has evolved and so has the military culture. The military culture has
become increasingly permissive to the deliberate targeting of facilities with
civilians and otherwise exposing civilians to danger.
Most
people are averse to the taking of life but this aversion can be overcome.
Military training seeks to deindividualize enlistees. Through psychological
conditioning military norms are substituted for norms previously held by
enlistees. Nonetheless each soldier brings his or her own idiosyncrasies which
factor into what kind of soldier he or she will become; these idiosyncrasies
are shaped by society and military training.
The actions of the soldier are further constrained by public
acceptability.
Vietnam
adduced that public opinion could shape the war. Public antipathy to the deaths
of American youth finally rose to such a level that it led to the US defeat. US
administration officials knew that Vietnam Syndrome had to be dealt with in
future violence. Aggression and its resolution had to be swift. American
casualties had to be minimized and this was achieved through the introduction
of new high-tech weaponry that enabled long distance bombing of the enemy,
reducing the need for ground troops; casualties of the enemy are neglected.
Propaganda became an increasingly important tool in overcoming public
resistance to war.
There
is a fundamental difference in the makeup of the US military today. Whereas the
military used to be a primarily volunteer force, with some coming by way of draft,
today it is professional. Recruitment is based more on financial reward and
less on patriotism. Former military man Charles Carlson writes of a resulting
intelligence dip in what he terms the “all-mercenary army.”
Mr.
Carlson maintains that the volunteer soldiers of before would have been too
clever to go along with a “war on Islam.” The paid soldiery is beholden to the
administration in Washington and less able and likely to refuse. The valour called upon is also qualitatively
different. Carlson points out: “Vietnam patriots die without a price when they
are convinced they are needed. Mercenaries are now deployed in safe non-combat
actions so they will sign up for another tour.” (17) Mr.
Carlson’s disparaging rendering of present day servicemen and women is a little
unfair. Ms. Roy pointed out that today’s US military is a “poverty draft of
poor whites, Blacks, Latinos and Asians looking for a way to earn a living and
get an education.” (18) When one compares the composition
of the armed services to that of the general population it becomes apparent
that the never-ending War on Terrorism is being fought by a disproportionately
high number of minorities to fill the coffers of the true cowards: the immoral
white men ensconced in the boardrooms of America.
To
sweepingly impugn the bravery of the men and the women in the armed services
would be wrongheaded. The Persian Gulf Slaughter was conceived in cowardice. It
was the scheme of a greedy Whitehouse cabal commonly referred to as
chickenhawks because few of them had ever served in war. The troops are pawns
in a grand power play just as are the Iraqi people. The real bravery was to
refuse the mission on moral grounds. But unfortunately most of the troops were
probably convinced of the righteousness of the mission against part of Mr.
Bush’s axis of evil.
The
American public is complicit by its gullibility and acquiescence. US citizens
enjoy some of the best civil rights and privileges in the world. As Mr. Zinn’s A
People’s History of the Unites States reveals, these rights came about
through long and hard struggle. (19) The Washington cabal
is in the process of stripping these hard-won rights. The “land of the free and
the home of the brave” has become a little less so. There was little outrage at
the theft of the 2000 election; there was barely a whimper at the sacrifice of
civil rights after 9-11; there is only background grumbling to a slew of
corporate crimes and the government largesse of tax cuts going preponderantly
to the wealthy. The chickenhawks with supine media personalities in tow induced
a fear unique in the world to Americans of an imminent Iraqi attack. Malaysian
leader Mahathir Mohamad charged that Americans are now “afraid of their own
shadows.” (20) Gore Vidal pointed out the epistemological
chasm that Americans find themselves in. “Americans are not stupid … but we are
ignorant.” (21) The chickenhawks repeated a litany of
lies to cower the American people and steal Iraq’s resources.
In
the face of atrocities, however, true bravery can emerge. The unimaginable
horror of My Lai should have lain to rest once and for all the routine bestowal
of valour on American soldiers. In the Vietnamese hamlet of My Lai American
infantry were raping, torturing, and executing hundreds of unarmed Vietnamese
women, children, and the elderly. Lt. Hugh Thompson with crewmates Lawrence
Colburn and Glenn Andreotta had the courage to set their helicopter between US
infantry and fleeing villagers and defy the superior officer on the ground Lt.
William Calley. Up to 80 of Lt. Calley’s men participated in the horror at My
Lai. Yet Lt. Calley was the only man ever convicted in the My Lai Massacre and
served only days of a life sentence. President Richard Nixon later pardoned
him.
There
is little to suggest the lessons of My Lai have been learned. Bob Graham
reporting in the Evening Standard from Baghdad writes of the occupying forces:
At first glance they appear to be the
archetypal Band of Brothers of Hollywood myth, brave and honest men united in
common purpose.
But a closer look at these American GIs,
sweltering in the heat of an unwelcoming Iraq, reveals the glazed eyes and limp
expressions of those who have witnessed a war they do not understand and have
begun to resent. By their own admission these American soldiers have killed
civilians without hesitation, shot wounded fighters and left others to die in
agony. (22)
Stanford
University psychology professor Lee Ross cautions: “Don't assume that people
who commit atrocities are atrocious people, or people who do heroic things are
heroic.” (23)
In
a personal communication, an American navy serviceman, who had served in the
1991 phase of the Persian Gulf Slaughter, admitted knowing beforehand that the
war was about oil. He knew it was wrong and yet he served. To praise all
soldiers, even who serve contrary to their conscience, as heroes reinforces a
rationale for unwavering obedience to militaristic doctrine. This rationale
must be refuted. To carry out immoral acts and execute wrong orders is not
courageous. To reject such orders is rather bravery. This is best exemplified
by the refuseniks in Israel, who refuse military service in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories. These conscientious objectors are languishing in
prisons for having the courage of their convictions.
The
unquestioned assumption of bravery is a disservice to the men and women in
uniform. The mere conferral of bravery diminishes its true manifestation.
Furthermore valour cannot be considered in a vacuum. It must be contemplated
with morality, for it is the sense of morality that is the fillip for courageous
behaviour.
Kim Petersen is an English teacher
living in China. He can be contacted at: kimpetersen@gyxi.dk
* The
Buck Stops Here or Does It?
* Superpower
in Suspended Animation
* Scarcely
a Peep in Mainland China
* Pulp Fiction
at the New York Times: Fawning at the Feet of Mammon
* Canadian
Predation in Africa
(1) “Japan conceals rising crime rate among U.S. servicemen,” Mainichi
Shinbun, 24 January 2003: http://mdn.mainichi.co.jp/politics/0301/24militarycrime.html
(2) Matthew Rothschild, “Bush’s Top Gun Speech,” The Progressive,
2 May 2003: http://www.progressive.org/webex03/wx050203.html
(3) SM Menon, “From ‘Infinite Justice’ to ‘Infinite War,’”
People’s Democracy, 7 October 2001: http://pd.cpim.org/2001/oct07/2001_oct07_uswar_sukumar.htm
(4) Mark Franchetti, “US Marines turn fire on civilians at the
bridge of death,” The Times [London], 30 March 2003. Available on the
CounterPunch website: http://www.counterpunch.org/franchetti03312003.html
(5) Lyndsey Layton, “Causing Death and Destruction, but Never
Seeing It,” Washington Post, 3 April 2003: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A14993-2003Apr2¬Found=true
(6) Samia Nakhoul, “Boy Bomb Victim Struggles Against Despair,”
The Daily Mirror, 8 April 2003: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/allnews/page.cfm?objectid=12821263&method=full&siteid=50143
(7) Daniel McGory, “US heavy-handedness baffles British,”
News.com.au [Australia], 3 April 2003:
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,6230427%5E26277,00.html
(8) Ibid
(9) George Orwell, “The Sporting Spirit,” Tribune, December 1945.
Available on George Orwell website: http://orwell.ru/library/articles/spirit/e/e_spirit.htm
(10) David Barsamian, “Noam Chomsky,” The Progressive, 1999: http://www.progressive.org/chom999.htm
(11) Lindsey Murdoch, “‘We shoot them down like the morons they
are’: US general,” Sydney Morning Herald, 9 April 2003: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/04/09/1049567715079.htm
l
(12) Alan Freeman, “Survivors slam friendly-fire ‘cowboy,’” Globe
and Mail, 1 April 2003: http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20030401.ubrit0401/BNStory/International
(13) Kieran Murray, “U.S. Troops Struggle to Find Enemy Among
Civilians,” Reuters, 6 April 2003: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=focusIraqNews&storyID=2515789
(14) Arundhati Roy, “Instant-Mix Imperial Democracy. Buy One, Get
One Free,” Outlook India online, 15 May 2003:
http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20030526&fname=Cover+Story&sid=1
(15) Thomas Friedman, “Postcard from Iraq,” NY times, 21 May 2003:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/21/opinion/21FRIE.html?th
(16) Mark Steel, “Truth, Lies and Weapons of Mass Destruction,” The
Independent, 29 May 2003: http://argument.independent.co.uk/regular_columnists/mark_steel/story.jsp?story=410418
(17) Charles E. Carlson, “Out From Its Cocoon, the All
Professional Military,” Information Clearing House, 16 May 2003: http://207.44.245.159/article3406.htm
(18) Arundhati Roy, Ibid
(19) Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the Unites States:
1492-Present, (Perennial Classics, 1999).
(20) AFP, “US warning shows it is 'afraid of its own shadow':
Mahathir,” Yahoo! News, 16 May 2003: http://sg.news.yahoo.com/030516/1/3azpd.html
(21) “Gore Vidal on the "United States of Amnesia,” 9/11, the
2000 Election and the War in Iraq,” Democracy Now, 13 May 2003: http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=03/05/13/174244
(22) Bob Graham, ‘I just pulled the trigger,’ Evening Standard, 19
June 2003:
http://www.thisislondon.com/news/articles/5402104
(23) Quoted in Mickey Z., “Where We Are,” Dissident Voice, 9 June
2003: http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles5/MickeyZ_Situations.htm