Community | April 09, 2010 | 11 comments

We Can't Keep Funding What We Believe Is Evil | | AlterNet

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Monkey_Films
There is really only one way to stop the collateral murder by our military: stop the wars and bring our troops home.

April 7, 2010 |

“Let us not become the evil we deplore”, warned Cong. Barbara Lee when she cast the lone vote against going to war in Afghanistan in September 2001. Well, it’s time to look in the mirror—and it’s not a pretty picture.

Just contemplate these two incidents, one that took place in Iraq in 2007 and has now gone viral on the internet, the other that took place in Gardaz, Afghanistan in February 2010.

Baghdad: U.S. aerial shooters chuckle as they let loose a torrent of bullets, killing over a dozen people, including two Reuters staff. Then they unleash another round on an Iraqi who—passing by in his van—tries to help the wounded. When the American soldiers discover they have hit two children in the van, they can be heard snorting, “It's their fault for bringing their kids into a battle.”

No one—from those who pulled the triggers to those who gave the okay—has been punished for the murder of these innocents. That’s because this blatant disregard for human life falls within the rules of engagement. And the only reason the incident came to light is thanks to Reuters for its persistence and to Wikileaks for procuring the footage and putting on their site.

Gardez, Afghanistan: US Special Operations forces surround a home where a party is taking place for the birth of a grandson. Two men come out to see why they are being surrounded. They are shot dead. The US soldiers later report they found three women inside the house, gagged and murdered by their own relatives.

The Times of London later reports that the women were killed by the American soldiers. Not only that. To hide the murder, the soldiers dug bullets out of the women’s bodies and washed the wounds with alcohol to hide the evidence. One of the women was a pregnant mother of 10; another was a pregnant mother of six; the third was a teenage girl.

No one has been punished in this incident either. General McChrystal was briefed on the case in March but said nothing about it. The murders only came to light because the Times reporter Jerome Starkey visited the family and talked to Afghan investigators.

While McChrystal issued a new directive in July 2009 restricting activities likely to result in civilian casualties and urged troops to act with greater sensitivity to Afghan cultural and religious concerns, the killing of innocents continues. According to the UN, at least 98 Afghan civilians were killed in night raids in 2009.

The same is true at checkpoints. In a rare moment of honesty, while addressing a virtual townhall with troops in Afghanistan, General McChrystal admitted, "We really ask a lot of our young service people out on the checkpoints because there's danger, they're asked to make very rapid decisions in often very unclear situations. However, to my knowledge, in the nine-plus months I've been here, not a single case where we have engaged in an escalation of force incident and hurt someone has it turned out that the vehicle had a suicide bomb or weapons in it and, in many cases, had families in it…We've shot an amazing number of people and killed a number and, to my knowledge, none has proven to have been a real threat to the force."

Our killing of civilians has spread to Pakistan, where the most deadly attacks come from unmanned drones. A report by the New America Foundation speculates that U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan have killed somewhere around 700 to 1,000 people, one-third of them civilians.

As Americans on conscience, we can’t stand by and allow these killings to continue. Here are some actions we should we be calling for:

* stop the air wars, including the deadly drone attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan;
* stop the night raids that sow terror and abuse;
* hold the soldiers and higher ups accountable for their actions, including General McChrystal;
* pressure Congress to hold hearings on these atrocities;
* organize teach-ins that educate the public and help build the anti-war movement.


These are all critical actions to engage in. But there is really only one way to stop the collateral murder by our military: stop the wars and bring our troops home. The Obama administration is now asking Congress for another $33 billion of our tax dollars for war. Enough is enough. These are wars we can’t afford, we can’t win, and we can’t condone on moral grounds. Call your representatives—202-224-3121—and tell them “No more money for war.” It’s time we stop being and funding the evil we deplore.

Do not stay silent and complacent to collateral murder. Sign-on to CODEPINK's condemnation of the cover-ups and demand accountability for past and present war crimes.
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11 comments // We Can't Keep Funding What We Believe Is Evil | | AlterNet

  • Daniel_Peddicord
    • 0
      Daniel_Peddicord  
    • Right on... I'm sure that for every war we've ever been involve with, there's a dynasty of resentment for the kinds of attacks that inevitably happen. You take the young, poor, and send them th squash these insurgencies, all while dehumanizing the locals. The British did the same kinds of things while trying to squash our rebellion. Besides, who exactly is our big enemy these days. There's not a single country, nor any combination of countries, that would even think of a straight up war, since we spend more than all of them. Healthcare would be a breeze if we used that money here, even if oil prices rise, it would still be worth standing down on all these cold war fronts. But they won't, we need the instability to keep the Wolfowitz program going. For all his lofty rhetoric, I don't think Obama is up to it, especially after espousing the ideals of Dawn Johnsen, then letting her nomination wither, knowing she would make him reverse the trend of executive superpowers, used to such great degree by Bush.

    • 2 years ago
  • deathvoices
  • skunkatoras
  • SleepDirt
    • 0
      SleepDirt  
    • Image
    • I fear there will be a lot of chest-beating in the upcoming election over who is the toughest on terror and Democrats will cower as usual. Yet, the polls show that the public is split on the Afghanistan occupation and largely opposed to Iraq.

    • 2 years ago
  • SillyHo
    • 0
      SillyHo  
    • I agree that the Afghanistan and Iraq wars are a shamble and a sad reflection of our disregard for human life. It is such things as this, that leads the military to then lose sight of the utter irony of things like eco weapons for which I recently saw a brilliant spoof:

      http://current.com/news-and-politics/92351299_mod-launches-eco-weapons-programme...

      On the other hand, I think the point about these and other wars be they interventionary, humanitarian or otherwise should go beyond whether a war is legal, humane enough, or morally justifiable. The stance I would uphold is an anti-interventionist one. I would say that respect the sovereignty of other nations to manage their own affairs just as we expect others to not meddle with our sovereignty. In Britain, we have laws (anti-terror laws) and scandals (MPs expenses) that I'm sure, if they were happening in another country, we would start putting pressure, embargos and eventually wage wars in its name.

    • 2 years ago
  • Xenzaka
    • 0
      Xenzaka  
    • I wish more people would have the heart for humanity, and stop war.

      Besides, we all know it is nothing but business, it's a big game.

    • 2 years ago
  • CarolineS
    • 0
      CarolineS  
    • Unfortunatley America and Britain have sent it's men and women out to murder and maim people for years, sadly some people think war is glory and it's honourable to fight for ones country, when it isnt, it is honourable to fight for ones world, and if we did that there would be no wars, only the one of the people versus the governments that send us to war.

    • 2 years ago
  • Monkey_Films
  • PocketCup
  • Ares
  • SleepDirt
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