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Un-American?
I can't help but smirk every time I see this quote
from Mr. Rumsfeld describing the abuse and murder
of Iraqi prisoners in US-run prisons throughout
Iraq. While these photographs are certainly (as
Bush says) "disgusting," they not only do more
to represent the US military's standard operating
procedure, they also pale when compared to other
episodes in US history. I'm not trying to be cynical
or anti-American here when I take a look at history
for other un-American activities by our armed
forces and its intelligence cohorts. If one is
to list just a few well-verified incidents of
other murderous and abusive actions by US troops,
it makes sense to begin with the decades long
war on indigenous Americans-a war that was intended
from the beginning to destroy the indigenous nations
and their peoples.
1776:
Six thousand US troops razed more than 20 Cherokee
towns, "destroying crops, inflicting serious casualties
on noncombatants and sweeping much of the population
into Spanish Florida.
1864:
U.S. territorial military commander Colonel John
Chivington ordered the brutal murder of as many
as 200 Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians at Sand Creek
(Colorado). The Indians were told that they had
been given sanctuary at Sand Creek. More than
half of the victims were women and children.
1868:
Lieutenant George Armstrong Custer's Seventh U.S.
Cavalry attacked a noncombatant Cheyenne village
camped along the Washita River in Oklahoma. This
resulted in the murders of more than 100 Cheyenne,
including women and children and the killing of
875 ponies.
1890/1899:
The U.S. Seventh Cavalry massacred 350 unarmed
Lakota -- mainly women, children, and old men
-¡© at Wounded Knee creek in South Dakota.
Then,
of course, there is the historical reality of
chattel slavery in the United States. This holocaust
not only enslaved millions of people stolen from
their homelands in Africa, it also caused the
deaths of untold millions during their transport
in inhumane conditions across the Atlantic. In
addition, thousands more died due to mistreatment
and neglect by their white owners. On top of these
deaths, there are untold massacres and individual
murders of rebellious and "uppity" slaves by US
troops and other militias.
After
the Civil War, which was fought between slave-owning
and non-slave-owning states over a variety of
economic and cultural differences, with the question
of slavery being one of those differences, the
US economic system began to demand another type
of expansion in order to grow and survive. This
meant that US troops would soon be called into
duty overseas, as the US began its empire-building
phase. The first major stop on this journey would
be Cuba and the Phillipines.
1898-1905:
The U.S. Army seized the Philippines from Spain,
crushing a Filipino independence movement and
killing as many as 600,000 natives of the newly
US-acquired Philippine islands.
1915-1934:
Haiti is occupied by the U.S. Marine Corps, which
dissolves that country's National Assembly, restores
virtual slavery, turns the economy over to U.S.
corporations, and massacres an untold number of
Haitian peasants.
Meanwhile,
the US invaded and occupied various other southern
neighbors, among them Nicaragua and the newly
formed Panama. In the process, thousands of locals
were uprooted from their homes, murdered and raped,
and subjected to daily humiliation and poverty.
Korean
War, U.S. soldiers machine-gunned hundreds of
helpless civilians, under the railway bridge at
No Gun Ri. At least 300 civilians were killed
in this attack. Another 100 died in a preceding
air attack. This incident was but one of many
similar incidents in the murderous war on the
Korean people -- a war where over 2 million Koreans
died, mostly as the result of US bombardment by
a variety of weapons, the most notorious among
them being napalm (a jellied gasoline that burns
the skin off its victims). Those Korean prisoners
who survived the US prison camps in Korea tell
countless tales of torture and psychological abuse.
On
March 16, 1968, Charlie Company, of the US Eleventh
Light Infantry Brigade, was ordered into combat
by Captain Ernest Medina. The 150 soldiers, led
by Lt. William Calley, stormed into the hamlet,
and murdered more than 500 civilians -- unarmed
women, children, and old men. They had not encountered
a single enemy soldier, and only three weapons
were confiscated.
Just
as was the case in Korea, this incident is but
one of many similar incidents that occurred during
America's war on Vietnam. This war finally ended
in 1975 with a Vietnamese victory. However, it
is estimated that over 2 million Vietnamese were
killed during the course of the war; most of them
killed by the US military and its counterintelligence
counterparts. One of the most well-known and most
heinous programs developed in Vietnam to destroy
the Vietnamese insurgency was known as Operation
Phoenix. This program involved the torture of
prisoners, their murder, and the displacement
of whole populations into internment camps. In
addition, many civilians were also tortured and
murdered in the hope that they would provide information
about the insurgency.
1989-
The United States launched an assault on Panama,
ostensibly to rid the country of its leader, Manuel
Noriega. Noriega's primary crime seems to have
been refusing to go along with US plans for Nicaragua
and El Salvador. These plans included the subversion
of the anti-imperialist government of Nicaragua
via the use of mercenary forces contracted by
the CIA and the destruction of the popular insurgency
in El Salvador against the US-sponsored government.
These operations involved the use of procedures
on insurgent forces that were developed in Vietnam:
torture, murder, and economic subversion. After
the assault on Panama is over, world news media
concludes that over 2000 civilian residents of
Panama City were murdered in the US attack. The
US denies the carnage.
1991:
US forces killed as many as 250,000 Iraqis, including
large numbers of civilians during "Operation Desert
Storm." Iraqi conscripts were buried alive in
the desert by US tank forces and US military planes
and helicopters killed thousands of retreating
military men after the war was declared over by
the US in what became known as the "Highway of
Death."
This
litany is not all-inclusive, nor is it meant to
be. My intention in relaying this list is to graphically
illustrate one of the fundamental pillars of our
lives in the United States. We are not where we
are economically and culturally by the grace of
any god, as some of our fellow residents pretend.
No, we are here because of our military might
and its license to abuse, torture, and kill. I
wish that it weren't so, but it is.
Ron
Jacobs is author of The Way the Wind Blew: a history
of the Weather Underground, which is being republished
by Verso.
Topplebush.com
Posted: May 23, 2004
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