The Final Indignity, The Last Insult, The Real America
By William Rivers Pitt, cross-posted from Truthout
Let's start here.
The Air Force dumped the incinerated partial remains of at least 274 American troops in a Virginia landfill, far more than the military had acknowledged, before halting the secretive practice three years ago, records show. The landfill dumping was concealed from families who had authorized the military to dispose of the remains in a dignified and respectful manner, Air Force officials said. There are no plans, they said, to alert those families now.
Think about that for a long moment.
This is a nation with a big, fat, fancy, shiny, appealing opinion of
itself. The mythology of American Exceptionalism perseveres, even unto
this dark and dilapidated day. We are not as others are. We are
different. We are better. We honor and fete our soldiers, our veterans,
our war heroes. We make movies about their bravery and their deeds, we
throw parades for them annually, and when it suits us politically, we
attack our political rivals for "not supporting" those who carry our
banner in the field of combat.
We take care of our own, right? That's who we are, as Americans, right?
No, that is not who we are. We have not been thus for many, many
years. We, like so many allegedly "lesser" powers throughout history,
also hurl our children into the meat grinder of meaningless warfare on
the word of the powerful ones who control the day...and when it suits,
the broken bodies of those spent children - each of whom is nothing more
than the chink of another gold coin into the coffers of those "leaders"
- are anonymously and dishonorably cast into a convenient ditch, to be
plowed under and forgotten, because it is easier that way, and far less
expensive.
For the record, this program of indecent disposal of dead American
service members began, and concluded, during the administration of
George W. Bush. It is no accident, for that administration - despite
perhaps the slickest PR campaign about America and patriotism and
"Supporting The Troops" ever undertaken in our history - had no more
regard or concern for the troops they consigned to death and
dismemberment than a dog has for the snowbank it pisses on. They
consigned thousands of US service members to death, tens of thousands of
US service members to gruesome injury and the permanent aftermath of
PTSD, and hundreds upon hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians to
the same fates, for two reasons: to win elections, and to make money.
The soldiers themselves? The ones who have borne the battle? They are
turned away from VA hospitals for lack of funds or insurance coverage,
foreclosed upon by predatory lenders, left to shrift for themselves if
alive, buried in the cold ground of a soldier's grave if not, or simply
tossed into a landfill like a bag of household garbage. If anyone ever
needed to see and fully encompass the true sum and substance of the
administration of George W. Bush, and of all that has gone wrong in
America, this despicable scandal tells you all you need to know.
That, for the record, is why I support "Occupy Wall Street." That is
why you should, too. It is all of a piece - the wars, the profiteering,
the looting of our most essential social protections, the evisceration
of the most basic promises afforded by what was once a civil society.
Even as so many of us in America have suffered from the aftermath of
that greed, it is the soldier who has bled for it, died for it, suffered
for it in ways most of us cannot fathom, and has done so over and over
and over again - as well as that soldier's family, now seemingly bereft
of even the token comfort of a proper, honorable burial for the one they
hoped would someday come home, but never did.
I have, since these wars began, spent countless hours at countless bars
with countless service members from every branch, with their arms slung
around my shoulder, well-met in their ever-temporary homecoming, in
that fragile and fleeting slice of time between their return from their
last tour and their government stop-gap-mandated departure for their
next tour to either Iraq or Afghanistan, or both. They were all
unutterably grateful to be home, to have the simple privilege of tipping
a beer on their native soil, an act those who cheered them into combat
and slaughter take absolutely for granted even unto this very day,
though they cheer the dead and maimed and shattered for "protecting our
freedoms."
These troops and I would get nice and drunk, more often than not, and
they would spend the later hours of the evening leaning into me to
whisper the horrors they had seen and done into my ear. I kept in touch
with many of them, and some of those I stayed in touch with never came
home, except in silence by way of Dover Air Force Base. The idea, the
remote possibility, that those fine people could have been discarded in
such a heartless, soulless, despicable, un-American fashion is a
towering insult to everything I hold dear...and a horrible thing to
encompass. Those troops I have known who gave that last full measure of
devotion deserve better, in whole and in part, than a burial beside
garbage in an anonymous landfill.
When you don the uniform of the United States, when you pledge to spend
your life in defense of the Constitution, you are making a sacred oath.
That is only half the truth of it, however. The nation you have sworn
your life to, and the government which represents it as it accepts that
oath, is making a promise, as well. It is the oath pledged by Abraham
Lincoln in his second Inaugural Address, when he spoke the words that
became the sworn duty of the Veterans Administration, written in tall letters at their door:
"Let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's
wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his
widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and
lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations."
That we have not done so, that they swore an oath, died, and were
thrown away like garbage - both the living and the dead - after
fulfilling that oath, is a mortal stain of indelible shame.
-------------------------------------------------
William Rivers Pitt is a Truthout editor and columnist. He is also a
New York Times and internationally bestselling author of three books: "War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know," "The Greatest Sedition Is Silence" and "House of Ill Repute: Reflections on War, Lies, and America's Ravaged Reputation."







2 comments:
He is clearly the most reprehensible man to have ever held that office, ol' Dubya is--and that's saying something.
I find Mr. Pitt, though his politics are almost always spot-on, often provides a firehose of verbiage when a more concentrated, less loquacious approach might serve his arguments better..
Just when I begin to believe that American military practices couldn't possibly sink any lower, and then guess what, surprise! They can. And did.
"reprehensible" is most fitting.
(I also have to agree with the above commenter's opinion upon the firehose of verbiage. I found myself thinking the same thing. A more concentrated and steady rundown would have better made the point)
Excellent article nonetheless. And truly, grossly shocking
Post a Comment