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Dear American serviceperson
in Iraq,
I am a retired veteran of the army, and my own son
is among you, a paratrooper like I was. The changes that are happening
to every one of you--some more extreme than others--are changes I know
very well. So I'm going to say some things to you straight up in the
language to which you are accustomed.
In 1970, I was assigned to the 173rd Airborne
Brigade, then based in northern Binh Dinh Province in what was then the
Republic of Vietnam. When I went there, I had my head full of shit: shit
from the news media, shit from movies, shit about what it supposedly
mean to be a man, and shit from a lot of my know-nothing neighbors who
would tell you plenty about Vietnam even though they'd never been there,
or to war at all.
The essence of all this shit was that we had to
"stay the course in Vietnam," and that we were on some mission to save
good Vietnamese from bad Vietnamese, and to keep the bad Vietnamese from
hitting beachheads outside of Oakland. We stayed the course until 58,000
Americans were dead and lots more maimed for life, and 3,000,000
Southeast Asians were dead. Ex-military people and even many on active
duty played a big part in finally bringing that crime to a halt.
When I started hearing about weapons of mass
destruction that threatened the United States from Iraq, a shattered
country that had endured almost a decade of trench war followed by an
invasion and twelve years of sanctions, my first question was how in the
hell can anyone believe that this suffering country presents a threat to
the United States? But then I remembered how many people had believed
Vietnam threatened the United States. Including me.
When that bullshit story about weapons came apart
like a two-dollar shirt, the politicians who cooked up this war told
everyone, including you, that you would be greeted like great
liberators. They told us that we were in Vietnam to make sure everyone
there could vote.
What they didn't tell me was that before I got
there in 1970, the American armed forces had been burning villages,
killing livestock, poisoning farmlands and forests, killing civilians
for sport, bombing whole villages, and commiting rapes and massacres,
and the people who were grieving and raging over that weren't in a
position to figure out the difference between me--just in country--and
the people who had done those things to them.
What they didn't tell you is that over a million
and a half Iraqis died between 1991 and 2003 from malnutrition, medical
neglect, and bad sanitation. Over half a million of those who died were
the weakest: the children, especially very young children.
My son who is over there now has a baby. We visit
with our grandson every chance we get. He is eleven months old now. Lots
of you have children, so you know how easy it is to really love them,
and love them so hard you just know your entire world would collapse if
anything happened to them. Iraqis feel that way about their babies, too.
And they are not going to forget that the United States government was
largely responsible for the deaths of half a million kids.
So the lie that you would be welcomed as liberators
was just that. A lie. A lie for people in the United States to get them
to open their purse for this obscenity, and a lie for you to pump you up
for a fight.
And when you put this into perspective, you know
that if you were an Iraqi, you probably wouldn't be crazy about American
soldiers taking over your towns and cities either. This is the tough
reality I faced in Vietnam. I knew while I was there that if I were
Vietnamese, I would have been one of the Vietcong.
But there we were, ordered into someone else's
country, playing the role of occupier when we didn't know the people,
their language, or their culture, with our head full of bullshit our
so-called leaders had told us during training and in preparation for
deployment, and even when we got there. There we were, facing people we
were ordered to dominate, but any one of whom might be pumping mortars
at us or firing AKs at us later that night. The question we stated to
ask is who put us in this position?
In our process of fighting to stay alive, and in
their process of trying to expel an invader that violated their dignity,
destroyed their property, and killed their innocents, we were faced off
against each other by people who made these decisions in $5,000 suits,
who laughed and slapped each other on the back in Washington DC with
their fat fucking asses stuffed full of cordon blue and caviar.
They chumped us. Anyone can be chumped.
That's you now. Just fewer trees and less water.
We haven't figured out how to stop the pasty-faced,
oil-hungry backslappers in DC yet, and it looks like you all might be
stuck there for a little longer. So I want to tell you the rest of the
story.
I changed over there in Vietnam and they were not
nice changes either. I started getting pulled into something--something
that craved other peole's pain. Just to make sure I wasn't regarded as a
"fucking missionary" or a possible rat, I learned how to fit myself into
that group that was untouchable, people too crazy to fuck with, people
who desired the rush of omnipotence that comes with setting someone's
house on fire just for the pure hell of it, or who could kill anyone,
man, woman, or child, with hardly a second thought. People who had the
power of life and death--because they could.
The anger helps. It's easy to hate everyone you
can't trust because of your circumstances, and to rage about what you've
seen, what has happened to you, and what you have done and can't take
back.
It was all an act for me, a cover-up for deeper
fears I couldn't name, and the reason I know that is that we had to
dehumanize our victims before we did the things we did. We knew deep
down that what we were doing was wrong. So they became dinks or gooks,
just like Iraqis are now being transformed into ragheads or hajjis.
People had to be reduced to "niggers" here before they could be lynched.
No difference. We convinced ourselves we had to kill them to survive,
even when that wasn't true, but something inside us told us that so long
as they were human beings, with the same intrinsic value we had as human
beings, we were not allowed to burn their homes and barns, kill their
animals, and sometimes even kill them. So we used these words, these new
names, to reduce them, to strip them of their essential humanity, and
then we could do things like adjust artillery fire onto the cries of a
baby.
Until that baby was silenced, though, and here's
the important thing to understand, that baby never surrendered her
humanity. I did. We did. That's the thing you might not get until it's
too late. When you take away the humantiy of another, you kill your own
humanity. You attack your own soul because it is standing in the way.
So we finish our tour, and go back to our families,
who can see that even though we function, we are empty and incapable of
truly connecting to people any more, and maybe we can go for months or
even years before we fill that void where we surrendered our humanity,
with chemical anesthetics--drugs, alcohol, until we realize that the
void can never be filled and we shoot ourselves, or head off into the
street where we can disappear with the flotsam of society, or we hurt
others, esepcially those who try to love us, and end up as another
incarceration statistic or a mental patient.
You can ever escape that you became a racist
because you made the excuse that you needed that to survive, that you
took things away from people that you can never give back, or that you
killed a piece of yourself that you may never get back.
Some of us do. We get lucky and someone gives a
damn enough to emotionally resuscitate us and bring us back to life.
Many do not.
I live with the rage every day of my life, even
when no one else sees it. You might hear it in my words. I hate being
chumped.
So here is my message to you. You will do what you
have to do to survive, however you define survival, while we do what we
have to do to stop this thing. But don't surrender your humanity. Not to
fit in. Not to prove yourself. Not for an adrenaline rush. Not to lash
out when you are angry and frustrated. Not for some ticket-punching
fucking military careerist to make his bones on. Especially not for the
Bush-Cheney Gas & Oil Consortium.
The big bosses are trying to gain control of the
world's energy supplies to twist the arms of future economic
competitors. That's what's going on, and you need to understand it, then
do what you need to do to hold on to your humanity. The system does
that; tells you you are some kind of hero action figures, but uses you
as gunmen. They chump you.
Your so-called civilian leadership sees you as an
expendable commodity. They don't care about your nightmares, about the
DU that you are breathing, about the lonliness, the doubts, the pain, or
about how you humanity is stripped away a piece at a time. They will cut
your benefits, deny your illnesses, and hide your wounded and dead from
the public. They already are.
They don't care. So you have to. And to preserve
your own humanity, you must recognize the humanity of the people whose
nation you now occupy and know that both you and they are victims of the
filthy rich bastards who are calling the shots.
They are your enemies--The Suits--and they are the
enemies of peace, and the enemies of your families, especially if they
are Black families, or immigrant families, or poor families. They are
thieves and bullies who take and never give, and they say they will
"never run" in Iraq, but you and I know that they will never have to
run, because they fucking aren't there. You are
They'll skin and grin while they are getting what
they want from you, and throw you away like a used condom when they are
done. Ask the vets who are having their benefits slashed out from under
them now. Bushfeld and their cronies are parasites, and they are the
sole beneficiaries of the chaos you are learning to live in. They get
the money. You get the prosthetic devices, the nightmares, and the
mysterious illnesses.
So if your rage needs a target, there they are,
responsible for your being there, and responsible for keeping you there.
I can't tell you to disobey. That would probably run me afoul of the
law. That will be a decision you will have to take when and if the
circumstances and your own conscience dictate. But it perfeclty legal
for you to refuse illegal orders, and orders to abuse or attack
civilians are illegal. Ordering you to keep silent about these crimes is
also illegal.
I can tell you, without fear of legal consequence,
that you are never under any obligation to hate Iraqis, you are never
under any obligation to give yourself over to racism and nihilism and
the thirst to kill for the sake of killing, and you are never under any
obligation to let them drive out the last vestiges of your capacity to
see and tell the truth to yourself and to the world. You do not owe them
your souls.
Come home safe, and come home sane. The people who
love you and who have loved you all your lives are waiting here, and we
want you to come back and be able to look us in the face. Don't leave
your souls in the dust there like another corpse.
Hold on to your humanity.
Stan Goff
US Army (Ret.)
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