|
Giving a Voice to Our Veterans - Winter
Soldier Iraq & Afghanistan
Ever since the Bush Administration has taken
office, America’s media channels have become
lapdogs, seemly taking their direction from the
White House press director. They have done a disservice
not only to American citizens but to the world
as a whole.
Last weekend was no different. On the fifth anniversary
of the start of the Iraq war, Iraq Veterans Against
the War emulated a similar gathering held by 109
Vietnam veterans gathered in Detroit for the first
Winter Soldier conference in 1971, where former
soldiers presented their accounts of what really
happened in Vietnam. This was the panicle moment
when the nation pushed for a pull out of that
war.
Approximately 300 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans
held their own Winter Soldier Conference
(http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier)
in Maryland, testifying about what has been taking
place in Iraq over the past five years, showing
pictures and video footage of what we will never
see on the Nightly News.
The most coverage I was able to find was on DemocracyNow.org,
which was not a surprise, considering their news
content delves deeper into the issues that matter
versus 60 second clips on NBC or any other mainstream
media outlet. This was the only news channel that
dedicated time and coverage to this extremely
critical news story that every American citizen
needs to see and hear. “While the corporate
media ignored the story, we broadcast their voices.”
Video footage viewable on the democracynow.org
website features a number of Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans, presenting their war testimony.
One veteran provides an explanation for his stand,
Jon Turner, “The reason I am doing this
today is not only for myself and for the rest
of society to hear, but it’s for all those
who can’t be here to talk about the things
that we went through; to talk about the things
that we did.”
Turner was visibly shaken during his testimony,
as four crosses appear on the large screen in
dedication to the four marines they lost. “I
am sorry for the hate and destruction that I have
inflicted on innocent people. At one point it
was okay. But reality has shown that it is not.
Until people hear what is going on with this war
it will continue to happen and people will continue
to die. I am no longer the monster that I once
was.”
And with that, he received a standing ovation
from the audience, some of which were made up
of fellow soldiers and like Turner, where emotionally
affected by his stories.
DemocracyNow.org - Winter Soldier: US Vets, Active-Duty
Soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan Testify About
the Horrors of War
US veterans gathered in Maryland this past weekend
to testify at Winter Soldier, an eyewitness indictment
of atrocities committed by US troops during the
ongoing occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Soldiers
spoke of free-fire zones, the shootings and beatings
of innocent civilians, racism at the highest levels
of the military, sexual harassment and assault
within the military, and the torturing of prisoners.
You can view or just listen to the coverage
here:
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/3/14/hundreds_of_veterans_of_iraq_and
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/3/17/winter_soldier_us_vets_active_duty
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/3/18/winter_soldier_contd_us_vets_active
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/3/19/half_a_decade_of_war_five
Luis Montalvan, Iraq War Veteran who witnessed
waterboarding was featured in a news story on
BBC, "It was disturbing because I'd never
seen anything like that, because it really was
torture.”
This is shown on BBC, not on MSNBC, CBS, CNN
or ABC. American media doesn't seem to want to
listen to our own men and women, which in all
accounts, is a disservice to our citizens. Even
the BBC correspondent recognizes this, stating
that the voice of those who oppose the war, including
veterans like Montalvan, are muted here.
The statistics to date for the Iraq war include
almost 4,000 US Miliary Deaths, over 29,000 US
Military Wounded, 1.2 million Iraqi deaths, 200,000
homeless veterans in USA on any given night, and
120 veteran suicides per week.
Other statistics, according to an MSNBC report,
states that over 700,000 children have parents
who have served in the Iraq war, and of these
veterans, 25% of them suffer from psychological
injuries such as PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder).
On the Winter Soldiers website, http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier/video,
other veterans provide their video testimony.
One veteran, Jason Washburn,
Former Marine Corporal, recalls an attack on a
city to take out enemy insurgents, but when they
rolled to town to assess the damage, all they
found was dead, unarmed Iraqi citizens and total
destruction. “We were supposed to be liberating
these people and we were just destroying them.”
That was just instance of many, memories that
he carries around on a daily basis. “You
start to look back on the things you went through
and the things you did and realize, that’s
not you. That’s not who you are, and you
wonder what you’ve become.”
Steve Mortillo, Former Army
Specialist, poses the question on the U.S.’s
intent to help Iraq to rebuild, after we continue
to demolish cities and neighborhoods. But what
about those Iraqi citizens that have died? “This
idea that we can rebuild someone’s family
after we destroy; the idea that we can go over
there and cause so much death and destruction
and still think that we can fix this…how
do you repair the loss of your child?”
Mortillo goes on to say, “There is no forgiveness
in my book for someone who sits here in America
and orders Americans into battle to die and makes
money off of it, and profits hand and fist, and
lies through their teeth to keep it going. At
some point, it becomes enough.”
Time.com article covering the event, took a look
at the expected rise between the anti-war and
pro-war veterans, “The resurrection of Winter
Soldier is already be pitting veterans against
veterans. Not only are pro-war veterans denouncing
the testifiers as a few malcontents, phonies or
potential war criminals to be prosecuted according
to the alleged crimes they reveal, but the event
site itself has become contested ground.”
On NPR.org, Sergeant McRutter
expresses his position, “Betrayal is when
your government put you in a situation that you
don’t need to be in. Betrayal is sitting
back and saying nothing when you can see your
fellow brothers and sisters in arms suffering.
Betrayal is, essentially, not doing what is morally
right. This is morally right for us to share our
experiences with the American public so they can
understand what is actually going on…and
not get what is coming from a Pentagon brief,
but hear from those who have put their boots on
ground and served their nation proudly.”
Here the full NPR audio recording here:
http://www.npr.org/templates/dmg/dmg_rpm.rpm?id=88346801&type=1&date=16-Mar-2008&mtype=RM&sc=YahooNews&getUnderwriting=1
Additional Winter Soldiers video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DeszyFWL_g&feature=related
The Nation – Winter Soldiers
From tomorrow through Saturday the Winter Soldier:
Iraq and Afghanistan hearings in Washington, DC
will feature testimony from US veterans detailing
what's really happening on the ground in these
occupations. They'll present photographs and videos,
recorded with mobile phones and digital cameras,
to back up their allegations of brutality, torture
and murder. http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20080312/cm_thenation/4297759
Bush maintains war was worth it
In anniversary remarks, president will say war
worth it despite the "high cost in lives
and treasure."
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23698943/
Cheney On Two-Thirds Of The American
Public Opposing The Iraq War: ‘So?’
This morning, on the fifth anniversary of the
Iraq invasion, ABC’s Good Morning America
aired an interview with Vice President Cheney
on the war. During the segment, Cheney flatly
told White House correspondent Martha Raddatz
that he doesn’t care about the American
public’s views on the war:
CHENEY: On the security front, I think there’s
a general consensus that we’ve made major
progress, that the surge has worked. That’s
been a major success.
RADDATZ: Two-third of Americans say it’s
not worth fighting.
CHENEY: So?
RADDATZ So? You don’t care what the American
people think?
CHENEY: No. I think you cannot be blown off course
by the fluctuations in the public opinion polls.
http://thinkprogress.org/2008/03/19/cheney-poll-iraq/
(NPR) From the Beginning: A Look at Five
Years of War
After the fall of Baghdad in 2003, the city was
eerily silent. Then, suddenly the Iraqi capital
burst into chaos. Looters thronged the streets,
taking whatever they could. When asked why they
didn't intervene, American officers said they
had no orders to do so.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=88692496
Reports: 'Disastrous' Iraqi humanitarian
crisis
As the war in Iraq reaches its five-year anniversary
this week, two of the world's leading humanitarian
groups issued extensive reports Monday describing
a crisis of huge proportions with little reason
for hope.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/03/17/iraq.humanitarian/index.html#cnnSTCText
Vet in a Suit
Testimony from the Iraq Veterans Against the War
Approximately 55 former members of the U.S. military
were preparing to testify about the ongoing military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan—or what
the IVAW consistently refers to as "occupations."
No brainchild of the Pentagon, IVAW modeled its
conference after the controversial 1971 Winter
Soldier event that vivified (some say fictionalized)
war crimes, human rights abuses, and military
waste then occurring in Vietnam. The IVAW has
three unifying aims: immediate withdrawal of all
American troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, reparations
for the Iraqi people, and consistent and reliable
medical care for all veterans of the war.
http://www.slate.com/id/2186755/
Time.com: Veterans Rally Against Iraq
War
In a reprise of the 1971 gathering that led to
the swift-boating of John Kerry, Iraq and Afghanistan
vets stage a forum to testify about the human
costs of the wars
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1722659,00.html?xid=feed-cnn-topics
War Stories Echo an Earlier Winter
(including video of “Iraq Veterans Speak
Out On Both Sides of War”)
Grim-faced and sorrowful, former soldiers and
Marines sat before an audience of several hundred
yesterday in Silver Spring and shared their recollections
of their service in Iraq.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/14/AR2008031403887.html
Iraqis and Americans Respond
A soldier, an Iraqi politician, a student protester,
a Bush loyalist and others weigh in on anniversary.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/18/AR2008031802902.html?hpid=topnews
Support the Troops: Bring Them Home
The resolution passed by the House of Representatives
on Feb. 16, expressing disapproval of President
Bush's "surge" of additional troops
for the war in Iraq, is only 69 words long, and
the disapproval itself takes only 27 words. It's
point two. Point one, a loquacious 32 words, is
an expression of approval for the troops. Not
just for the troops who are currently serving,
but also for those who "have served bravely
and honorably" in Iraq in the past.
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1591571,00.html
Viewpoint: Stop Saying, "Support
Our Troops"
On Wednesday the Senate fell four votes short
of passing a bill mandating that U.S. troops be
allowed to spend as much time at home as they
do on deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. The
defeated proposal, which also failed in July,
addresses a genuine problem: Throughout Iraq you
meet soldiers and Marines whose personal lives
have been strained, sometimes to the breaking
point, by their long and repeated deployments.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1663883,00.html?iid=sphere-inline-sidebar
Estimates of Iraq War Cost Were Not Close
to Ballpark
"At the outset of the Iraq war, the Bush
administration predicted that it would cost $50
billion to $60 billion to oust Saddam Hussein,
restore order and install a new government.
The Costs So Far Five years in, the Pentagon
tags the cost of the Iraq war at roughly $600
billion and counting. Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel
Prize-winning economist and critic of the war,
pegs the long-term cost at more than $4 trillion.
The Congressional Budget Office and other analysts
say that $1 trillion to $2 trillion is more realistic,
depending on troop levels and on how long the
American occupation continues.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/19/washington/19cost.html?ref=middleeast
Reader mail can go to sarah.jaffe-at-gmail.com.
Please include “Political Buzz” in
the subject line or it may go to junk mail!
|