A couple hundred thousand dead civilians have a way of making such
noble ideals seem like dollar-store tinsel. And so, throughout our
decade-long foreign policy debacle in the Greater Middle East, we in the
U.S. have generally agreed that no one shall commit the gaucherie of
dwelling on (and “dwelling on” = fleetingly mentioned) civilian
casualties. Washington elites may squabble over some things, but as for
foreigners killed by our numerous wars, our Beltway crew adheres to a
sullen code of omertà.
Club rules do, however, permit one loophole: Washington officials may
bemoan the nightmare of civilian casualties -- but only if they can be
pinned on a 24-year-old Army private first class named Bradley
Manning.
Tomgram: Chase Madar, Accusing WikiLeaks of Murder
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta called it “utterly deplorable.” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed “total dismay.” General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, was “deeply disturbed” that the actions in question would “erode the reputation of our joint force.” Marine Corps Commandant General James Amos declared
them to be “wholly inconsistent with the high standards of conduct and
warrior ethos that we have demonstrated throughout our history,” and
Senator John McCain claimed they made him “so sad.”
Seldom have so many high officials in Washington lined up to denounce
an event so quickly or emphatically. I’m talking, of course, about
the video
of four wisecracking U.S. Marines in Afghanistan pissing on what might
be three dead Taliban or simply -- since we may never know whose bodies
those are -- the corpses of three dead Afghans. (“Have a good day,
buddy... Golden -- like a shower, ” you hear them say, seemingly
addressing the bodies.) The video went viral in the Muslim world, and
the Obama administration moved fast to contain the damage. After all,
no one wanted another Abu Ghraib.
On this subject Washington has been remarkably united (with the exception of Rick Perry, who offered a half-hearted defense
of the Marines -- “to call it a criminal act, I think, is over the
top”). Pardon me, though, if I find this chorus of condemnation to be
too little, too late. It feels like a malign version of one of Casablanca’s famous final lines: “Round up the usual suspects.”
After all, these last years in occupied Iraq and Afghanistan have
been utterly deplorable, totally dismaying, and deeply disturbing from
start to finish. On occasion after occasion, U.S. troops, aka “America’s heroes,” as well as private contractors and others
in Washington’s employ have run riot. There is no way to catalogue
what’s been deplorable, dismaying, and deeply disturbing, but if you
wanted to start, it really wouldn't be that hard.
In fact, you wouldn't have to go farther than this website. If, for
instance, it was deeply disturbing pictures taken by our troops you
were curious about, you could have read David Swanson’s 2006 piece "The Iraq War as a Trophy Photo," which focused on the “war porn”
photos U.S. soldiers were already taking (or even setting up) and then
proudly submitting to an actual porn website for posting (something, by
the way, that’s still going on).
Or if checkpoint killings by U.S. soldiers in Iraq were what you were interested in, all you had to do was read Chris Hedges at TomDispatch in 2008, based on interviews he did with American soldiers for the book Collateral Damage:
“Iraqi families,” he wrote, “were routinely fired upon for getting too
close to checkpoints, including an incident where an unarmed father
driving a car was decapitated by a .50-caliber machine gun in front of
his small son.” ("'It's fun to shoot sh-t up,' a soldier said.") And if
his word wasn’t enough, you could turn to U.S. Afghan War commander
General Stanley McChrystal who, in a moment of bluntness in April 2010, commented:
“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.”
Or consider something no one has yet denounced as deplorable,
dismaying, or deeply disturbing: the obliteration of wedding parties.
Over the years, TomDispatch has counted up at least six weddings
in Iraq and Afghanistan that were wiped out in part or full by the U.S.
Air Force. All of these, including the first in December 2001 in
which a B-52 and two B-1B bombers, armed with precision weapons, killed
110 of 112 Afghan revelers, were reported individually. But next to
no one in our world thought them dismaying or disturbing enough to
write about them collectively or, for that matter, to deplore them.
(Of a wedding in Western Iraq in which U.S. planes killed 40 people,
including wedding musicians and children, Major General James Mattis,
commander of the 1st Marine Division, asked: "How many people go to the middle of the desert... to hold a wedding 80 miles from the nearest civilization?")
The troves of documents leaked to the website WikiLeaks, for which
Army Pfc. Bradley Manning has been charged, certainly caused a stir, but
the carnage in them was, in truth, easily available without access to a
single secret document. Washington’s crocodile tears can’t wash away
the stain of all this on American honor, as TomDispatch regular Chase Madar, author of the upcoming book The Passion of Bradley Manning,
makes all too clear. (To catch Timothy MacBain’s latest Tomcast audio
interview in which Madar discusses the coming trial of Bradley
Manning, click here, or download it to your iPod here.) Tom
Blood on Whose Hands?
Bradley Manning, Washington, and the Blood of Civilians
Pfc. Manning, you will remember, is the young soldier who is soon to
be court-martialed for passing some 750,000 military and diplomatic
documents, a large chunk of them classified, to the website WikiLeaks.
Among those leaks, there was indeed some serious stuff about how
Americans dealt with civilians in invaded countries. For instance, the
documents revealed that the U.S. military, then the occupying force in
Iraq, did little or nothing to prevent Iraqi authorities from torturing prisoners in a variety of gruesome ways, sometimes to death.
Then there was that gun-sight video
-- unclassified but buried in classified material -- of an American
Apache helicopter opening fire on a crowd on a Baghdad street, gunning
down a dozen men, including two Reuters employees, and injuring more,
including children. There were also those field reports about how jumpy
American soldiers repeatedly shot down civilians at roadside checkpoints; about night raids gone wrong both in Iraq and Afghanistan; and a count of thousands of dead Iraqi civilians, a tally whose existence the U.S. military had previously denied possessing.
Together, these leaks and many others offered a composite portrait of
military and political debacles in Iraq and Afghanistan whose grinding
theme has been civilian casualties, a fact not much noted here in the
U.S. A tiny number of low-ranking American soldiers have been held to account
for rare instances of premeditated murder of civilians, but most of the
troops who kill civilians in the midst of the chaos of war are not
tried, much less convicted.
We don’t talk about these cases a lot either. On the other hand,
officials of all types make free with lusty condemnations of Bradley
Manning, whose leaks are luridly credited with potential (though not
actual) deaths.
Putting Lives in Danger
“[WikiLeaks] might already have on their hands the blood of some young soldier or that of an Afghan family,” said
Admiral Mike Mullen, then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on the
release of the Afghan War Logs in July 2010. This was, of course, the
same Admiral Mullen who had endorsed
a major escalation of the war in Afghanistan, which would lead to a
tremendous “surge” in casualties among civilians and soldiers alike. Here
are counts -- undoubtedly undercounts, in fact -- of real Afghan
corpses that, at least in part, resulted from the policy he supported:
2,412 in 2009, 2,777 in 2010, 1,462 in the first half 2011, according to
the U.N. Assistance Mission to Afghanistan. As far as anyone knows,
here are the corpses that resulted from the release of those WikiLeaks
documents: 0. (And don’t forget, the stalemate war
with the Taliban has not budged in the period since that surge.) Who,
then, has blood on his hands, Pfc. Manning -- or Admiral Mullen?
Of course the admiral is hardly alone. In fact, whole tabernacle
choirs have joined in the condemnation of Manning and WikiLeaks for
“causing” carnage, thanks to their disclosures.
Robert Gates, who served as secretary of defense under George W. Bush
and then Barack Obama, also spoke sternly of Manning’s leaks, accusing
him of “moral culpability.” He added, “And that's where I think the
verdict is ‘guilty’ on WikiLeaks. They have put this out without any
regard whatsoever for the consequences."
This was, of course, the same Robert Gates who pushed for escalation in Afghanistan in 2009 and, in March 2011, flew to the Kingdom of Bahrain to offer his own personal “reassurance of support” to a ruling monarchy already busy shooting and torturing
nonviolent civilian protesters. So again, when it comes to blood and
indifference to consequences, Bradley Manning -- or Robert Gates?
Nor have such attitudes been confined to the military. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton accused
Manning’s (alleged) leak of 250,000 diplomatic cables of being “an
attack on the international community” that “puts people’s lives in
danger, threatens our national security, and undermines our efforts to
work with other countries to solve shared problems.”
As a senator, of course, she supported the invasion of Iraq in flagrant contravention of the U.N. Charter. She was subsequently a leading hawk when it came to escalating and expanding the Afghan War, and is now responsible for disbursing an annual $1.3 billion in military aid to Egypt’s ruling junta whose forces have repeatedly opened fire
on nonviolent civilian protesters. So who’s been attacking the
international community and putting lives in danger, Bradley Manning --
or Hillary Clinton?
Harold Koh, former Yale Law School dean, liberal lion, and currently the State Department’s top legal adviser, has announced
that the same leaked diplomatic cables “could place at risk the lives
of countless innocent individuals -- from journalists to human rights
activists and bloggers to soldiers to individuals providing information
to further peace and security.”
This is the same Harold Koh who, in March 2010, provided
a tortured legal rationale for the Obama administration’s drone strikes
in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia, despite the inevitable and
well-documented civilian casualties they cause. So who is risking the lives of countless innocent individuals, Bradley Manning -- or Harold Koh?
Much of the media have clambered aboard the bandwagon, blaming
WikiLeaks and Manning for damage done by wars they once energetically
cheered on.
In early 2011, to pick just one example from the ranks of journalism, New Yorker writer George Packer professed his horror that WikiLeaks had released a memo
marked “secret/noforn” listing spots throughout the world of vital
strategic or economic interest to the United States. Asked by radio
host Brian Lehrer whether this disclosure had crossed a new line by
making a gratuitous gift to terrorists, Packer replied with an appalled yes.
Now, among the “secrets” contained in this document are the facts
that the Strait of Gibraltar is a vital shipping lane and that the
Democratic Republic of the Congo is rich in minerals. Have we Americans
become so infantilized that factoids of basic geography must be
considered state secrets? (Maybe best not to answer that question.)
The “threat” of this document’s release has since been roundly debunked by various military intellectuals.
Nevertheless, Packer’s response was instructive. Here was a typical
liberal hawk, who had can-canned to the post-9/11 drumbeat of war as a
therapeutic wake-up call from “the bland comforts of peace,”
now affronted by WikiLeaks’ supposed recklessness. Civilian casualties
do not seem to have been on Packer’s mind when he supported the
invasion of Iraq, nor has he written much about them since.
In an enthusiastic 2006 New Yorker essay on counterinsurgency warfare, for example, the very words “civilian casualties” never come up, despite their centrality to COIN theory, practice, and history.
It is a fact that, as Operation Enduring Freedom shifted to
counterinsurgency tactics in 2009, civilian casualties in Afghanistan
skyrocketed. So, for that matter, have American military casualties.
(More than half of U.S. military deaths in Afghanistan occurred in the past three years.)
Liberal hawks like Packer may consider WikiLeaks out of bounds, but
really, who in these last years has been the most reckless, Bradley
Manning -- or George Packer and some of his pro-war colleagues at the New Yorker like Jeffrey Goldberg (who has since left for the Atlantic Monthly, where he’s been busily clearing a path for war with Iran) and editor David Remnick?
Centrist and liberal nonprofit think tanks have been no less
selectively blind when it comes to civilian carnage. Liza Goitein, a
lawyer at the liberal-minded Brennan Center at NYU Law School, has also
taken out after Bradley Manning. In the midst of an otherwise deft
diagnosis of Washington’s compulsive urge to over-classify everything --
the federal government classifies an amazing 77 million documents a year -- she pauses just long enough to accuse
Manning of “criminal recklessness” for putting civilians named in the
Afghan War logs in peril -- “a disclosure,” as she puts it, “that surely
endangers their safety.”
It’s worth noting that, until the moment Goitein made this charge,
not a single report or press release issued by the Brennan Center has
ever so much as uttered a mention of civilian casualties caused by the
U.S. military. The absence of civilian casualties is almost palpable in
the work of the Brennan Center’s program in “Liberty and National Security.” For example, this program’s 2011 report “Rethinking Radicalization,”
which explored effective, lawful ways to prevent American Muslims from
turning terrorist, makes not a single reference to the tens of thousands
of well-documented
civilian casualties caused by American military force in the Muslim
world, which according to many scholars is the prime mover of terrorist
blowback. The report on how to combat the threat of Muslim terrorists,
written by Pakistan-born Faiza Patel, does not, in fact, even contain
the words “Iraq,” “Afghanistan,” “drone strike,” “Pakistan” or “civilian
casualties.”
This is almost incredible, because terrorists themselves have freely
confessed that what motivated their acts of wanton violence has been the
damage done by foreign military occupation back home or simply in the
Muslim world. Asked by a federal judge why he tried to blow up Times
Square with a car bomb in May 2010, Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad answered
that he was motivated by the civilian carnage the U.S. had caused in
Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. How could any report about “rethinking
radicalization” fail to mention this? Although the Brennan Center does
much valuable work, Goitein's selective finger-pointing on civilian
casualties is emblematic of a blindness to war’s consequences widespread
among American institutions.
American Military Whistleblowers
Knowledge may indeed have its risks, but how many civilian deaths can
actually be traced to the WikiLeaks revelations? How many military
deaths? To the best of anyone’s knowledge, not a single one. After
much huffing and puffing, the Pentagon has quietly denied -- and then denied again -- that there is any evidence at all of the Taliban targeting the Afghan civilians named in the leaked war logs.
In the end, the “grave risks” involved in the publication of the War
Logs and of those State Department documents have been wildly
exaggerated. Embarrassment, yes. A look inside two grim wars and the
workings of imperial diplomacy, yes. Blood, no.
On the other hand, the grave risks that were hidden in those leaked
documents, as well as in all the other government distortions,
cover-ups, and lies of the past decade, have been graphically
illustrated in aortal red. The civilian carnage caused by our rush to
war in Iraq and by our deeply entrenched stalemate of a war in
Afghanistan (and the Pakistani tribal borderlands) is not speculative or
theoretical but all-too real.
And yet no one anywhere has been held to much account: not in the
political class, not in the military, not in the think tanks, not among
the scholars, nor the media. Only one individual, it seems, will pay,
even if he actually spilled none of the blood. Our foreign policy
elites seem to think Bradley Manning is well-cast for the role of fall
guy and scapegoat. This is an injustice.
Someday, it will be clearer to Americans that Pfc. Manning has joined the ranks of great American military whistleblowers like Dan Ellsberg (who was first in his class at Marine officer training school); Vietnam War infantryman Ron Ridenhour, who blew the whistle on the My Lai massacre; and the sailors and marines who, in 1777,
reported the torture of British captives by their politically connected
commanding officer. These servicemen, too, were vilified in their
times. Today, we honor them, as someday Pfc. Manning will be honored.