~terry
Sun, Apr 4, 1999 (13:35)
seed
The war in Kosovo rages on for it's second week now.
Three US captives have put a "face" on a war that Americans have a tough
time stomaching because it's not microwaveable. It can't be conducted
with instant efficiency and no repercussions.
I'll set the stage for this topic with something I read by Dave Hughes
today, who's been through the wars. Nowadays, he's mostly a warrior for
wireless communications.
~terry
Sun, Apr 4, 1999 (13:36)
#1
ITEM 45...R,S,P or ?:
45:126) Dave Hughes 04-APR-1999 10:25
Woah! The last person on Metanet that I thought would advocate the
extermination of a race of people is XXXX. I hope it was said in
a fit of frustration. Even I, who have fought the nations wars 'up
close and personal' with people (North Koreans, Chinese, North
Vietnamese,) who were doing their level best to kill me,
and who saw my fellow officers, West Point classmates with whom
I had formed lifelong friendships, and my men, killed, wounded or
captured, I *still* adhere to the position expressed most eloquently by
a boss of mine, General Harold K Johnson - who spent years as a
prisoner of war of the Japanese that, for Americans there is
'an Object which lies beyond War, and for the US that Object is
never the extermination of another population.'
And that sentiment, rooted deeply in the moral fiber of this nation,
which has attempted, even if not fully successfully even inside
its own borders, to accept the diversity of peoples, and their
rights to live lives of self-determination so long as they do
not attempt to force their wills on another people. It is *precisely*
that level of political tolerance - which often gets so open minded
our brains fall out - that differs Americans from others, and the
United States from other polities.
In fact it is far more out of that moral sense that we are at war
in Yugoslavia - and NOT for oil, or 'national interests' or to
deflect an imminent threat to our safety. A point many people have
difficulty grasping or accepting. Sure, it has been heightened by the
modern phenomnon of television, bringing the suffering of the Albanians
in Kosovo to our living rooms. But it is *the* wellspring of our policy
believe it or not.
We *have* the capability of annihilating any foreign population.
Its called the nuclear bomb. The primary reason that wonderful
Democrat Harry Truman authorized its use against Japan which
ended WWII in the Pacific, was to save the hundreds of thousands
of American lives which would have been lost had we done it the
hard way and invaded with ground troops. It was *not* to 'punish'
the hapless Japanese people whose war-mongering leadership plunged
them into that war. Even though I can assure you that the atrocities
visited on the peoples of countries they invaded - from the Rape
of Nanking to the treatment of POWs - was as evil as anything being
done today in Kosovo.
And we did *not* use it in North Korea when we were desperately
trying to hang on - and spent over 50,000 dead Americans to
defend South Korea. Against a tyrannical communist regime just as
evil as Milosovic and his cronies. Still.
We did *not* use it against North Vietnam, even when a Presidential
candidate Goldwater suggested we should 'bomb them back into the
Stone Age.' Even though we were losing Americans at an unnacceptable
rate and knew those South Vietnamese who had cast their lot with
us would be severely punished if North Vietnam occupied South Vietnam.
We did NOT use it against Pol Pot and Khmer Rouge, whose killing fields
were far beyond what the Serbs have done.
And I did not let my handful of angry, trembling, tearful men
shoot the 192 Chinese prisoners we had taken after 600 of them
had tried to kill us all, and succeded in killing, wounding
or capturing all but 29 of my 167 men and 6 offiers. When several
of my men *wanted* to kill them all under circumstances where it
would have been justifiable, nobody would have made a fuss,
and we were in imminent danger of being overwhelmed by the
192 against our 15 on a very forward (into Chinese lines)
hill. Why didn't I? Because I am an American soldier, not just
a soldier.
I think we last, as a nation, pursued a policy of extermination
only during our western expansion across Native American lands
and peoples. We outgrew it, actually. Something deeper than 'The
only good Indian is a dead Indian' finally moved us. Americans
take a long time to do the right things, but they eventually do.
Among the German people, the committed Nazis were evil, and tolerated
evil. And even today, with the skinheads there, the latent impulses
within German society to look down upon, and punish, 'other peoples'
is quite alive. The Japanese are *still* feared and hated by the
Chinese (I know, with my daughter in law Chinese, and my face to
face discussions with her parents, I have seen it up close). And
many Japanese would be perfectly willing to exterminate others,
even today. And we still have our KKK and elements of our society
who would, if king, drive out the blacks and browns from America.
The hatred of Arabs for Jews, (and the willingness of many Jews
to deny Arabs their own 'self determination') is obvious. As is
the ethnic and religious animonsity between Pakistanis, and Indians.
I wouldn't trust either one of them if they had unlimited power.
The innumerable tribal hatreds in Africa are legend.
Thats the way the world is, and has been, and will continue to be.
Yet America, as one of the only great powers to NOT carry over
racial or religious hatred into a permanent policy of annihilation,
stands almost alone. We *could* exterminate the Serbs. (though anyone
who thinks the Albanians, especially through their militant arm
the KLA is clean, is uninformed. Their atrocities are there too. And
*they*, unlike the Serbs, collaborated with the Nazis, and assisted
in German tyranny over the people of occupied Balkans.) But we are
not, and I condemn anyone who seriously suggest that as a policy.
So while Clinton is misguided in his strategy, still unable to
overcome *his* hatred and mistrust of US military, naive about
just how evil others can be, and their willingness to oppose
him with determination and arms, nevertheless his basic reason
for committing our blood and treasure to the fight in Yugoslavia
comes from the best, not worst, American political instincts and moral
values. The worst I can say of him in this fight is that he and his
advisors are venal and incompetant. And only now, late in his life,
is he learning - at the expense of hundreds of thousands of Albanian
muslims - and the US taxpayer, as well as three young American
soldiers, what Armies are for, and why they are necessary and why
their blood often has to be spilled for the United States to pursue
a moral policy. A lesson, had he not dodged the draft, and got
caught up with demonizing the military for the sins of their political
leaders, he might have grasped earlier. And not have gotton himself this
much into the fix we are in.
And when its all over, the one organization which will have
performed as it was asked to do, committed no excesses, rose in no
political revolt, and whose commanders command without personal
or ethnic anger motivating their use of deadly force. Who can go to
church on Easter in Aviano, or the border of Macadonia with a clear
conscience. And will stand ready for the next war, will have been the
officers and men in the US military of all services. Who understand
more than most Americans how hard it is, yet how important, to do their
job limited by such moral considerations deeply rooted in the
Judeo-Christian tradition on man's relationship to his fellow man.
And NOT, motivated by the dark impulses of a frustrated Kurtz in
Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" who finally lashed out after fruitless
years
in the Congo and finally concludes - "Exterminate the brutes."
Have a sobering Easter - and remember who you are.
Dave Hughes
dave@oldcolo.com