-Caveat Lector-

an excerpt from:
Blood Rites - Origins & History of the Passions of War
Barbara Ehrenreich©1997
Metropolitan Books
Hennry Holt & Companty
ISBN 0-8050-5077-9
-----
 I can not say enough about this book. These excerpts do it little justice. I
strongly recommend reading this book.Well-written and thoughtful; when all is
said and done, the veneer between passions, expectations, propaganda and
thought can be very thin. There are chapters on the warrior elites, the
sacralization of war, the effect of missle(guns/longbow) warfare and war
worship. A very important book.

Om
K
-----
Is it not wonderful for a man, having been born a man,
to die at the hands of another man and then,
with his quiver and bow at his side,
lie on the ground as a corpse?(1)

—MONGOLIAN PROVERB FROM THE TIME OF GENGHIS KHAN

8

FEARFUL SYMMETRIES

However and wherever war begins, it persists, it spreads, it propagates itself
through time and across space with the terrifying tenacity of a beast attached
to the neck of living prey. This is not an idly chosen figure of speech. War
spreads and perpetuates itself through a dynamic that often seems independent
of human will. It has, as we like to say of things we do not fully understand,
"a life of its own."

Biological metaphors for war are popular among those who study war abstractly,
through the grid of mathematics.(2) Normally we think of war as a product of
human volition—an activity, a habit, perhaps an "institution"—growing out of
human needs and cultural proclivities. And of course it is that: Take away
human whims and passions, and there is no war, or at least no human versions
of it. But if we consider war abstractly, we see that something else is going
on. As the Dutch social scientist Henk Houweling points out, the mathematical
study of outbreaks of war and of national decisions to participate in wars
shows "strong indications of epidemicity":

By using methods of epidemiology we do not suggest, of course, that wars are
transmitted by bacteria or by common exposure to some causal variable in the
environment. Our analysis does not reveal the cause of war. But it does
suggest that one of the causes of war is war itself.(3)

If war is analogous to a disease, then, it is analogous to a contagious
disease. It spreads through space, as groups take up warfare in response to
warlike neighbors. This may seem obvious, but statistical studies show that
warfare is indeed more intense and frequent in the vicinity of warlike
groups.(4) War has another way of spreading, too, and that is through time.
Ineluctably, the insults inflicted in one war call forth new wars of
retaliation, which may be waged within months of the original conflict or
generations later. Even the conditions of peace may serve as a springboard to
new wars, as the modern world learned from the Treaty of Versailles; among the
Central Enga of New Guinea, unpaid indemnities from one war are a common
excuse for the next one.(5) So, to continue the epidemiological metaphor, if
war is regarded as an infectious "disease," it is caused by a particularly
hardy sort of microbe—one capable of encysting itself for generations, if
necessary, within the human soul.

Stated in more conventional terms, war spreads from band to band and culture
to culture because it is a form of contact that no human group can afford to
ignore or disdain. If outsiders show up hoping to woo mates or trade goods or
induct you into their religious practices, you can always tell them to go
away. But, as Andrew Bard Schmookler argues in his brilliant exploration of
human power relationships, The Parable of the Tribes, you can no more brush
off a war party than you can tell a mugger who demands your money or your life
that, frankly, you'd rather keep both and continue peaceably along your way
(6) If the other tribe harbors a corps of thuggish aggressors, so must
yours—or fall prey to those who thought up thuggery first. No warlike
instinct, greedy impulses, or material needs are required to explain why war,
once adopted by some, must of necessity be adopted by all. Peaceable societies
will survive only in isolated or marginal locales—the deep forests of the
Mbuto, the snowfields of the Inuit. Everyone else is swept up into the dynamic
of war. As Schmookler writes:

Among all the cultural possibilities, only some will be viable.... The warlike
may eliminate the pacificistic; the ambitious, the content.... Civilized
societies will displace the remaining primitives, modern industrial powers
will sweep away archaic cultures. The iron makers will be favored over those
with copper or no metallurgy at all, and the horsemen will have sway over the
unmounted. Societies that are coherently organized and have strong leadership
will make unviable others with more casual power structure and more local
autonomy.... What looked like open-ended cultural possibilities are channeled
in a particular, unchosen direction.(7)

In other words, as it spreads from place to place, war tends to stamp a
certain sameness on human cultures. At the most obvious level, it requires
that each human society be as war-ready as the other societies it is likely to
encounter; that spears be matched with spears, fighting men matched with the
men of potential enemy groups; and that in all groups, similar proportions of
energy and resources be dedicated to destructive ends. No doubt there are
other directions in which human cultures might have evolved—toward greater
emphasis on the arts, for example, or philosophy, or more lighthearted games
and rituals. But war, once chosen by some, quickly became the "unchosen
direction" imposed on all.

Most scholars have paid little attention to the homogenizing effects of war.
The enemy, after all, is always the fearsome and wicked Other. "The occasions
for each particular war will vary perhaps," Robin Fox has written,

But ultimately "we" fight "them" because they are different, and their
difference is threatening in its challenge to the validity of the ideas we
live by.(8)

Similarly, Ruth Benedict argued that the problem arises from what is basically
a cognitive confusion: Our fellow humans often look to us like animals. Give
the other tribe a strange accent, a peculiar religion or unusual style of body
paint, and, in our provincialism, we take them for a different species. In
"primitive" societies, she wrote,

human beings are merely one's own little tribe; the rest are nonhuman like the
animals. Killing animals is of course acclaimed, and nonhuman bipeds of the
neighboring tribe are equally objects of prey. Their death proves my strength
just as a successful lion hunt does.(9)

Left unexplained in this account is why Homo sapiens, being so famously
intelligent in other respects, should alone of all the species be unable to
recognize its own kind. In fact, there is reason to believe that diverse
cultures have been capable of peaceful interaction for many thousands of
years, meaning that they were also capable of recognizing one another as
human. For example, the vast distribution of "Venus'' figurines throughout the
Eurasian continent would seem to attest to cultural contact and exchange among
presumably quite different peoples as early as the Upper Paleolithic. By the
Neolithic, goods like obsidian were being traded across thousands of miles in
the Mediterranean and Near East—again presumably among people who recognized
one another as human beings.(10) Even the most parochially minded Paleolithic
bands were probably exogamous, that is, disposed to pick mates from outside
the band rather than risk incest within.(11) Diversity is endemic to the human
race, which would have had to realize long ago that the stranger may be next
year's trading partner, or kin.

Conversely, warfare is hardly confined to groups that differ strikingly in
culture, language, and appearance. On the contrary, anthropologist Lawrence H.
Keeley observes that "ethnographers have frequently encountered tribes that
intermarried and traded with one another but were also periodically at war
(12) Peaceful trading and socializing may alternate with vicious warfare—a
pattern observed among certain Inuit, North American Indian, and Brazilian
tribes. To quote Keeley:

When the Sioux came to trade at Hidatsa villages along the Upper Missouri, a
truce was in force only within sight of the villages; once the [Sioux] nomads
passed out of sight by climbing over the bluffs, they might steal horses or
kill Hidatsa and were themselves subject to attack. The Mae Enga of New Guinea
asserted, 'We marry the people we fight."(13)

But the notion that war arises, basically, from ignorance and provincialism
has persisted because it is in many ways an optimistic one: If war represents
a failure to recognize human diversity, then all we have to do to end it is to
learn to see through the local variations in language, culture, religion, and
so forth and rediscover our common humanity. In this view, the flaw that leads
humans into war is not a moral but a cognitive one and can be cured through
the kind of education that engenders an enlightened tolerance of human
differences.

Now, from the point of view of any particular side, in any particular war, the
enemy may indeed be seen as a repulsively different Other. But the differences
are often almost imperceptible to an outsider—as between Protestant and
Catholic Irish people, for example, or Serbs and Croats, or one subtribe of
Yanomamo Indians and another—and over time they will be overshadowed by the
common and overarching imperatives of war. Certainly this is true at the level
of technology, where failure to mimic the enemy can be fatal. An American
commentator observed of the Cold War:

All things Communist remain anathema, but the slightest word of some new
development in Russia is sufficient to set in motion investigations by several
congressional committees and private foundations to find out why we are not
doing the same thing.(14)

But the symmetry between enemies goes beyond the instruments of war. During
the Cold War, the ostensibly democratic United States developed the permanent
bureaucracy of the "national security state," parallel to that of the Soviets
and including government agencies dedicated to rooting out and suppressing
domestic dissent. In general, as Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld
explains:

Given time, the fighting itself will cause the two sides to become more like
each other, even to the point where opposites converge, merge, and change
places.... The principal reason behind this phenomenon is that war represents
perhaps the most imitative activity known to man. (15)

There is a mechanism—almost a human reflex—that guarantees that belligerents
will in fact be "given time" for this convergence to occur, and that mechanism
is revenge: A raid or attack or insult must be matched with an attack of equal
or greater destructive force. One atrocity will be followed by another; and no
matter how amicable the two sides may once have been, they will soon be locked
together in a process from which no escape seems possible. To the warrior, the
necessity of revenge may be self-evident and beyond appeal:

The Jibaro Indian is wholly penetrated by the idea of retaliation; his desire
for revenge is an expression of his sense of justice.... If one reprehends a
Jibaro because he has killed an enemy, his answer is generally: "He has killed
himself."(16)

The "necessity" of revenge may well be another legacy of our animal-fighting,
prehistoric past. Revenge has a pedagogical purpose, whether the enemy is
animal or human: It teaches the intruder to stay away. Conversely, the
creature that does not fight back marks itself as prey. At the Paleolithic
kill sites where early humans battled competing scavengers, some version of
revenge may have been essential to establishing the human claim to meat. Like
modern dogs, canine intruders could have been taught to keep their distance by
being struck or stoned. Similarly, many wild predators have learned that the
price of human meat can be gunshots, spear wounds, or fiery sticks waved in
their faces, and they seem to have passed the lesson along to their young. In
the face of nonhuman enemies, retaliation makes sense: The animals will not
counterretaliate at some later time but, being sensible, will slink away.
But no matter how often we are told that some human enemy must be "taught a
lesson," the impulse to revenge is by no means entirely rational. In
traditional societies, wars may be started for no other purpose than to
overcome grief. The Kwakiutl of the Pacific Northwest often followed up
natural deaths with retaliatory headhunting raids:

The dead relative might equally have died in bed of disease or by the hand of
an enemy. The head-hunting was called "killing to wipe one's eyes," and it was
a means of getting even by making another household mourn instead. (17)

Among South American Indians living near the Putumayo River, even damage
caused by a thunderstorm could be an excuse for a retaliatory raid, since
"every ill that befalls a man they set down to the evil intent of an
enemy.''(18) Similarly, the Miyanmin of New Guinea lacked the concept of a
"natural" death, so that all adult deaths were viewed as "political acts
carried out by the enemy." Every death, then, was an insult, which had to be
avenged by going to war:

After a period of mourning (marked by violence and brawls) the hamlet may be
abandoned, as if the survivors of the deceased were war refugees, and/or
retaliatory attacks on other hamlets (on whom blame has been assigned by
ritual).(19)

Grief, depression, helplessness—these are the experiences of prey. The obvious
way out, the way our species learned through a million years of conflict with
larger and stronger animals, is to assume the stance of the predator: Turn
grief to rage, go from listless mourning to the bustling preparations for
offensive attack. This, more or less, is what Achilles does in the lliad He
recovers from the paralysis of hurt feelings and grief through his spectacular
revenge for Patroklus's death. Animals secure in their-predator status know
nothing of revenge. But humans are hardly secure; our triumph over the other
species occurred not that long ago, and childhood, for each of us,
recapitulates the helplessness of prey. For purely emotional reasons, then,
human antagonists readily find themselves caught up in the well-known "cycle
of violence," taking turns as prey and predator, matching injury with
injury—bound together as powerfully as lovers in their bed.

The dance of action and reaction engenders a symmetry between belligerents
which warriors recognize and sometimes consciously enhance. To defeat an
enemy, you must know that enemy and learn to think as he thinks. Before
Achilles can kill Hektor he must become as much like him as possible, spending
books 18 to 20 of the lliad mimicking him and usurping his identity as a
hunter. Conversely, if someone is so truly and incomprehensibly different as
to be subhuman in the sense Ruth Benedict suggests, he may never achieve the
status of a genuine "enemy." Nineteenth-century European aristocrats refused
to duel with their social inferiors, nor did Europeans always bother to
dignify their campaigns against indigenous peoples with the word "war." The
clashes of British against French or French against Prussian were "wars,"
recalled with definite names and dates, but—with a few exceptions like the
Zulu Wars—their fiercely resisted incursions against Africans and Asians tend
to be lumped together indiscriminately under bloodless phrases like
"imperialist expansion."

At the level of the individual, the symmetry of war may even be expressed as a
kind of love. Enemies by definition "hate" each other, but between habitual
and well-matched enemies, an entirely different feeling may arise. Sometimes
this love is reserved for the trophies created from the bodies of dead
enemies, their shrunken heads or scalps:

The scalp of an enemy was of remarkable importance for the Cocopa warrior. He
brought the object back with him and soon retired to a place isolated from
other people where he spent several nights and days in communion with the
scalp. During that time it talked to him, "especially at night, telling him
how to be a great warrior and giving him special powers."(20)

Or the dead enemy may be incorporated by his killer's tribe as a kind of
honorary kinsman. The practice of naming a child after a particularly valiant
enemy was once widespread, from New Guinea(21) to the North American
plains.(22) Genghis Khan's birth name, for example, was Temujin, taken from a
tribal enemy his father had vanquished and captured.(23)

There have been, in some instances, ritual occasions for the face-to-face
expression of love between enemy combatants. When an Aztec warrior subdued an
opponent in battle, he formally reassured his prisoner that he would not be
eaten, and "considered his captive as his own flesh and blood, calling him
son, while the latter called him father. (24) Or consider what Richard Barber,
the historian of medieval European knighthood, called "the curious custom of
fighting in mines." The besiegers of a fortress often dug mines under the
fortress walls; the besieged would dig countermines in order to get out and
harass the besiegers. If a mine met a countermine, a fight might ensue,
conducted by torchlight and according to the rules of the tournament. The odd
part is that, merely by participating in this underground combat, enemy
knights were transformed into "brothers-in-arms," meaning that their personal
enmity was dissolved and they were henceforth "bound to one another in such a
way, that each will stand by the other to the death if need be."(25)

The symmetry forged by war echoes the peculiar symmetries often found in
sacrificial rites. In Aztec ritual, the sacrificial victim was sometimes
dressed to impersonate the god or goddess who was the intended recipient of
the sacrifice. In Christian imagery, which reflects far earlier traditions,
Jesus is both the sacrificial "lamb" and, through the mystery of the Trinity,
the deity to whom the lamb is offered. Hubert and Mauss noted the extreme and
complicated "doubling" in ancient Greek sacrificial rites.- The great Dorian
festival of the Karneia, for example, celebrated in honor of Apollo Karneios,
was supposedly instituted to expiate the sacrificial killing of the soothsayer
Karnos, who is himself Apollo Karneios.(26) These symmetries may reflect
humankind's primordial experience of being both prey and predator—an
experience faithfully re-created in every battle.

War, then, is not simply a clash of Others, made possible by an ignorant
horror of difference. The warrior looks out at the enemy and sees men who are,
in crucial respects, recognizably like himself. They are warriors, too, and
whatever differences they may have, whatever long-standing reasons for hatred,
they share the basic tenets of warriordom: a respect for courage, a
willingness to stand by one's comrades no matter what, a bold indifference to
death. Even when divided by race and vast cultural differences, enemies may
admire each other for their conduct as warriors. To the medieval European
Crusaders, for example, the enemy was not a priori an object of hatred.... The
Saracen, strong, brave, and fierce and always vanquished in the end, was the
ideal adversary in the medieval warrior's imagination.(27)

More ambivalently, a British colonel wrote of the West African Asantes he had
helped to defeat: "It was impossible not to admire the gallantry of these
savages.(28) In a sense, warriors everywhere constitute a tribe unto
themselves, transcending all other tribes and nations.
Certainly, and especially in our own time, warring cultures have sought to
magnify their differences for propagandistic reasons—witness the demonization
of the "Huns," "Japs," and "gooks" Americans have fought against. But at the
same time, as Schmookler observed, war also works to flatten out many of the
differences—of culture, if not, of course, of race or language—that
distinguish tribes and nations. Trade does this, too, imposing similar tastes
and fashions on people who may share little else, but war does it in a highly
specific way. For one thing, the concentration of the weapons and prestige of
war in the hands of men reinforces male supremacy, which is in itself a nearly
universal characteristic of human societies. Certain common patterns of gender
relations have been observed, for example, among warlike, small-scale
horticultural societies, whether they are in the Amazon basin, New Guinea, or
parts of Africa. In these societies women are valued largely as prizes of war
or as prestigious possessions accorded to victorious warriors, and have little
or no voice in group decision-making. As anthropologist William T. Divale
observes:

Primitive warfare is part of a syndrome which also includes female
infanticide, polygyny, and marriage alliances. The almost universal occurrence
of this syndrome in primitive cultures plus its important ecological role has
led to the conclusion that the syndrome constitutes the basic structural
framework or template of primitive social organization.(29)

In addition, the maintenance of warriors itself imposes certain disciplines
and forms of organization: Weapons must be manufactured, sometimes out of raw
materials gathered from distant sites, and potential warriors must be
instructed in their use. The use of metal weaponry in particular demands a
complex division of labor and, usually, a centralized command system to
coordinate the mining and transport of ore and the manufacture of the weapons.
In the ancient world, the imperatives of weapons manufacture and warrior
maintenance often went along with despotism and the formation of highly
centralized, dynastic states. But not always: The ancient Greeks fought on
foot, in a phalanx formation that stressed equality and interdependence; and,
as historian Victor Hansen has convincingly argued, this mode of warfare was
compatible with the limited democracy of the city-state. In general, the
early-twentieth-century sociologist Stanislaw Andrzejewski argued, militarism
has a decisive influence on forms of political organization, but whether it
favors democracy or despotism depends on the particular mode of warfare
practiced.(30)

So there is no single cultural pattern stamped by war on all human societies,
everywhere and at all times. We can say, though, that similar technologies and
styles of warfare place similar demands on human cultures, and that these
demands tend to impose a kind of sameness in areas of social endeavor that are
seemingly remote from the business of war. Contrary to Marx, it is not only
the "means of production" that shape human societies, but "the means of
destruction,''(31) and for much of human history the means of destruction have
favored societies ruled by warriors themselves.
pp132-143
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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