ZNet Commentary
Veterans Day
by Howard Zinn

Veterans Day used to be called Armistice Day, because it was November
11, 1918, at 11 AM - the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the
eleventh month, that the first World War came to an end.

It would be good to remember a few things about that war as this
country is about to embark on still another war. First, that you don�t
"win" wars. We "won" World War I, but sowed the seeds of another world
war. War is a quick fix, like crack. An exultant high - we won! - and
soon you�re down again, and you need another fix, another war.

In World War I. the German Kaiser was presented as the epitome of evil
- a threat to the world,, who must be eliminated for our safety. In
truth, he was bad, but his danger to us was enormously exaggerated, as
with Saddam Hussein. So the Allies defeated Germany, got rid of the
Kaiser, and ten million men died on the battlefields.

We can get rid of Saddam Hussein. Iraq is a fifth-rate military power,
with no Air Force to speak of, its army a remnant of what it was ten
years ago, the country still in ruins, its infrastructure devastated
by two wars, its people weakened by ten years of sanctions depriving
people of food and hospitals of medicine, and causing hundreds of
thousands of deaths. And the U.S. with its invincible Air Force, will
win.

In the course of that, tens of thousands of Iraqis will die, , many of
them innocent civilians, others poor, miserable conscripts in the
Iraqi army. We will be killing the victims of Saddam Hussein. .
Because of its high tech weaponry and overwhelming military
superiority, America will lose few soldiers. But it will lose its
soul.

World War I, presented to the public as a war for democracy, for
freedom, was in fact a war fought by imperial powers (France, England,
Russia) against an imperial rival, Germany. It led, not to the freedom
of colonial peoples, but to a change in who dominated the Middle East,
Africa, Eastern Europe.

Now, the war in Iraq is presented as a moral crusade to end the menace
of "weapons of mass destruction", the evidence for which is far from
clear. The assumption that Saddam would use them and invite
annihilation (since most weapons of mass destruction in the world are
held by the United States) makes no sense.

As in the first World War, there are imperial motives at work, and the
defeat of Saddam will lead to a change in who controls the precious
oil reserves of Iraq. Deals will be cut with Russia, France and
England to divide the booty. The talks are going on right now.

The first World war was sold to the American public as "the war to end
ll wars". But twenty-one years later came World War II, in which fifty
million people were killed. The United Nations was formed, as its
Charter says, "to end the scourge of war which twice in our lifetime
has brought untold sorrow to mankind".

But no, it�s been war after war for the United States: Korea, Vietnam,
Grenada, Panama, Iraq, Yugoslavia. All accompanied by claims that we
were at war for some good cause, all resulting in the loss of human
life, all demanding acceptance of the government�s reasons for war,
most of which turned out to be lies. We should have learned from
Vietnam that true patriotism does not mean marching off to war just
because the government tells you to. Those 58,000 names on the
Washington memorial should make that clear.

As a veteran of World War II, as a student of the history of our wars,
and contemplating still another war, I suggest we keep certain things
in mind. First, that we must be extremely skeptical of whatever
government officials tell us about the reasons for going to war.
Second, that what is certain about war is that large numbers of
innocent people will die, including many children, and what is
uncertain about war is that any good will come of it.

Finally, that when you go to war, you assume that the lives of people
in another country are not as valuable as the lives of your own
countrymen. If we really believe, as our most fundamental moral
principles demand we believe, that the children in other countries
have as much right to live as our children, then we must refuse the
call to war. It is time, by public demand, by general outcry, to end
"the scourge of war" .

The best thing we can do for Veterans Day is to pledge: "No more war
veterans".




------- End of forwarded message -------

Reply via email to