[Only other people's atrocities are endlessly fascinating.]

[Of course when other countries treat their own half century old
atrocities as if they were old news their complacency just boggles our
minds.]

http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=17192

The Scalping Party

Mike Davis, tomdispatch.com
November 14, 2003

   In his dark masterpiece, Blood Meridian (1985), novelist Cormac
   McCarthy tells the terrifying tale of a gang of Yanqui scalp-hunters
   who left an apocalyptic trail of carnage from Chihuahua to Southern
   California in the early 1850s.

   Commissioned by Mexican authorities to hunt marauding Apaches, the
   company of ex-filibusters and convicts under the command of the
   psychopath John Glanton quickly became intoxicated with gore. They
   began to exterminate local farmers as well as Indians, and when there
   were no innocents left to rape and slaughter, they turned upon
   themselves with shark-like fury.

   Many readers have recoiled from the gruesome extremism of McCarthy's
   imagery: the roasted skulls of tortured captives, necklaces of human
   ears, an unspeakable tree of dead infants. Others have balked at his
   unpatriotic emphasis on the genocidal origins of the American West and
   the book's obvious allusion to "search and destroy" missions à la
   Vietnam.

   But Blood Meridian, like all of McCarthy's novels, is based on
   meticulous research. Glanton -- the white savage, the satanic face of
   Manifest Destiny -- really existed. He's simply the ancestor most
   Americans would prefer to forget. He's also the ghost we can't avoid.

   Six weeks ago, a courageous hometown paper in rustbelt Ohio -- the
   Toledo Blade -- tore the wraps off an officially suppressed story of
   Vietnam-era exterminism that recapitulates Blood Meridian in the most
   ghastly and unbearable detail. The reincarnation of Glanton's scalping
   party was an elite 45-man unit of the 101 Airborne Division known as
   "Tiger Force." The Blade's intricate reconstruction of its murderous
   march through the Central Highlands of Vietnam in summer and fall 1967
   needs to be read in full, horrifying detail.
  (http://www.toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=SRTIGERFORCE)
   Blade reporters interviewed more than 100 American veterans and
   Vietnamese survivors.

   Tiger Force atrocities began with the torture and execution of
   prisoners in the field, then escalated to the routine slaughter of
   unarmed farmers, elderly people, and even small children. As one
   former sergeant told the Blade, "It didn't matter if they were
   civilians. If they weren't supposed to be in an area, we shot them. If
   they didn't understand fear, I taught it to them."

   Early on, Tiger Force began scalping its victims (the scalps were
   dangled from the ends of M-16s) and cutting off their ears as
   souvenirs. One member -- who would later behead an infant -- wore the
   ears as a ghoulish necklace (just like the character Toadvine in Blood
   Meridian, while another mailed them home to his wife. Others kicked
   out the teeth of dead villagers for their gold fillings.

   A former Tiger Force sergeant told reporters "he killed so many
   civilians he lost count." The Blade estimates that innocent casualties
   were in "the hundreds." Another veteran, a medic with the unit,
   recalled 150 unarmed civilians murdered in a single month.

   Superior officers, especially the Glanton-like battalion commander
   Gerald Morse (or "Ghost Rider" as he fancied himself), sponsored the
   carnage. Orders were given to "shoot everything that moves" and Morse
   established a body-count quota of 327 (the numerical designation of
   the battalion) that Tiger Force enthusiastically filled with dead
   peasants and teenage girls.

   Soldiers in other units who complained about these exterminations were
   ignored or warned to keep silent, while Tiger Force slackers were
   quickly transferred out. As with Glanton's gang, or, for that matter,
   Einsatzgruppen, the Nazi mobile extermination squads, in the western
   Ukraine in 1941, atrocity created its own insatiable momentum.
   Eventually, nothing was unthinkable in the Song Ve Valley.

   "A 13-year-old girl's throat was slashed after she was sexually
   assaulted, and a young mother was shot to death after soldiers torched
   her hut. An unarmed teenager was shot in the back after a platoon
   sergeant ordered the youth to leave a village, and a baby was
   decapitated so that a soldier could remove a necklace."

   Stories about the beheading of the baby spread so widely that the Army
   was finally forced to launch a secret inquiry in 1971. The
   investigation lasted for almost five years and probed 30 alleged Tiger
   Force war crimes. Evidence was found to support the prosecution of at
   least 18 members of the platoon. In the end, however, a half dozen of
   the most compromised veterans were allowed to resign from the Army,
   avoiding military indictment, and in 1975 the Pentagon quietly buried
   the entire investigation.

   According to the Blade, "It is not known how far up in the Ford
   administration the decision [to bury the cases] went," but it is worth
   recalling whom the leading actors were at the time: the Secretary of
   Defense, then as now, was Donald Rumsfeld, and the White House chief
   of staff was Dick Cheney.

   Recently in the New Yorker, Seymour Hersh, who was instrumental in
   exposing the My Lai massacre, decried the failure of the corporate
   media, especially the four major television networks, to report the
   Blade's findings or launch their own investigations into the official
   cover-up. (Since then, ABC news and Ted Koppel's Nightline have both
   covered the subject.) He also reminds us that the Army concealed the
   details of another large massacre of civilians at the village of My
   Khe 4, near My Lai on the very day in 1968 when the more infamous
   massacre took place.

   Moreover, the Tiger Force story is the third major war crimes
   revelation in the last few years to encounter apathy in the media
   and/or indifference and contempt in Washington.

   In 1999, a team of investigative reporters from the Associated Press
   broke the story of a horrific massacre of hundreds of unarmed Korean
   civilians by U.S. troops in July 1950. It occurred at a stone bridge
   near the village of No Gun Ri and the unit involved was Custer's old
   outfit, the 7th Calvary regiment.

   As one veteran told the AP, "There was lieutenant screaming like a
   madman, fire on everything, kill 'em all. .... Kids, there was kids
   out there, it didn't matter what it was, eight to eighty, blind,
   crippled or crazy, they shot them all." Another ex-soldier was haunted
   by the memory of a terrified child: "She came running toward us. You
   should have seen guys trying to kill that little girl. With machine
   guns."

   A reluctant Pentagon Inquiry into this Korean version of the Wounded
   Knee Massacre acknowledged that there was a civilian toll but cited
   very low figures for the dead and then dismissed it as "an unfortunate
   tragedy inherent in war," despite overwhelming evidence of a
   deliberate U.S. policy of bombing and strafing refugee columns. The
   Bridge at No Gun Ri (2001), by the three Pulitzer Prize-winning AP
   journalists, currently languishes at near 600,000 on the Amazon sales
   index.

   Likewise there has been little enduring outrage that a confessed war
   criminal, Bob Kerrey, reigns as president of New York City's once
   liberal New School University. In 2001, the former Navy SEAL and
   ex-Senator from Nebraska was forced to concede, after years of lies,
   that the heroic engagement for which he received a Bronze Star in 1969
   involved the massacre of a score of unarmed civilians, mainly women
   and children. "To describe it as an atrocity," he admitted, "is pretty
   close to being right."

   The blue-collar ex-SEAL team member who revealed the truth about the
   killings at Than Phong under Kerrey's command was publicly excoriated
   as a drunk and traitor, while powerful Democrats -- led by Senators
   Max Cleland and John Kerry, both Vietnam veterans -- circled the
   wagons to protect Kerrey from further investigation or possible
   prosecution. They argued that it was wrong to "blame the warrior
   instead of the war" and called for a "healing process."

   Indeed covering up American atrocities has proved a thoroughly
   bipartisan business. The Democrats, after all, are currently
   considering the bomber of Belgrade, General Wesley Clark, as their
   potential knight on a white horse. The Bush administration, meanwhile,
   blackmails governments everywhere with threats of aid cuts and trade
   sanctions unless they exempt U.S. troops from the jurisdiction of the
   new International Criminal Court.

   The United States, of course, has good reason to claim immunity from
   the very Nuremburg principles it helped establish in 1946-47. American
   Special Forces troops, for example, were most probably complicit in
   the massacres of hundreds of Taliban prisoners by Northern Alliance
   warlords several years ago. Moreover, "collateral damage" to civilians
   is part and parcel of the new white man's burden of "democratizing"
   the Middle East and making the world safe for Bechtel and Halliburton.

   The Glantons thus still have their place in the scheme of Manifest
   Destiny, and the scalping parties that once howled in the wilderness
   of the Gila now threaten to range far and wide along the banks of the
   Euphrates and in the shadow of the Hindu Kush.

   Mike Davis is the author of City of Quartz, Ecology of Fear, and most
   recently, Dead Cities: and Other Tales.
     _________________________________________________________________

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