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Terrorists or Resistance Fighters:
America’s Dilemma in Iraq
"Hitler's decisions had ceased to have anything in
common with the principles of strategy and operations as they
were recognized for generations past. They were the product of a
violent nature following its impulses, which recognized no
limits to possibility and which made its wish-dreams the father
of its acts.”--Gen. Franz Halder, Chief of the German General Staff, 1944
By Gerald
Rellick
03/16/06 "ICH"
-- -- In his latest book, “Hegemony or Survival,” Noam Chomsky raises
provocative questions about America’s role in the world, and not
just in our current crisis in the reign of Bush II. Ever since
World War II America has assumed the role of the world’s super
power, particularly so after the fall of the Soviet Union.
One critical question he raises is the difference between
terrorism and resistance.
During World War II, after German occupation of Europe was
complete, there arose underground resistance movements.
Prominent among these were the French and the Norwegians. When I
was in high school in the 1950’s I was a World War II buff.
After all, the war was not long over and many men in our small
community, including my father and his three brothers all fought
in WWII.
Many have disparaged the French resistance as too few in number
and ineffectual. But while in high school I recall reading a
story of a husband and wife in the French resistance. One day
they were in a café when the Gestapo stormed in, guns drawn, and
advanced toward their table. The husband pulled out his pistol,
shot his wife in the head and then killed himself. They knew the
end was at hand and that before death there would be torture. It
took incredible courage to do that. That was 40 years ago and I
have never forgotten that story. When your homeland is occupied
by foreign troops, extraordinary courage seems to come
naturally.
Norway had its own style. Although Norway had professed
neutrality, the country was critical to the German Navy with its
thousand miles of coast line. With Norway in their control,
Germany could launch its submarine wolf pack into the Atlantic
at will. So, in April 1940 the Germans invaded Norway. But the
Norwegians gave the Germans a bit of surprise. They fought
bitterly and the Germans took heavy casualties, although
Germany’s superior numbers won out in the end. But the
Norwegians never gave up. They established an extremely
effective underground, and throughout the war were able to relay
to Allied forces submarine movements, the results of which were
critical to the British Navy. Once again, when your homeland is
occupied by foreign troops, destroying all you have lived and
fought for, extraordinary courage is not so extraordinary after
all.
Anther story I recall vividly from those same high school days
was that of the Norwegian resistance discovering a traitor
amongst them, a man who had given over names of the resistance
to the Nazis. He was confronted by the resistance in his home
with his family. They tied him to a chair and then summarily
executed his wife and three children in front of his eyes, and
he was allowed to go free, to live whatever life was possible
for him.
So, what defines terrorism? Was this terrorism? Or was it
resistance against an occupying force?
This episode echoed the thinking of the French anarchist, Emile
Henri, discussed recently by Alexander Cockburn:
“Asked at his trial in 1894 why he had killed some many innocent
people…Henri explained to the court that anarchism ‘is born in
the heart of a corrupt society which is falling to pieces; it is
a violent reaction against the established order. It represents
egalitarian and libertarian aspirations which are battering down
existing authority; it is everywhere, which makes it impossible
to capture.’ So, said Henri as he faced the guillotine,
"il n'y a pas d'innocents". “There are no
innocents,” at least among the privileged classes.”
And to add one more note to this saga, let me cite a recent
article by former Sen. Gary Hart in the Boston Globe. Hart
writes that, “In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Russia
and…marched on and occupied Moscow. Napoleon and his generals
took over the palaces of the court princes and great houses of
the mighty boyars.”
“Sadly for Napoleon, the Russians had different plans for their
nation. Within days after abandoning their city to the French
army, they torched their own palaces, homes, enterprises, and
cathedrals. They burned Moscow down around Napoleon. Denied his
last great triumph, the disappointed emperor abandoned Moscow
and started home. Along the way, he lost the world's most
powerful army.”
The lesson of history is to never underestimate the occupied and
oppressed. And the second lesson is you can’t win against the
occupied. You don’t have the same will. They will die for their
cause. Consider our own revolutionary soldiers, a rag-tag bunch
at best, up against a well trained and disciplined British Army.
But through sheer tenacity, determination and courage, the
British were defeated and finally gave in. They realized this
war would go on forever, no matter how many troops they sent to
the colonies. American courage and determination to be free was
endless, stopless. This is how history plays out.
So, now when we look at Iraq, we see the same thing. Even with
the ethnic strife and potential for civil war, Iraqis want their
country back from the U.S. occupiers. In fact the civil strife
has worsened to the point that U.S. military commanders are
ordering their troops to stay in their barracks as much as
possible. So, one asks, why are our troops there if they are
only hiding out in their barracks? What exactly is their mission
now?
The sickening answer is they are to save George Bush’s
“reputation.”
The average Army soldier or Marine in Iraq probably has a pretty
decent life at home. Most likely he is close to his mother and
father and is probably married with children, and has a good job
in the U.S. He found the military to be both an adventure and an
opportunity for growth and a chance to honor his country in
military service, just as those who fought in WWII in the
Pacific islands of Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Saipan. He might recall
the bloody beaches of Normandy, where the 2nd U.S. Ranger
battalion had the unenviable job of scaling up the cliffs of
Pointe du Hoc, with German troops firing down on them.
Casualties were heavy. At the end of the 2-days action, the
landing force of 225+ was reduced to about 90 men who could
still fight.
But there was purpose to their mission. They fought to destroy
Nazism and Japanese Imperialism. But today our troops in Iraq
fight for no honorable cause, and it is not their fault. They
are soldiers. They take their orders. But one has to wonder
about the big guns, General Abizaid and General Casey. They have
shown no courage or commitment to their troops. They have proven
be stooges of Donald Rumsfeld. When the history of this war is
written, the U.S. military command will be seen as weak and
compliant, unwilling and unable to defend America against a
rogue president -- nothing more than toy soldiers kissing ass to
get ahead. The lesson is that courage is not to be found in the
military.
But now after three years, and the recognition that the war was
a fraud, theses brave soldiers in Iraq know the difference: 70-
75% of them want the war to end and want to come home to their
families rather than fight George Bush’s personal war. This is
not what they signed up for. They signed an oath to defend and
protect the United States. After three years it has become clear
to them that this is not the goal in Iraq. Good, decent American
soldiers have become the oppressors, destroying much of Iraq’s
infra- structure, where water, food and medicine are hard to
come by, and electric power in Baghdad is available only 20% of
the day.
It is time to admit defeat in Iraq as has concluded ultra-
conservative William F. Buckley recently in an article in the
National Review. Writes Buckley:
"One can't doubt that the American objective in Iraq
has failed… Our mission has failed because Iraqi animosities
have proved uncontainable by an invading army of 130,000
Americans. The great human reserves that call for civil life
haven't proved strong enough. No doubt they are latently there,
but they have not been able to contend against the ice men who
move about in the shadows with bombs and grenades and pistols."
Buckley concludes, “…different plans have to be made. And the
kernel here is the acknowledgment of defeat.”
Gerald S. Rellick, Ph.D., worked in aerospace industry for
22 years. He now teaches in the California Community College
system. He can be reached at grellick@hotmail.com
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