The Real American Sniper
Was A Hate-filled Killer
Why are simplistic patriots treating him as
a hero?
By Lindy West
Clint Eastwood’s film about Navy
Seal Chris Kyle has hit a raw
nerve in America, with right
wingers calling for the rape or
death of anyone ungrateful
enough to criticise his actions
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January 16, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian"
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I have to confess: I was
suckered by the
trailer for American Sniper. It’s a
masterpiece of short-form tension – a
confluence of sound and image so viscerally
evocative it feels almost domineering. You
cannot resist. You will be stressed out. You
will feel. Or, as I believe I put it
in a blog about the trailer, “Clint
Eastwood’s American Sniper trailer will ruin
your pants.”
But however effective it
is as a piece of cinema, even a cursory look
into the film’s backstory – and particularly
the public reaction to its release – raises
disturbing questions about which stories we
choose to codify into truth, and whose, and
why, and the messy social costs of
transmogrifying real life into
entertainment.
Chris Kyle, a US navy Seal
from Texas, was deployed to Iraq in 2003 and
claimed to have killed more than 255 people
during his six-year military career. In
his memoir, Kyle reportedly described
killing as “fun”, something he “loved”; he
was unwavering in his belief that everyone
he shot was a “bad guy”. “I hate the damn
savages,” he wrote. “I couldn’t give a
flying fuck about the Iraqis.” He bragged
about murdering looters during Hurricane
Katrina, though that was never
substantiated.
He was
murdered in 2013 at a Texas gun range by
a 25-year-old veteran reportedly suffering
from post-traumatic stress disorder.
However we diverge
politically, I have enough faith in
Eastwood’s artistry and intellect to trust
that he is not a black-and-white ideologue –
or, at least, that he knows that the
limitations of such a worldview would make
for an extremely dull movie. But the same
can’t be said for Eastwood’s subject, or, as
response to the film has demonstrated, many
of his fans.
As Laura Miller wrote in
Salon: “In Kyle’s
version of the Iraq war, the parties
consisted of Americans, who are good by
virtue of being American, and fanatic
Muslims whose ‘savage, despicable evil’ led
them to want to kill Americans simply
because they are Christians.”
Adds Scott Foundas at Variety:
“Chris Kyle saw the world in clearly
demarcated terms of good and evil, and
American Sniper suggests that such
dichromatism may have been key to both his
success and survival; on the battlefield,
doubt is akin to death.”
Eastwood, on the other
hand, Foundas says, “sees only shades of
gray”, and American Sniper is a morally
ambiguous, emotionally complex film. But
there are a lot of Chris Kyles in the world,
and the chasm between Eastwood’s intent and
his audience’s reception touches on the old
Chappelle’s Show conundrum: a lot of
white people laughed at Dave Chappelle’s
rapier racial satire for the wrong reasons,
in ways that may have actually exacerbated
stereotypes about black people in the minds
of intellectual underachievers. Is that
Chappelle’s fault? Should he care?
Likewise, much of the US
right wing appears to have seized upon
American Sniper with similarly shallow
comprehension – treating it with the same
unconsidered, rah-rah reverence that they
would the national anthem or the flag
itself. Only a few weeks into its release,
the film has been flattened into a symbol to
serve the interests of an ideology that,
arguably, runs counter to the ethos of the
film itself. How much, if at all, should
Eastwood concern himself with fans who
misunderstand and misuse his work? If he,
intentionally or not, makes a hero out of
Kyle – who, bare minimum, was a racist who
took pleasure in dehumanising and killing
brown people – is he responsible for
validating racism, murder, and
dehumanisation? Is he a propagandist if
people use his work as propaganda?
That question came to the
fore last week on Twitter when several
liberal journalists drew attention to Kyle’s
less Oscar-worthy statements. “Chris Kyle
boasted of looting the apartments of Iraqi
families in Fallujah,”
wrote author and former Daily Beast writer
Max Blumenthal. “Kill every male you
see,”
Rania Khalek quoted, calling Kyle an
“American psycho”.
Retaliation from the
rightwing twittersphere was swift and
violent,
as Khalek documented in an exhaustive (and
exhausting) post at Alternet. “Move your
America hating ass to Iraq, let ISIS rape
you then cut your cunt head off, fucking
media whore muslim,” wrote a rather
unassuming-looking mom named Donna. “Rania,
maybe we to take you ass overthere and give
it to ISIS … Dumb bitch,” offered a bearded
man named Ronald, who enjoys either bass
fishing or playing the bass (we may never
know). “Waterboarding is far from torture,”
explained an army pilot named Benjamin, all
helpfulness. “I wouldn’t mind giving you two
a demonstration.”
The patriots go on, and on
and on. They cannot believe what they are
reading. They are rushing to the defence of
not just Kyle, but their country, what their
country means. They call for the rape or
death of anyone ungrateful enough to
criticise American hero Chris Kyle. Because
Chris Kyle is good, and brown people are
bad, and America is in danger, and Chris
Kyle saved us. The attitude echoes what
Miller articulated about Kyle in her Salon
piece: “his steadfast imperviousness to any
nuance, subtlety or ambiguity, and his lack
of imagination and curiosity, seem
particularly notable”.
There is no room for the
idea that Kyle might have been a good
soldier but a bad guy; or a mediocre guy
doing a difficult job badly; or a complex
guy in a bad war who convinced himself he
loved killing to cope with an impossible
situation; or a straight-up serial killer
exploiting an oppressive system that, yes,
also employs lots of well-meaning, often
impoverished, non-serial-killer people to do
oppressive things over which they have no
control. Or that Iraqis might be fully
realised human beings with complex inner
lives who find joy in food and sunshine and
family, and anguish in the murders of their
children. Or that you can support your
country while thinking critically about its
actions and its citizenry. Or that many
truths can be true at once.
Always meet your heroes.