The Nasty Blowback from America’s Wars
There are historical warnings to countries that inflict violence abroad, that
the imperial impulse will blow back on the domestic society with suppression of
public debate and repression of common citizens, that the war will come home —
as is happening in the United States, says ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern.
By Ray McGovern
April 13, 2015 "ICH"
- Brutality thrives in American police
treatment of common citizens reflecting an
ethos of violence that has flourished over
the past dozen years with almost no one in
authority held accountable. Much of this
behavior can be traced back to U.S. wars of
choice – and it is not as though we were not
warned of the inevitable blowback.
On Feb. 26, 2003, three
weeks before the U.S./UK attack on Iraq,
Coleen Rowley, then division counsel and
special agent at the FBI office in
Minneapolis, had the prescience and the guts
to send
a
letter to then FBI Director
Robert Mueller. The New York Times
published it a week later.
Rowley warned Mueller that
launching unjustified war would prove
counterproductive in various
ways. One blowback she highlighted was that
the rationale being applied to allow
preemptive strikes abroad could migrate back
home, “fostering a more permissive attitude
toward shootings by law enforcement officers
in this country.” Tragically, the recent
spate of murders by police has proved Rowley
right.
And not only killing.
Police brutality toward the citizenry, some
of it by former soldiers who themselves were
brutalized by war, has soared. Yet, the dark
side of what was done by U.S. troops abroad
as well as the damage that was done to their
psyches and sense of morality is rarely
shown in the U.S. mainstream media, which
prefers to veer between romanticizing the
adventure of war and lamenting the physical
harm done to America’s maimed warriors.
One has to go to foreign
media for real-life examples of the
brutalization of,
as well as by, the
young soldiers we send off to battle. (See,
for example,
this segment from Germany’s “60
Minutes”-type TV program, Panorama.)
The glib, implicit
approval of violence (embedded, for
instance, in the customary “Thank you for
your service”) simply adds to the widespread
acceptance of brutality as somehow okay.
Gratuitous
Beatings
Cases of police beating
citizens who are detained or taken into
custody have multiplied, with police
offenders frequently held to the same
unconscionable let’s-not-look-back
“accountability” that has let George W. Bush
and Dick Cheney walk free – so far – for
launching the “war of aggression” on Iraq.
The post-World War II
Nuremberg Tribunal carefully defined such a
war as “the supreme international crime,
differing from other war crimes only in that
it contains within itself the accumulated
evil of the whole.” Accumulated evil? Having
just emerged from the nightmare of world
conflagration, the jurists on the Tribunal
understood that it was the unleashing of the
dogs of war – launching an aggressive war –
that also loosed all the other atrocities
and barbarities associated with warfare.
Looking back on the last
decade, think of crimes like kidnapping,
black prisons and torture as well as the
slaughter of so many civilians as the
Bush/Cheney war of choice has spread
violence and death – now in the form of the
brutal Islamic State and America’s endless
“drone wars” – across almost the entire
Middle East.
But part of that
accumulated evil is also playing out at home
– on the streets of American cities and in
even in our deserts. On April 9, San
Bernardino’s “sheriff’s deputies” were
caught on video viciously
brutalizing a man who had already prostrated
himself on the desert floor with his hands
behind his back.
Warning:
Watching this video may make you ill – or
cry. If so, take heart. For this would
merely show that, because you still have a
conscience, you are sickened by what you
see, and that you can still “cry our beloved
country.”
Conscience is a good
thing, for it often brings the courage to
speak out and confront the banality of
evil that always flows and inevitably blows
back from wars of aggression. Indifference
to human suffering is another one of those
accumulated evils of the whole.
We need to summon the kind
of courage Coleen Rowley showed three weeks
before the United
States launched the “supreme international
crime.” We need to monitor closely what
happens after the
unconscionable abuse by police of the
helpless man in San Bernardino,
after the recent police
shootings of unarmed black men, and
after the excessive
brutality that America’s over-militarized
police now regularly inflict on citizens
during routine arrests.
“If you see something, say
something” – we are constantly told. If we
see this video coverage, watch this sort of
brutality, and do nothing, I fear for what
will become of our country.
Ray McGovern works with Tell
the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical
Church of the Saviour in inner-city
Washington. He served as an
infantry/intelligence officer, and then as a
CIA analyst for a total of 30 years.