Unanswered Questions: Thinking For Ourselves
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The Longest Winter
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Wednesday 9 April 2003
There is a US Army chaplain in Iraq named Josh Llano, hailing originally from Houston, who is tending his flock in the
desert outside Najaf.. He has in his possession a 500-gallon pool of pure, clean water. He is well aware of the fact
that our troops have been suffering a water shortage due to Fedayeen attacks on Army supply lines; many soldiers have
gone weeks without bathing, and have often been forced to go thirsty, because of this.
Llano, who describes himself as a Southern Baptist evangelist, sees this deprivation as an opportunity. ''It's simple,"
he said in a recent Miami Herald article. "They want water. I have it, as long as they agree to get baptized." Said
baptism involves listening to one of Llano's hour-and-a-half sermons, followed by a rite which requires another hour of
Bible quotations, before the troops are allowed to bathe and drink. "You have to be aggressive to help people find
themselves in God," says Llano.
On another part of the planet, a doctor from Boulder named Gene Bolles works as chief neurosurgeon at Landstuhl Regional
Medical Center in Germany. His job is to repair, as best he can, the grievous wounds American soldiers have suffered
during the war in Iraq. "We have had a number of really horrific injuries now from the war," Bolles said in an article
from the Boulder Daily Camera. "They have lost arms, legs, hands, they have been burned, they have had significant brain
injuries and peripheral nerve damage. These are young kids that are going to be, in some regards, changed for life. I
don't feel that people realize that."
Bolles, who describes himself as a pacifist "opposed to any war," felt compelled to do what he could for his country
after the attacks of September 11. He has learned, in very short order, what is really happening during the Bush
administration's action in the Middle East. "The feeling here originally was, this is going to be over in a couple
days," said Bolles. Instead, he has dealt with a steady torrent of wounded American soldiers. "It really is disgustingly
sanitized on television," he said.
Back in America, some 500 anti-war protesters descended upon the Port of Oakland on Monday in California to stand
against the conflict in a place where many of the war's supplies are shipped from. Nearby were several longshoremen who
work the docks. The Oakland Police, facing the protesters, let loose with a fusillade of "non-lethal" crowd-controlling
wooden dowels, which are about three inches wide and four inches thick, fired from stout steel launchers. Said launchers
are emblazoned with the words, "Do not fire directly at persons as serious injury or death may result." The police also
fired bean bags, concussion grenades and "sting grenades" – rubber pellets accompanied by tear gas – at the protesters.
One young woman was blasted in the jaw by one of these wooden bullets, which ricocheted into her neck and opened a
bloody gash. Another protester was shot three times in the back by these dowels, which are supposed to be fired only
when the armor-clad police feel threatened. The back wounds are indicative of only one thing: The protester was shot
while fleeing, and a fleeing person is no threat to anyone but the grass he is running across. Several of the
longshoremen were struck in the crossfire.
Tin soldiers and Bush is coming.
These are but three of the stories that have come to us through the mainstream media filter in the last 72 hours. They
are a dismal trifecta speaking to the darkness of the age: A chaplain who abuses his position and the sanctity of his
robe by bribing bedraggled soldiers into accepting his religion in order to get a cool drink in a combat-riven desert; a
neurosurgeon up to his elbows in the blood of American children who knows, for an unassailable fact, that the war goes
far worse than we are told; and a young woman in Oakland whose face was smashed because she dared to speak her mind.
The war goes on.
Here in Boston, the winter does not want to end. It started early, in mid-October, and has roared on and on with no sign
of a letup. It snowed yesterday, again. It has been cold, and it has been raw. This has been, without question, the
longest winter in my memory. Add to this a war without cause, an administration without shame, and an American people
who have been fed a lie so verbose that their televisions can scarcely contain it.
The anthrax killer walks free, as does Osama bin Laden. The prime justification for this Iraq war, the existence of
weapons of mass destruction, has been thoroughly downplayed and spun away because it has become clear that this premise
was nonsense from the start. Soon, the term 'WMD will join said 'thraxer and said super-terrorist on the back shelf
designated to hold all the stuff we're not supposed to care about anymore. Patriot Acts I and II wait liked coiled
snakes for the opportunity to sink their venomous teeth into our constitutional body politic, a death blow that will
come when the terrorism caused by our Iraq adventure makes its inevitable appearance on our shores.
I am forced to wonder if the flowers will ever bloom again.
***********
William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times bestselling author of two books - - "War On Iraq" (with Scott Ritter) available now from Context
Books, and "The Greatest Sedition is Silence," available in May 2003 from Pluto Press. He teaches high school in Boston,
MA. Scott Lowery contributed research to this report.
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