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Veterans Don't Support the Troops

Anton, VVAWAI | 03.05.2003 21:07

The war on and occupation of Iraq are unjust and illegal. We veterans don't support the troops because to do so would be to support the war. Support the troops who do the right
thing-- support GI resisters!



Anti-Imperialist Veterans ask:
Can We Oppose This War
While We "Support the Troops"?
On March 21 and 22, over a thousand massive cruise missiles and two thousand sorties pounded Iraq and especially its capital, Baghdad. The U.S.'s "Shock and Awe" war on Iraq began as the world watched in outrage. Never in history had a war been so powerfully opposed before it even started.
We know that, like us, many in the anti-war movement have brothers, sisters, family and friends in the military. As veterans, we wouldn't wish the situations these troops face on anybody. The government and media are telling us that now that the war has started we have to rally behind the troops and if we don't we're unpatriotic or wishing the troops harm. Let's be clear: not only is the government using these troops as cannon-fodder in their unjust war, but they are also using the troops in a political and public opinion campaign designed to divide and diffuse the anti-war movement. As veterans of the U.S. military we have something to say about this.
The call to Support the Troops targets the citizenry, you and I. It is aimed at disarming us now that the war has started, just when we need to be the staunchest in our opposition to this unjust, immoral and illegal war. It has been used historically to confuse and misuse the feelings people have for the men and women in uniform. It is supposed to make people feel guilty and question the patriotism of those opposed to the war. Never mind who put the troops in harm's way in the first place by starting the war. Never mind who harms the troops with experimental drugs and the horror of depleted uranium weapons. People's feelings for their loved ones are used to redefine the terms of the debate and to drag them along for the ride by their heartstrings. People are told it is their patriotic duty to come together as a nation behind its troops. The government counts on people's confusion to obscure the real issues and to inspire an emotional knee-jerk response in support of their war. But to support the troops is to support the war and that is something we refuse to do.
The U.S. government doesn't support the troops in any REAL way. Just look at statistics about how many homeless vets there are or talk to any veteran trying to get decent medical care at the Veterans Administration. Why is it that today over 1/3 of the troops from the 1991 Gulf War are ill, 1/4 are disabled and it takes an average of 7 months for them to see a doctor? The federal government is slashing veteran benefits as we speak. Their support for the troops is full of empty promises.
"What is a "troop?" A troop, simply put, is the basic cog of the U.S. war machine that exists for one reason: to wage war. To be successful at war, a war machine has to have disciplined and trained troops. Troops who will obey all orders without question. Troops who will drop the bomb, launch the cruise missile, shoot the gun when told. The last thing a war machine needs is troops that ask questions and make their own decisions about which orders to follow. This is exactly what the Veterans Call to Conscience* asks them to do.
Veterans know this because we were the troops. We followed orders and some of us committed atrocities so we know where the troops are being led and what they are being ordered to do. What does the word "support" mean? It means you "agree with the mission." We know that if one supports the troops, the troops will lead them to a future of the imperialists' making: to the hell that is their new world order. The U.S. war machine is not, and cannot be, a force for "liberation." The U.S. military uses their troops as a force for imperial conquest. Was there anything courageous about what the U.S. military had the troops do in the first Gulf War? Was there anything honorable about defeating, via overwhelming air power, a minor league opponent?
This is an unjust war, a war of conquest launched by the U.S. government. They have created this situation; put rifles in these troops hands and told them that the Iraqis are their enemy. As the casualty numbers rise we have to be clear: We don't support this. We don't support this war and we can't support the troops doing this, even if they are our brothers and sisters. We cannot support the U.S. government turning them into killing machines, complete with the nightmares, drug and substance abuse and a life of horror that they will face if they come home alive.
What the men and women in the U.S. military really need is not undeserved support, they need to know the truth behind the orders that they are expected to carry out in this illegal and immoral war. They need to know the history of Iraq and the real reason why the U.S. is using them to invade that country. They need to know that the decisions they make and consequences of these orders may haunt them the rest of their lives. They need to be challenged to question the morality of this war. We in the anti-war movement need to encourage those in the military to follow their conscience and to do the right thing. We challenge the troops to make a decision they would be proud to stand by-even if put before the world court. We need to stand with and support the troops who refuse to fight. That is what many veterans of the U.S. military are doing now. We need to popularize the stands of these real heroes. In addition, there needs to be support and organized structure to aid GI resisters in their legal and political battles.
Straight up-it is the U.S. government that is placing those in the military in harm's way, compelling them to kill or be killed. The government believes that our "vital interests," like control of Middle East oil, outweigh the rights of the Iraqis to a sovereign nation. It is the government that views those in the military as expendable, putting them in harm's way to satisfy their own ambitions. It is the government who will turn its back on those in the military when they have returned and are suffering the effects of their involvement in this war. Who will support them when they find that they have been used and then cast aside?
So if the government and its military wage an unjust war that jeopardizes its troops, should we temper our opposition because they are "our" troops? Doesn't this really say that the lives of U.S. troops are worth more and the lives of Iraqis are worth less? And aren't those in the military less in harm's way if they follow their conscience and refuse to participate in another Gulf slaughter?
As anti-imperialists and veterans of the U.S. military, we cannot go down that path; we will not fall behind the government's call to support the troops. GIs are responsible for their actions while they are in the U.S. military, just as we were. They, like us, must come to their own understanding of their role in the war machine and then act their conscience. When they do this, they stop being a troop and we will stand by their side and give them support. As for the slogan: "Bring them Home," only a movement powerful enough to challenge the U.S. war machine stands a chance to force them to withdraw their troops. This is the challenge and task before us; one we must continue to rise up and meet.
• No Support for Killing the Iraqi People
• Stop the War on Iraq! - The Iraqi People are our Sisters and Brothers!
• Support the Troops Who Do the Right Thing - Support GI Resistance!
*Veterans Call to Conscience to Active Duty Troops and Reservists Statement signed by over a thousand veterans calling on troops to do the right thing. www.calltoconscience.net or write VVAWAI for info.
Vietnam Veterans Against the War Anti-Imperialist
PO Box 21604, Seattle, WA 98111-3604, Phone/Fax-206.374.2215
Email:  TheVets@vvawai.org, Web: www.vvawai.org

Anton, VVAWAI
- e-mail: thevets@vvawai.org
- Homepage: http://vvawai.org