Lost in the Lust of Werewolves
March 19 2007
Counterbias.com
by Sheila Samples
"A lost infant
in the ashes, lost faces in the dust, a lost finger in the garbage
dumps, a lost mother in the debris, a nation lost in the fire, a
country lost in the greed...and eyes lost in that endless tunnel of
helplessness, anguish and despair...lost in the total emptiness, in
the void of the living dead" - Layla Anwar,
"Ashes & Dust"
Sometimes
I wonder if Americans are unaware of the malicious devastation the Bush
administration is wreaking upon this good earth and its inhabitants, or
if they just don't give a damn. I wonder if they ever put a
"face" on even one of the hundreds of thousands of innocent men,
women and children who are lost forever -- victims of arrogance, lust
for power, insatiable greed. And lies .. all lost because of evil,
deliberate lies.
I wonder why so many denizens of this Christian nation seem unable or
unwilling to wrap their minds around the reality that Iraqi people are
human beings just as they, themselves, are -- not rabid dogs to be
hunted down and slaughtered. Perhaps it's because, in order to remain
sane or to avoid being targeted by the Bush administration, they traded
their Christianity for Religion, their Love for Hate -- their Life for
Death. For protection from the Butcher of Baghdad, far too many
Americans far too easily traded their souls to the Werewolf of
Washington.
They don't want to know what it's like for families to cower in terror
as their doors are kicked in, mothers and daughters raped, fathers and
sons dragged off, never to be seen again. They don't want to know about
prisoners being humiliated and tortured, secretly "rendered" to
countries for more torture, held captive for endless years without
charges, without hope, without life. They don't want to know about
Iraq's rich culture, its secular society, its formidable institutions of
learning. According to the late Columbia University professor Edward
Said, all of this, along with Iraq's "long-suffering people were made
invisible, the better to smash the country as if it were only a den of
thieves and murderers." (Al-Ahram Weekly, 24 - 30 April 2003)
Even if it were possible to know how many innocent civilians have been
needlessly murdered, it wouldn't matter. Because America's leaders don't
know and they don't care. As General Colin Powell, then Chairman of the
US Joint Chiefs of Staff, retorted to an April 1991 question about Iraqi
casualties -- "That's not really a number I'm terribly interested in."
And, following the assault on Afghanistan, General Tommy Franks, CENTCOM
commander and architect of both the Afghanistan and Iraqi killing
sprees, quipped at a March 2002 news conference at Bagram Air Base --
"We don't do body counts."
Even President George Bush, the commander-in-chief -- the Energizer
Bunny Decider -- pleaded ignorance and apathy when asked on Dec. 12,
2005 about the
number of iraqi civilians slain since the March 2003 invasion. "How
many Iraqi civilians have died...in this war?" he asked. "Um...I would
say about 30,000 -- more or less..."
Reporters in the room knew that more than a year before, the British
medical journal, The Lancet,
had reported for the period March 2003 - Sept. 2004, an excess mortality
of nearly 100,000 civilian deaths. Yet none dared challenge Bush then
nor in October 2006 when the journal released
an in-depth study that an estimated 655,000 Iraqis had died since
the invasion, with more than 600,000 due to violence.
Is Politics really more important than life? Of course, when you
consider the gandy-dancing, moon-walking and flip-flopping that's gone
on within the political axis -- the administration, the Congress and the
media -- since the November elections. If there were doubts that this
axis considers the nation's military anything more than "dumb, stupid
animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy," the spectacle that has
unfolded since Bush was backed into a corner with the release of the
James Baker/Les Hamilton
Iraq Study Group (ISG) report put them to rest. Its 84 pages boiled
down to one sentence in the Executive Summary -- "The United States has
long-term relationships and interests at stake in the Middle East, and
needs to stay engaged," which was another way of telling Bush not to cut
and run until the oil law was passed which will legalize US corporate
plunder of Iraq's oil fields via 35-year contracts.
The ISG was nine months in the making, March through October 2006,
during which time 556 coalition "troops" were killed -- 515 of them
American. For political reasons, Baker and Hamilton waited until after
the election to release it, hardly noticing that 77 servicemen and women
were killed in November. On Dec. 13, when Bush tossed the report on the
table with the rest of the options and announced he'd make his decision
after Christmas, US casualties stood at 2,937. On Christmas Day, when he
bowed his head to thank God for making him The Decider, 2,975 Americans
would never open another present.
The overwhelming vote in November 2006 was a national demand to stop the
war. Bush responded in January 2007 by announcing not only that he was
staying the course, but that he was "surging" an additional 21,500
military in a "New Way Forward" plan. Since that time, with the surge
underway, Democrats and Republicans have sparred in a shameful display
of shadow-boxing oratory and endless debates on debates, resulting in a
single limp, non-binding resolution designed to do little more than give
political cover to those voting for it. With the surge nearly complete,
House Democrats now say they're working on a plan to restrict Bush's
ability to wage war, with the stipulation, of course, that he can
continue to kill if he "publicly justifies" his position.
With cruel indifference this pack of werewolves, led by a creature who
deserted his post in a time of war, continue to fund a surge they claim
they are against while shouting, "Support the troops!" They neither know
nor care that, above all things, support means full force protection --
sufficient training, proper equipment -- and medical care for those who
return broken in body, mind and spirit.
Like their more than 650,000 Iraqi counterparts, the
3,185 US victims of the Iraqi inferno have no individual form or
substance in the minds of the general public -- certainly not in those
of the media or the Congress. One is merely "collateral damage," the
other a heap of body bags labeled "troops." Senators John McCain and
Barack Obama were exactly right when they said that so many lives in
this illegal war have been "wasted," rather than sacrificed. Victims of
this war -- Iraqi and American -- are little more than debris scattered
in the wake of the werewolves' lust to dominate the world and control
its resources.
They are, as described so eloquently by Iraq's Layla Anwar -- "lost
faces in the dust."
==
Sheila Samples is an Oklahoma writer and a former civilian US Army
Public Information Officer. She is a regular contributor for a variety
of Internet sites. Contact her at
rsamples@sirinet.net