The Iraq War is officially at an end – the troops have come
home. Is there any intention on the part
of government and its people to seriously assess the significance of this
prolonged conflict and to ascertain whether the enormous cost inflicted both on
ourselves and our alleged enemies was worth it? I think not; similar to the aftermath of the
Vietnam War, it will quickly be forgotten by those who did not directly
participate in it. Political pundits and
those running for office will, of course, distort the reality of this war in
whatever way necessary to achieve personal satisfaction and gain.
In fact, nothing of lasting importance has been achieved in
spite of the one trillion dollar drain on the national treasury; the more than
four thousand American lives lost and the tens of thousands grievously injured
Americans and the death of what well may be one million Iraqis. Quite to the contrary, sectarian rivalries
have been greatly exacerbated and the physical infrastructure of the country
has still not been restored to the state they were in prior to the First Gulf
War – electricity and reliably clean drinking water are still not readily
available to the Iraqi population, for example.
The Iraq War represents, in my mind, a reprehensible and
failed attempt to establish economic hegemony in the region. It is true that the energy and weapons
industries may have profited immensely from the conflict, but these are
ephemeral gains. The depraved
indifference to human life that this unprovoked and brutal war on the people of
Iraq represents has not only diminished the financial and human resources of
the United States, but also, has wrecked havoc on the moral character of the
nation. It is another senseless war
along with the wretched litany of past conflicts perpetrated against
essentially defenseless peoples around the globe.
Is there no end to what the American people will tolerate in
regards to the militaristic behavior of our nation towards other governments
and their citizens? There is now about
one and one-half million men and women who have served in Iraq and
Afghanistan. They have been badly used
and exploited by those in power who remain remote from any possibility of harm. What kind of treatment should they expect to
find on their return home? The evidence
is clear in regards to the answer to this question – they can expect little
help or understanding. They are, in
fact, expected to suffer in silence.
If we, as a people, do not look honestly and with
unflinching clarity at our own behavior, we are doomed to repeat it.
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