In the Public Interest By Ralph Nader 1/24/12
The U.S. war in Afghanistan is testing so much futuristic
detect and destroy weaponry that it can be called the most advanced all-seeing
invasion in military history. From blanket satellite surveillance to soldiers’
infra-red vision to the remotely guided photographing, killer drones to the
latest fused ground-based imagery and electronic signal intercepts, the age of
robotic land, sea, and air weaponry is at hand.
U.S. and NATO soldiers and contractors greatly outnumber
the Taliban, whose sandals and weapons are from the past century. Still, with
the most sophisticated arsenals ever deployed, why are U.S. generals saying
that less than 30,000 Taliban fighters, for almost a decade, have fought the
U.S. led forces to a draw?
The chief elder rose to address a wise circle of
villagers. “Today we are presenting our beloved Mursi with the revered Jirga
medal of honor for courage beyond the call of duty in rescuing seven of his
brother defenders from almost certain destruction. The invaders had surrounded
our young brothers at night in the great Helmand gully with their snipers,
grenade-launchers and helicopter gunships.
It looked like the end. Until Mursi started a very smoky
fire and diverted the enemy with a firebomb that startled several donkeys into
braying loudly. In the few seconds absorbed by diverting the foreigners who
directed their firepower in that direction, Mursi led his brothers, two of them
wounded, through a large rock crevice and down an incline that was hidden from view
and into a cave covered with bush. For some reason, the occupiers’ night vision
equipment was not working, thanks be to Allah.
The next morning, the enemy had gone away, provably to
start another deadly attack elsewhere on our people. Before the Jirga awards
you this ancient symbol of resistance, Mursi, in the form of a sculptured
shield made of a rare wood, will you say a few words to your tribe?”
Mursi, a thin as a rail twenty year old youth, rose.
“I accept this great honor on behalf of my brothers who
escaped with their lives that terrible night in Helmand. I was very scared. The
enemy has everything and we have nothing. They have planes, helicopters,
artillery, many soldiers with equipment that resists bullets, sees in the dark
and provides them with food, water and medicine. We only have our old rifles,
some grenades and explosives. They can see us all the way from America on
screens sitting in cool rooms where they can press buttons and wipe us out
without our seeing or hearing anything coming at us. We are all so terrified.
Especially the children.
We wonder why they are doing this to us? We never
threatened them. They threaten everyone with their bases, ships, planes and
missiles. I hear that the foreign soldiers ask themselves why are they here,
what are they doing here and for what? But they are paid well to be here,
destroying our country year after year, though they boast about building some
bridges and digging some water wells. No thank you.”
“Go back to your families, you will never win because we
are fighting to repel you invaders from our ancient tribal lands, our homes,.
Fighting to expel the invaders is stronger and more righteous than your weapons
and all your military wealth. Even if many of us lose our lives, we will
prevail one day. For we will have heaven and they will have hell.”
A long knowing silence followed. A rooster crowed in the
distance. The chief elder then slowly handed the medal to their brave hero.
Can the most militarily powerful country in the world,
many of whose people and soldiers are opposed or have serious doubts about why
we are continuing to pursue these senseless undeclared wars of aggression that
create more hatred and enemies, look with empathy at what those people, whom we
are pummeling, are going through? Will the Pentagon, which doesn’t estimate
civilian casualties, let its officials speak publically about the millions of
such casualties—deceased, injured and sick—that have afflicted innocent Iraqis,
Afghanis and Pakistanis?
Will our current crop of political candidates for
Congress and the Presidency ever reflect on the wise words of our past
Generals—Dwight Eisenhower, George Marshall and earlier Smedley Butler—about
the folly and gore, not the glory of war?
The eighteenth century words of the Scottish poet, Robert
Burns, rings so true. He wrote:
“And would some Power the small gift give us.
To see ourselves as others see us!
It would from many a blunder free us…”
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