Why War Fails
I suggest there is something important to be learned from the recent experience of the United States and Israel in the Middle East: that massive military attacks are not only morally reprehensible but useless in achieving the stated aims of those who carry them out.
In the three years of the Iraq War, which began with shock-and-awe bombardment and goes on with day-to-day violence and chaos, the United States has failed utterly in its claimed objective of bringing democracy and stability to Iraq. American soldiers and civilians, fearful of going into the neighborhoods of Baghdad, are huddled inside the Green Zone, where the largest embassy in the world is being built, covering 104 acres and closed off from the world outside its walls.
I remember John Hersey's novel The War Lover, in which a macho American pilot, who loves to drop bombs on people, and also to boast about his sexual conquests, turns out to be impotent. George Bush, strutting in his flight jacket on an aircraft carrier, and announcing victory in Iraq, has turned out to be an embodiment of the Hersey character, his words equally boastful, his military machine equally impotent.
The Israeli invasion and bombing of Lebanon has not brought security to Israel. Indeed, it has increased the number of its enemies, whether in Hezbollah or Hamas, or among Arabs who belong to neither of those groups.
That failure of massive force goes so deep into history that Israeli leaders must have been extraordinarily obtuse, or blindly fanatic, to miss it. The memory is not lost to Professor Ze'ev Maoz at Tel Aviv University, writing recently in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz about a previous Israeli invasion of Lebanon: "Approximately 14,000 civilians were killed between June and September of 1982, according to a conservative estimate." The result, aside from the physical and human devastation, was the rise of Hezbollah, whose rockets provoked another desperate exercise of massive force.
The history of wars fought since the end of World War II reveals the futility of large-scale violence. The United States and the Soviet Union, despite their enormous firepower, were unable to defeat resistance movements in small, weak nations. Even though the United States dropped more bombs in the Vietnam War than in all of World War II, it was still forced to withdraw. The Soviet Union, trying for a decade to conquer Afghanistan, in a war that caused a million deaths, became bogged down and also finally withdrew.
Even the supposed triumphs of great military powers turn out to be elusive. After attacking and invading Afghanistan, President Bush boasted that the Taliban were defeated. But five years later, Afghanistan is rife with violence, and the Taliban are active in much of the country. Last May, there were riots in Kabul, after a runaway American military truck killed five Afghans. When U.S. soldiers fired into the crowd, four more people were killed.
After the brief, apparently victorious war against Iraq in 1991, George Bush Sr. declared (in a moment of rare eloquence): "The specter of Vietnam has been buried forever in the desert sands of the Arabian peninsula." Those sands are bloody once more.
The same George Bush presided over the military attack on Panama in 1989, which killed thousands and destroyed entire neighborhoods, justified by the "war on drugs." Another victory, but in a few years, the drug trade in Panama was thriving as before.
The nations of Eastern Europe, despite Soviet occupation, developed resistance movements that eventually compelled the Soviet military to leave. The United States, which had its way in Latin America for a hundred years, has been unable, despite a long history of military interventions, to control events in Cuba, or Venezuela, or Brazil, or Bolivia.
Overwhelming Israeli military power, while occupying the West Bank and Gaza, has not been able to stop the resistance movement of Palestinians. Israel has not made itself more secure by its continued use of massive force. The United States, despite two successive wars, in Iraq and Afghanistan, is not more secure.
More important than the futility of armed force, and ultimately more important, is the fact that war in our time always results in the indiscriminate killing of large numbers of people. To put it more bluntly, war is terrorism. That is why a "war on terrorism" is a contradiction in terms.
The repeated excuse for war, and its toll on civilians-and this has been uttered by Pentagon spokespersons as well as by Israeli officials-is that terrorists hide among civilians. Therefore the killing of innocent people (in Iraq, in Lebanon) is "accidental" whereas the deaths caused by terrorists (9/11, Hezbollah rockets) are deliberate.
This is a false distinction. If a bomb is deliberately dropped on a house or a vehicle on the ground that a "suspected terrorist" is inside (note the frequent use of the word "suspected" as evidence of the uncertainty surrounding targets), it is argued that the resulting deaths of women and children is not intended, therefore "accidental." The deaths of innocent people in bombing may not be intentional. Neither are they accidental. The proper description is "inevitable."
So if an action will inevitably kill innocent people, it is as immoral as a "deliberate" attack on civilians. And when you consider that the number of people dying inevitably in "accidental" events has been far greater than all the deaths of innocent people deliberately caused by terrorists, one must reconsider the morality of war, any war in our time.
It is a supreme irony that the "war on terrorism" has brought a higher death toll among innocent civilians than the hijackings of 9/11, which killed up to 3,000 people. The United States reacted to 9/11 by invading and bombing Afghanistan. In that operation, at least 3,000 civilians were killed, and hundreds of thousands were forced to flee their homes and villages, terrorized by what was supposed to be a war on terror. Bush's Iraq War, which he keeps linking to the "war on terror," has killed between 40,000 and 140,000 civilians.
More than a million civilians in Vietnam were killed by U.S. bombs, presumably by "accident." Add up all the terrorist attacks throughout the world in the twentieth century and they do not equal that awful toll.
If reacting to terrorist attacks by war is inevitably immoral, then we must look for ways other than war to end terrorism.
And if military retaliation for terrorism is not only immoral but futile, then political leaders, however cold-blooded their calculations, must reconsider their policies. When such practical considerations are joined to a rising popular revulsion against war, perhaps the long era of mass murder may be brought to an end.
Howard Zinn is a historian and social activist. He flew bombing missions for the United States in World War II, an experience he now points to in shaping his opposition to war. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia University. He has taught at Spelman College and Boston University, and has been a visiting professor at the University of Paris and the University of Bologna.
He is best known for his book "A People's History of the United States", which presents American history through the eyes of those he feels are outside of the political and economic establishment.
Topics: Afghanistan, Conflicts And War, George W. Bush, United States Of America
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We, the men of this newly form government in order to plant the seeds for future conflicts holds these truth to be self-evident, that all men are not created equal, are not endowed by a creator with such inevitable rights and among these are not life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
We declare these writings by Dr Zinn should not be printed in all major newspapers in America. This is not one of the best article printed in Islamic City. It is not blunt, factual, therefore not truthful. Hezbollah is not a direct creation of the Israeli invasion and occupation of Lebanon. Violence is not primitive and outdated. We are not War Lovers therefore the Wolfowitz Doctrine of shock and awe will indeed win the hearts and minds of our enemies. More that any of our military excursions the Taliban who attacked our way of life has been defeated and the war on terrorism which are being fought in Iraq has been a spectacular success.
Very Truly Yours
President, G B
Vice President, D C
Defense Secretary, D R. and PW and C P On behalf of the entire present administration.
May the blessing of Allah continue to allow Dr. Howard Zinn to inform and inspire.
The reports are never correct, but Americans
are killing Iraqis at very opportunity.
Americans are pressured by the Zionist Govt.
The Zionist Govt pressure US into invading Iraq.
US did not invade Iraq; it invaded the Middle East. Iraq was to be just a way station on to the rest of the Middle East (Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia).
Unfortunately, war has its own dynamics. US is unable to control the situation in Iraq and will be defeated badly. It cannot stay there and cannot afford to leave Iraq. Eventually, it will have to leave Iraq, just like it left Vietnam. Only difference is that in Vietnam, it could negotiate with Vietnamese (Hanoi and National Liberation Front). In Iraq, it does not know who the enemy is; so, US has nobody to negotiate with. You cannot negotiate with a phantom enemy.
This has saved the rest of the Middle East from US invasions. US may even say good bye to the Middle East permanently leaving the vaccuum to be filled by China and Russia. This is the unintended consequence of this war.
If our troops leave Iraq for good, then Sunni and Shia Arabs will go at it nonstop. And the Kurds will strike out on their own, which would likely provoke Turkey. Bottom line is that the bloodletting won't stop even if America withdraws its troops.
via gettin 655,000 iraqi killed.
via abu gharib and torture.
is very hard to believe.
the idea is to make greater israel.
see its map on wikepedia below.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Israel