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"Bring 'Em On?"
by Stan Goff, July 3, 2003
Featured on Counterpunch.com
A Former Special Forces Soldier Responds to Bush's
Invitation for Iraqis to Attack US Troops
In 1970, when I arrived at my unit, Company A,
4th Battalion/503rd Infantry, 173rd Airborne Brigade, in what
was then the Republic of Vietnam, I was charged up for a fight.
I believed that if we didn't stop the communists in Vietnam, we'd
eventually be fighting this global conspiracy in the streets of
Hot Springs, Arkansas. I'd been toughened by Basic Training, Infantry
Training and Parachute Training, taught how to use my weapons
and equipment, and I was confident in my ability to vanquish the
skinny unter-menschen. So I was dismayed when one of my new colleagues--a
veteran who'd been there ten months--told me, "We are losing
this war."
Not only that, he said, if I wanted to survive
for my one year there, I had to understand one very basic thing.
All Vietnamese were the enemy, and for us, the grunts on the ground,
this was a race war. Within one month, it was apparent that everything
he told me was true, and that every reason that was being given
to the American public for the war was not true.
We had a battalion commander whom I never saw.
He would fly over in a Loach helicopter and give cavalier instructions
to do things like "take your unit 13 kilometers to the north."
In the Central Highlands, 13 kilometers is something we had to
hack out with machetes, in 98-degree heat, carrying sometimes
90 pounds over our body weights, over steep, slippery terrain.
The battalion commander never picked up a machete as far as we
knew, and after these directives he'd fly back to an air-conditioned
headquarters in LZ English near Bong-son. We often fantasized
together about shooting his helicopter down as a way of relieving
our deep resentment against this faceless, starched and spit-shined
despot.
Yesterday, when I read that US Commander-in-Chief
George W. Bush, in a moment of blustering arm-chair machismo,
sent a message to the 'non-existent' Iraqi guerrillas to "bring
'em on," the first image in my mind was a 20-year-old soldier
in an ever-more-fragile marriage, who'd been away from home for
8 months. He participated in the initial invasion, and was told
he'd be home for the 4th of July. He has a newfound familiarity
with corpses, and everything he thought he knew last year is now
under revision. He is sent out into the streets of Fallujah (or
some other city), where he has already been shot at once or twice
with automatic weapons or an RPG, and his nerves are raw. He is
wearing Kevlar and ceramic body armor, a Kevlar helmet, a load
carrying harness with ammunition, grenades, flex-cuffs, first-aid
gear, water, and assorted other paraphernalia. His weapon weighs
seven pounds, ten with a double magazine. His boots are bloused,
and his long-sleeve shirt is buttoned at the wrist. It is between
100-110 degrees Fahrenheit at midday. He's been eating MRE's three
times a day, when he has an appetite in this heat, and even his
urine is beginning to smell like preservatives. Mosquitoes and
sand flies plague him in the evenings, and he probably pulls a
guard shift every night, never sleeping straight through. He and
his comrades are beginning to get on each others' nerves. The
rumors of 'going-home, not-going-home' are keeping him on an emotional
roller coaster. Directives from on high are contradictory, confusing,
and often stupid. The whole population seems hostile to him and
he is developing a deep animosity for Iraq and all its people--as
well as for official narratives.
This is the lad who will hear from someone that
George W. Bush, dressed in a suit with a belly full of rich food,
just hurled a manly taunt from a 72-degree studio at the 'non-existent'
Iraqi resistance.
This de facto president is finally seeing his poll
numbers fall. Even chauvinist paranoia has a half-life, it seems.
His legitimacy is being eroded as even the mainstream press has
discovered now that the pretext for the war was a lie. It may
have been control over the oil, after all. Anti-war forces are
regrouping as an anti-occupation movement. Now, exercising his
one true talent--blundering--George W. Bush has begun the improbable
process of alienating the very troops upon whom he depends to
carry out the neo-con ambition of restructuring the world by arms.
Somewhere in Balad, or Fallujah, or Baghdad, there
is a soldier telling a new replacement, "We are losing this
war."
* Stan Goff is the author
of "Hideous Dream: A Soldier's Memoir of the US Invasion
of Haiti" (Soft Skull Press, 2000) and of the upcoming book
"Full Spectrum Disorder" (Soft Skull Press, 2003). He
retired in 1996 from the US Army, from 3rd Special Forces. He
lives in Raleigh.
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