My Lai . . . Haditha . . . and America’s whitewashers
By Ben Tanosborn
Online Journal Guest Writer
May 29, 2006, 01:06
It was 38 years ago
that a platoon from Charlie Company (11th Brigade, Americal Division) commanded
by a young Army lieutenant murdered hundreds of old men, women, and children in
a small Vietnam village, presumably with the tacit approval of military
higher-ups. A memorial later erected there by the Vietnamese lists 504 names as
victims of the massacre, ranging in ages from 1 to 82.
My Lai had its
victims, a gruesome display on par with the worst incidents that have come to
light in the last century. It also had its gang of perpetrators; soldiers under
the command of Lt. William Calley. And it even had four heroes; three from a
helicopter crew (Thompson, Colburn and Andreotta) who saved the lives of a few
villagers; and a man in Calley’s platoon whose conscience would not permit him
to take part in the massacre (Bernhardt). But beyond heroes and villains, for
the next few years My Lai would also have a never-ending series of
whitewashers, who in good conscience must also be considered villains . . . by
choice or by default.
The whitewashers
came in all ranks of importance, from the anticipated ever-present military
brass, that initiated and maintained the cover-up, to a host of politicians and
people in leadership, all the way to the commander-in-chief, President Nixon in
this case. The incredible bottom line to this massacre was, however, that the
only person found guilty for this carnage was Lt. Calley, who ended up serving
three and a half years of “house arrest” in his quarters at Fort Benning,
Georgia. The entire sordid affair became not just a national disgrace for which
the country could do penance, but a monumental whitewash that to date Americans
prefer not to talk about.
In a way, the
enablers to the entire whitewash were the American public. Not only were the
villains and whitewashers de facto exonerated, but the four heroes in the plot
became traitors . . . to their military comrades, and also to much of the
population.
My Lai, photos and
all, was just too big a war crime to allow an effective cover-up, or it might
have remained a secret to this date. Accounts provided by soldiers who lived
through similar criminal accounts, if on a much smaller scale, were kept
hush-hush we are led to believe “not to affect the morale of the troops.” It
was all done, as it always seems to be in these cases, for the “greater good.”
Yes, the end justifies the means!
Now the hamlets of Pinkville
have given way to the streets of Haditha, and the probable murder of two dozen
Iraqis, including women and children, by a large, yes large, group of marines.
If it turns out to be as horrific as noted in some of the leaked details, and
there wasn’t a single marine with enough humanity in the group to put a stop to
this. God have pity on us as a nation . . . and as human beings.
It has been six
months since the incident occurred, far too long to conduct an adequate
investigation had the military chosen to do so. But the delay probably had as
much or more to do with the timing in the formation of the Iraqi government
than with the preparation of Americans at home for this “new truth.”
Vietnam is far away
in time and memory. But now Americans have to cope with new unpleasant
realities: a government that lied to them, so as to enlist their support for an
illegitimate war; then Abu Ghraib, and the realization that the military is far
from squeaky-clean when it comes to torture, human rights and compliance with
international law. Now, it is the pride of the military, the marines, who are
being put to the test. And this may turn out to be a test like no other in the
history of the Corps.
Revenge for the
killing of a fellow marine is no reason to kill innocent, defenseless Iraqi
women and children; nor is frustration, even when insurgents are at times fed
and sheltered by civilians in the area, or when complicity is suspected.
Criminal reprisal as an answer to physical and/or mental strain is just
unacceptable behavior in human beings, much less in soldiers. When soldiers get
to a point where they are apt to crack, they should be kept in their barracks
or sent home. Just what role does the military leadership play in all this?
Commanders, doctors and chaplains . . . aren’t they all gravely derelict?
How many more
Hadithas are there . . . will we ever know what happened in Fallujah, and so
many other places where the US military has no reason or right to be?
One must wonder.
One, two . . . three decades from now some of these people who are committing
crimes in Iraq, or those whitewashing their behavior, are likely to be in
positions of political power in these United States. One could even become
senator, president, or secretary of state. The whitewash, it appears, never ends.
© 2006 Ben Tanosborn
Ben Tanosborn, columnist, poet and writer,
resides in Vancouver, Washington (USA), where he is principal of a business
consulting firm. Contact him at ben@tanosborn.com.
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