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Bob Kerrey, retired United States Senator of
Nebraska, and ex-Governor of that state, is being lauded by
the U.S. press for "coming forward" and "speaking
candidly" of his involvement in what can only be described
as mass murder during wartime conditions. The killing of between
12 and 21 civilian women, children and elderly men is portrayed
as inevitable due to the confusion and fog of war. Okay, so
what?
We are told the "so what" is that it is unfair
to judge acts which take place in the heat of war. Nonsense.
We judge Bosnian General Radko Mladic for his mass murders.
We judged individual Nazi officers for their mass murder.
We investigated and judged our own officers in cases when
they committed murder of civilians in Europe, Korea, and Vietnam.
The classic example of American war crimes is My Lai. Approximately
500 innocent Vietnamese civilians were executed by Lieutenant
William Calley's platoon, Charlie Company, Task Force Barker
on May 16, 1968. Calley was tried and found guilty of premeditated
murder on all counts. President Richard M. Nixon intervened,
and as a consequence William Calley was paroled about two
weeks after his conviction. The larger consequence is that
within the same two weeks polls reversed the record of opinion:
a majority of the U.S. electorate was found to be opposed
to the war in Vietnam.
We can and must judge these crimes after the fact. There
is something much larger at stake than reputations of individual
soldiers. We are told that Kerrey should be exonerated because
"it was that kind of war." How will the human condition
ever improve if we allow such weak excuses to hide and cover
despicable deeds? How can we become a humane world culture
of human beings if we condone ignorance and promote cover-ups?
War is deadly, demeaning, and debilitating for soldiers.
That should be a sufficient clue as to its danger for the
society that commits acts of war. Too long, this Western culture
has given glory to and glamorized this act of state brutality.
War is equally dangerous, demeaning and debilitating for countries
and societies. All wars are "that kind of war."
Bob Kerrey performed acts of heroism, one of which won him
the highest military award of the United States: the Congressional
Medal of Honor. The deed he performed only days before his
heroic act was a true military horroreven if you limit
the discussion to Kerrey's own description of the event. War
should always be discussed and contemplated with both types
of acts in mind.
When one accepts deeds such as those admitted to by Senator
Kerrey then one should consider what possible reason a society
would have to improve the human impulse to commit war. These
acts are not inevitable. They are a common component of wars.
The conclusion should not be, therefore to put the deed behind
us, and move on. It should be to end wars. Wars are politics
conducted by violence. We don't condone violence in any other
sort of negotiation. We cannot condone violence as an acceptable
part of the political repertoire.
Copyright © 2001 Robert Marcom. All Rights
Reserved.
Robert Marcom is a regular contributor
to *spark-online.
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