Scott Camil
Recently, I was asked to
speak at a teach-in built around the Downing Street Memo, a secret British
document that shows that the public was lied to to get our support for Bush’s
war against Iraq. This “Memo” is actually
meeting minutes transcribed during the British Prime Minister’s meeting on July
23, 2002—eight months prior to the invasion of Iraq in March 2003. (The Sunday Times in London printed the text
of this document on May 1, 2005.)
I was asked to speak about what it feels like to be a U.S.
veteran who voluntarily served in war, only to come home and learn that my
government had lied to, manipulated and betrayed me. I thought to myself, “This will be a real easy speech: It
sucks.” The question made me think about
the many similarities between the war in Vietnam and the war in Iraq.
• United States involvement in both wars started with
deception. In Vietnam, the deception
included the Gulf of Tonkin incident, the SEATO treaty, the violation of the
Geneva Accords, and the manipulation of the public with propaganda. In Iraq, we were lied to about weapons of
mass destruction. We were Goebbelized
(fed propaganda) to believe that there were links between 9/11 and Saddam
Hussein, and we were led to believe that Saddam was evil because of what he did
to his own people. It was our moral obligation to remove him, even though we
empowered him and sponsored his actions.
We were told that our effort in Iraq would help the war on terror;
instead, it is giving the terrorists a rallying cry and has allowed them to
operate inside Iraq, which Saddam Hussein never permitted.
• The U.S. Congress was derelict in its duty to the Constitution
and our citizens. The Constitution
provides for checks and balances and gives Congress the power to declare
war. In both wars, Congress abdicated
its responsibilities and gave carte blanche to the executive branch. This
breach of responsibility cannot be overstated.
• Neither war had a realistic exit strategy. The general strategy was and is “might makes
right,” and, “we’ll kick their ass and make them do what we want.” While we’re kicking their ass, we’re telling
the public that we’re winning their hearts and minds. In Vietnam, we used to say, “Grab them by the
balls and their hearts and minds will follow.”
It didn’t work in Vietnam, and it isn’t going to work in Iraq. Every time you hurt the innocent, you bolster
and inspire the anti-occupation forces.
• We claim that we will teach the Iraqis democracy and we will
train them to be able to militarily gain control over the people of their
country. We tried this in Vietnam and we
called it Vietnamization. It did not work in Vietnam, and it won’t work in
Iraq. We have still not learned from our
misplaced arrogance. Both Vietnamese and
Iraqi culture are thousands of years older than
ours.
• In both wars, we thirsted for oil. President Eisenhower spoke of the importance
of Vietnam’s oil to the US. Iraq has the
second largest oil reserves in the world.
The number one source of income of both countries is oil.
• In Vietnam, we trained, equipped and armed the South Vietnamese
military and police. That enabled the
anti-occupation forces (AOF) to infiltrate, get training, get equipment, and
learn intelligence to help their cause.
The same thing is happening in Iraq.
When car bombers ambush military and police units on the way to a
mission, it’s because of inside information.
It’s almost as if we’re fighting ourselves because we’re equipping them
and teaching them our military strategy.
• Part of our strategy in both wars was to eliminate the
leadership of the AOF by assassination.
In Vietnam, it was called the Phoenix Program. In that program, 41,000 Vietnamese citizens
were assassinated. One of the men who
worked in that program, Thomas O’Connell, has now become the U.S. assistant
secretary for Special Operations. (Thomas O’Connell, before he came to this
job, ran “Grey Fox,” a unit of Special Operations forces and CIA that
assassinates those considered to be enemies of the United States.) Special
Operations controls Task Force 121 and its plan for dealing with the AOF is
called “pre-emptive man-hunting.” In
both wars, there was monetary incentive to turn over neighbors who are leaders
of the AOF to the Americans. That
monetary incentive encourages people to turn in people they don’t like and get
paid for it.
• In both wars, the United States carried the overwhelming
economic and material of the burden of the war.
They were international efforts in name only.
• Both wars saw a large drop in the international standing of the
United States, which hurts our national security as well as our image.
• In both wars, the United States far outmatched the enemy in arms
and technology and American troops didn’t have to worry about enemy aircraft.
• In both wars, the United States attacked countries that were not
a threat to the United States. Neither
country had the power nor the ability to strike the
United States.
• In both wars, the borders were not secure.
• In both wars, the United States made secret illegal incursions
into neighboring countries.
• Both wars saw the use of mercenary forces by the United
States. In Vietnam, they were Laotian
mercenaries. In Iraq, there are mercenaries from Latin America and corporate
mercenaries. One of the ways that the United States has
played with the numbers to make Iraq look like a smaller commitment than
Vietnam is by changing who handles the infrastructure of the war. In Vietnam, the military handled it. In Iraq, private corporations handle it,
thereby concealing the actual size of our military presence there.
• Because of poor planning, in both wars, the U.S. government had
to turn to coercion to supply the manpower needed for the commitment. In Vietnam, it was the draft; and in Iraq, it
is the backdoor draft known as 'stop loss.'
Under stop loss, once you’ve served all the time in the military you’ve
signed up for, you can be kept in the military for up to six months after the
war has ended.
During the Civil War in the U.S., combat units were
organized by cities and towns, so when a unit from a certain place would take
heavy casualties, it impacted that place in a much more detrimental way than
had those soldiers been split up from around the country. We changed the way we
organized combat units so this wouldn’t happen anymore. Because Bush has bitten off more than the
regular army can chew, this war has to be fought with a large percentage of
reservists and National Guard, so again, as these units take casualties,
certain towns and cities are taking a disproportionate share of the losses.
• Neither war was fought to hold land. You clear an area, you lose some men, you go
somewhere else, only to come back and lose more men clearing that same area
again. This creates a morale problem for
the soldier.
• In Vietnam, the majority of casualties were from mines and booby
traps. In Iraq, they’re from improvised
explosive devices, commonly known as IEDs.
An IED is a mine.
• In both wars, there was and is an increase in soldiers going AWOL
(absent without leave).
• Psychologically speaking, it was the trauma of the war of
occupation in Vietnam that led to the realization that soldiers in combat will
have psychological scars that may last a lifetime. Now we hear that 30% of the troops coming
home from Iraq have symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
• In both wars, there was and is a lack of concern for the safety
of the troops. In Vietnam, we were given
M16 rifles that didn’t work. In Iraq,
our soldiers don’t have adequate body armor or armored vehicles.
• In both wars, there was lack of concern for the long-term health
of the troops. In Vietnam, the use of Agent Orange still affects veterans and
their families forty years later. In Iraq, the use of depleted uranium
ammunition will have the same negative long-term effects on our troops and
their families.
• In both wars, there was and is abuse of the citizens of the
occupied countries by U.S. forces. There
is much evidence of abuse of prisoners. In Vietnam, there were cases like My
Lai and the testimony of U.S. servicemen at the Winter Soldier Investigation
that show the type of abuse that went on.
In Iraq, abuse of prisoners in Abu Ghraib Prison is so bad that our
government is fighting to keep from the world the photographs and films of
these abuses, including rape of children. In Vietnam, body count as a measure
of success led to many civilian deaths.
Because of the stigma the body count created, in the Iraq war, they’ve
decided not to keep track of the people they kill. This lack of accountability results in
countless deaths of civilians.
• Major Colin Powell was assigned to investigate what happened at
My Lai. Being a team player, he
whitewashed the investigation. A year
later, an investigative journalist named Ron Ridenhour sent numerous letters to
the White House, the Pentagon and Congress, asking them to do something about
the massacre at My Lai. Congressman
Morris Udall started another investigation, which resulted in the conviction of
Lt. William Calley. This conviction
whitewashed the responsibility of U.S. government policy in the
massacre. Years later, Major Colin
Powell became U.S. Secretary of State and, as a team player, he sold the Bush
lies about WMD in Iraq to the United Nations.
• In both wars, the government has scapegoated lower ranking
members of the military, placing all of the blame for criminal acts on them
while denying any responsibility by leadership or policy. This is directly
counter to the rules established at the Nuremberg Trials where the U.S.
presided over prosecution of war criminals.
• In both wars, the mainstream news media, having initially bought
the government’s deceptions, eventually followed public opinion and turned
against the war.
• Journalists have died covering both wars. According to Reporters Without
Borders, more journalists have been killed in two and a half years in Iraq (66)
than were killed in 20 years of covering Vietnam (63). At least 20 of the journalists killed in Iraq
have been killed by American troops.
• In both wars, the U.S. lauded big democratic voter turnout in
the elections of their puppet governments. It didn’t make a difference in
Vietnam, and in Iraq, because everyone who was on government handout had to
show a purple thumb to get their water and food rations, we don’t really know
how much of that turnout was for anything besides food and water.
When
I think about occupation, I think about how would I
feel if the United States were occupied.
Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that another nation decides that we
need regime change in the United States.
They present their justifications to the world before they
unilaterally and preemptively attack us.
Their reasons are as follows:
• The people of the United States do not have real democracy. They have voting systems without paper
accountability. Their leaders are
responsive only to the corporations and the wealthy.
• The United States is the only western nation that executes its
own prisoners. It imprisons more of its
people per capita that any other western nation.
• It refuses to abide by international law and ignores the World
Court.
• It uses a much higher percentage of the world’s resources than
its share in terms of population.
• It’s not willing to acknowledge the huge negative impact it has
on the environment, putting the whole world at risk from things such as global
warming and the use of depleted uranium in ammunition.
There
are many things I could add to this list, but I think you get my point. I agree that all of the above is true and I
agree that we need regime change, but I would never accept that change—as
important as it might be to the world—if it came from the barrels of the guns
of foreign troops occupying my country. Occupation only gives you control—and
limited control at that—while you occupy.
The occupier becomes a prisoner of his own policy. There’s no way to get out and save face. We have to have the integrity to admit our
mistakes in Iraq and try to correct them.
The longer we draw it out, the worse it will be for us.
It
is very clear that the majority of the people of Iraq were much better
off under Hussein than they are under Bush.
Under Hussein, they had reliable electricity, running water and
telephone service, their children could walk to school without fear, their
wives could go shopping without fear, their fathers could take public
transportation to work, their daily routines were safe. Those politically opposed to Saddam, members
of Al-Qaeda, or a religious fundamentalists had
problems. Under Bush, the regular
people, the overwhelming majority of people, do not have the services or the
safety they had before we invaded.
The
U.S. war in Vietnam lasted 10 years. We
are now hearing that our military commitment to Iraq may also take 10
years. There are a few bottom lines here
for me:
1) Ten years from now, the only ones who will be
thinking about Iraq will be those who have lost family members and friends and
those who have lost parts of themselves physically or mentally. The rest of America will go on, just as it
did after Vietnam.
2) There will come a time when we leave Iraq and
the Iraqis will choose for themselves what they want just as the Vietnamese
did. So the real question is how many
must die and suffer before that happens.
I don’t believe that more deaths and suffering will change the
outcome. There are those that say if we
“cut and run now,” all those who have suffered and died will have done so in
vain. I ask those people how many have to die before it’s
okay to cut and run? When there are
58,000 names for a wall of American veterans who have died in Iraq, will it
then be okay to cut and run? Is that how
many lives have to be thrown away before it’s okay to admit that we’ve made a
mistake and do what’s right?
What
should we do?
1) Withdraw all American troops and support
services from Iraq immediately.
2) Turn over all responsibility except financial
to the international community.
3) Pay the cost of repairing all the damage we
have done. We broke it,
we should have to pay to fix it.
4) Recognize the World Court and turn over to
them everyone who is responsible for starting this war. Let them face justice.
5) Many American corporations are profiting
mightily from this war. In return, they
provide the economic support that allows these irresponsible and sometimes
criminal politicians to hold onto their power. We must take the ability to
profit out of war. If the troops are
asked to show their patriotism by sacrificing life and limb, then let the
corporations show their patriotism by sacrificing their profit.
6) Vote out of office every congressmember and
senator that supported this war. There
are those who say it’s not the fault of Congress, that there are many members
of Congress who are good, decent people who got swept up in the politics of
patriotism. But it is the responsibility of Congress to provide a check and
balance to the executive branch. To
allow the executive branch carte blanche because they wrapped a criminal policy
in the flag is an abdication of their responsibility. Why would we allow them to stay in office
when they have not been responsible? We
need to set a precedent so that future congresses will take their
responsibility seriously.
The
argument that Congress has to support the troops allows the executive branch to
commit the troops and then demand support for the policy, no matter how
wrong. This puts the cart before the
horse, keeps the troops in a place they do not belong, and mandates useless
suffering and death.
For
those congressmembers who argue that they were misled into starting this war,
they allowed themselves to be misled. There were many voices against this folly
of ours, including many of our citizens and most of the countries on this
planet.
If
we fail to take a stand that punishes those responsible for this crime, it will
only be repeated again.
During
the American war against Vietnam, we marched on Washington to confront our
government, express our dissatisfaction with their criminal policies, and call
for an immediate end to the war and
the return of our troops. On September 24th, we will be marching on Washington for the same
reasons. I urge you to join us.
Scott Camil is a Vietnam veteran. He testified about U.S. war crimes in Vietnam at the Winter Soldier investigation in 1971 in Detroit, a tribunal which is captured in the recently re-released film "Winter Soldier." Currently he serves as a counselor for the GI Rights Hotline and on the executive committee of The Suwannee St-Johns Group Sierra Club.