If this isn't enough incentive to pull out of that occupation, what is?
"We were told we'd be deploying to Iraq and that we needed to get ready to have">Dahr Jamail's latest report "Enough Is Enough, It's Time to Get Out" recounts the daily horror stories shared by Iraq War veterans in Seattle in what was "a continuation of the "Winter Soldier" hearings held in Silver Spring, Maryland in March."
little kids and women shoot at us," Sergio Kochergin, a former Marine who served
two deployments in Iraq, told the audience. "It was an attempt to portray Iraqis
as animals. We were supposed to do humanitarian work, but all we did was harass
people, drive like crazy on the streets, pretending it was our city and we could
do whatever we wanted to do."
If this isn't enough incentive to pull out of that occupation, what is?
"We were told we'd be deploying to Iraq and that we needed to get ready to have little kids and women shoot at us," Sergio Kochergin, a former Marine who served two deployments in Iraq, told the audience. "It was an attempt to portray Iraqis as animals. We were supposed to do humanitarian work, but all we did was harass people, drive like crazy on the streets, pretending it was our city and we could do whatever we wanted to do."
Kochergin continued, "We were constantly told everybody there wants to kill
you, everybody wants to get you. In the military, we had racism within every
rank and it was ridiculous. It seemed like a joke, but that joke turned into
destroying peoples' lives in Iraq."
"I was in Husaiba with a sniper platoon right on the Syrian border and
we would basically go out on the town and search for people to shoot," Kochergin
said. "The rules of engagement (ROE) got more lenient the longer we were there.
So if anyone had a bag and a shovel, we were to shoot them. We were allowed to
take our shots at anything that looked suspicious. And at that point in time,
everything looked suspicious."
Kochergin added, "Later on, we had no ROE at all. If you see something
that doesn't seem right, take them out." He concluded by saying, "Enough is
enough, it's time to get out of there."
The huge disconnect between rhetoric fed to the American public/protoplasm at home and the reality on the ground in US-occupied Iraq boggles the still-working mind. No wonder the Republican agenda is based on dumbing-down and distraction - to coverup for their blatant crimes, lies, and cruel policies.
We claim to oppose racism and promote democracy and higher values. Like this, perhaps?
Doug Connor was a first lieutenant in the army and worked as a surgical nurse inOr how about these "family values"?
Iraq. While there he worked as part of a combat support unit, and said most of
the patients he treated were Iraqi civilians. "There were so many people that
needed treatment we couldn't take all of them," he said. "When a bombing
happened and 45 patients were brought to us, it was always Americans treated
first, then Kurds, then the Arabs."
Connor added quietly, "It got to the point where we started calling the IraqiSo that's how they laid down the "groundwork for peace" as W claimed? Maybe he was thinking of the peace one finds in cemeteries? But there's more than just the "peace" of death.
patients 'range balls' because, just like on the driving range (in golf), you
don't care about losing them."
"I watched Iraqi Police bring in someone to interrogate," Seth Manzel, a vehicleOf course, they will say "those were Iraqis"... But who set the example for them? Abu Ghraib, no doubt - which was no exception.
commander and machine gunner in the U.S. Army, told the audience. "There were
four men on the prisoner...one was pummeling his kidneys with his fists, another
was inserting a bottle up his rectum. It looked like a frat house gang-rape."
This has to be Job One: Get out of Iraq asap. Occupation can never be victory. It was a mistake, a lie, a humanitarian disaster, a shame, a gigantic drain on the economy, and now a burgeoning tragedy.
No comments:
Post a Comment