A powerful and deeply needed piece by Brian Trautman, a U.S. Army Veteran, a peace educator-activist, and a national board member of Veterans For Peace. May we be informed and inspired by the wisdom, courage, and vital truth-telling of this veteran and so many others who are shining light on the only true path to peace. ― Molly
The United States is the most militarized and jingoistic nation
on earth. Its foreign policy is guided by imperialist militarism, neoliberal
capitalism and racial xenophobia. For more than sixteen years now, three
presidential administrations have carried out a so-called “War on Terror”
(GWOT), a perpetual state of war that is waged globally, under the depraved
reasoning that “the world is a battlefield,” to quote investigative journalist
Jeremy Scahill. As demonstrated by the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, the
GWOT is conducted through conventional warfare. More often, however, it is
executed through covert or “dirty” wars, against groups and individuals in many
other nations.
The U.S. has the financial and logistical capacity to wage these
illegal wars. Its bloated military budget is larger than the next seven
countries combined. It is by far the largest operator of military installations
abroad, maintaining nearly 800 bases in around 70 countries. The ever-growing
military-industrial complex, which President Eisenhower warned about in his
farewell address, permeates every facet of our society – from an economy
largely dependent on the war industry, to military recruiting in our public
schools, to police militarization. This toxic culture of war is underscored on
different national holidays, particularly Memorial Day.
Memorial Day – a day originating in 1868 (Decoration Day), on
which the gravesites of the Civil War dead were decorated with flowers – has
morphed into a day that conflates the memorialization of killed soldiers with
the glorification of war. The perennial flag-waving, ultra-nationalist
speeches, garish street parades and hyper-consumerism of Memorial Day do not
honor these soldiers. What might, however, is working to prevent future war and
nurture peace – honoring their memory by not sending more men and women into
harm’s way and to kill and maim in wars based on lies. To have any chance at
being effective, however, this work must include efforts aimed at increasing
public awareness about the many causes and costs of war.
Long-time consumer advocate, lawyer, and author Ralph
Nader affirms in the essay, “Strengthening Memorial Day,” honoring our war
casualties should be about more than their loss. According to Nader, “waging
strong peace initiatives is also a way to remember those human beings, soldiers
and civilians, who never returned to their homes. “Never again” should be our
tribute and promise to them.”
Referring to the post-9/11 invasions, in “Remember This on
Memorial Day: They Didn’t Fall, They Were Pushed,” Ray McGovern, former
Army officer and senior CIA analyst, tenders a hypophoric question: what
constitutes a show of respect for the U.S. troops killed in these wars and
for the family members on Memorial Day? To which McGovern
responds, “Simple: Avoid euphemisms like “the fallen” and expose the lies
about what a great idea it was to start those wars and then to “surge” tens of
thousands of more troops into those fools’ errands.”
Bill Quigley, law professor at Loyola University New
Orleans, writes in “Memorial Day: Praying for Peace While Waging Permanent
War?” that “Memorial Day is, by federal law, a day of prayer for permanent
peace.” This is a contradiction, though — based on the conduct of our government.
Quigley asks: “is it possible to honestly pray for peace while our country is
far and away number one in the world in waging war, military presence, military
spending and the sale of weapons around the world?” He offers five suggestions
for how we might alter this reality, the first two being, “learn the facts and
face the truth that the US is the biggest war maker in the world” and “commit
ourselves and organize others to a true revolution of values and confront the
corporations and politicians who continue to push our nation into war and
inflate the military budget with the hot air of permanent fear mongering.”
Quigley emphasizes that, “Only when we work for the day when the US is no
longer the world leader in war will we have the right to pray for peace on
Memorial Day.”
In an article published in The Boston Globe (1976), the
people’s historian Howard Zinn urged readers to rethink Memorial Day, who we
honor that day, and our national priorities. Dr. Zinn wrote: “Memorial Day will
be celebrated … by the usual betrayal of the dead, by the hypocritical
patriotism of the politicians and contractors preparing for more wars, more
graves to receive more flowers on future Memorial Days. The memory of the dead
deserves a different dedication. To peace, to defiance of governments.”... “Memorial Day
should be a day for putting flowers on graves and planting trees. Also, for
destroying the weapons of death that endanger us more than they protect us,
that waste our resources and threaten our children and grandchildren.”
Please continue this article here: https://www.counterpunch.org/2017/05/25/veterans-on-the-march/
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