This is about an incident of war; an incident in which four U.S.
Marines decided to outrage the vulnerable corpses of some of their
tenacious Taliban foes, dead in the dust at their feet. Such incidents —
and many worse — have always been a part of war… But such incidents
nowadays are not merely rumored or surmised… now they can be seen in
your office or home in all their disgusting detail. War, with all its
coarseness, vulgarity and shock, is now a thing we cannot escape… for we
have now reached the point where every war will take place not just on
far-flung battlefields, but — as fast as a video clip can be posted —
before your very eyes and in your very mind.
The facts.
On January 11, 2012 an undated video was posted by a YouTube user
identified as “semperfi LoneVoice”. It shows four men in U.S. Marine
combat gear standing in a semi-circle over 3 bodies. These men were
urinating on the bodies.
The entire film clip took just about a minute.
It was not the worst outrage in the long saga of human warfare, where
the desecration of corpses was a garden-variety barbarism. But this act
of desecration went viral at once, a matter of instant and immediate
concern to officials at the very highest reaches of government. In
short, it instantly became a Problem that had to be dealt with,
responded to, and contained before the next news cycle commenced.
Who would make such a video… and why would they do it?
I can surmise — but do not know — that this video was made for the
same reason that 19th Century big game hunters were photographed before
the bodies of elephants, tigers and lions… a form of bragging, to show
their friends where they had been, what they had done, and, Tarzan-like,
beat their breasts and release a primal scream of superiority and glee.
Thus did a fifth marine, perhaps the originator of “what seemed a
good idea at the time”, egg on his buddies, “Ah, come on. Don’t be a
wuss; the bastards had it coming.” Thus did the idea emerge,
spontaneous, ill-considered of course, but an act that would bond the
buddies while handing each something to show the admiring folks back
home. And so the buddies were positioned just so; zippers opened, a
crude video made with cruder remarks about giving the bodies a “shower”,
ending with “Have a nice day, buddy” … the final result a video that
showed in outrageous detail that these Marines, charged with service to
the Great Republic, knew nothing about who we are, how we behave, what
being an American is all about…
… Yes, in a minute, just 60 seconds, they had outraged their God,
their family values, everything they had ever heard or thought about the
shining city on a hill… they had lowered themselves; shown their
“Semper Fi” motto to be mere words, not high ideal. And they did this
willingly, happily, believing this was suitable for them, unexceptional,
a thing right and appropriate to do… good for laughs, another beer, a
clap on the back from an appreciative audience back home.
All this was bad enough. But then someone got the bright idea of
posting this video. This person had one of two possible objectives in
mind; either as a proud trophy…, or shrewder, to show us up as a nation
of high words but debased realities and so besmirch the Great Republic,
its solders, and the lofty ideals by which we live and for which we
fight.
And so the video was posted… its unmistakable image of hubris
instantly the property of a world which thereby gained another stick
with which to beat us, a stick which our own soldiers had fashioned,
completely clueless on what they had done and how destructive to our
cause, themselves, and their own buddies, whom the Taliban, biding their
time, would serve out worse than the outrage perpetrated upon the
bodies of their comrades… for retaliation there must be… swift, sure,
painful, revolting. It is as certain as anything can be in the uncertain
business of war: some young American Marines, now vibrant and alive,
will be captured, tortured, subjected to the most severe pain, killed,
then outraged… an unspeakable, horrific end made inevitable by the
unconsidered lark of 5 Marines who not just failed us but didn’t even
know they were doing so.
High-level condemnation, inadequate response.
To their credit, the Marine Corps immediately named an investigative
officer to decide whether charges would be brought. They have already
identified two of the four who committed the outrage; they are believed
to be members of the 3rd Batallion, 2nd Marines, based at Camp Lejeune,
North Carolina. It served in Afghanistan from March to September 2011,
presumably the time when the video was made.
Officials at the very highest level of government, Leon Panetta,
Secretary of Defense; Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as well as
other members of the Obama Administration stepped forward to condemn the
desecration… and to limit the damage and repercussions.
But they were checkmated by a belief as old as war itself: that all
the king’s horses and all the king’s men can never do wrong, whatever
they do, so long as it is in defense of the realm; Texas Governor and
(then) presidential candidate Rick Perry the case in point.
Perry’s worrisome reaction went like this: “These kids made a
mistake. There’s not any doubt about it. They shouldn’t have done it.
It’s bad. But to call it a criminal act, I think, is over the top.”
In other words, boys will be boys; they’re our boys so sacrosanct.
Yes, the act’s bad… but slapping their wrists constitutes an appropriate
punishment; enough said, let’s get back to America’s unending business,
the business of war. Such remarks constituted the thin edge of the
wedge; mild condemnation of the “kids” (Perry’s grossly inadequate word
and description)… their action bad, yes, but not really so very bad… not
least because other nations at other times have done far worse,
including worse to us. And that, is that.
But it most assuredly is not…. for if we wish to derive a good result
from this entirely avoidable incident a very different response is
called for. For if we leave this now in this way we shall surely pay for
our negligence with more such incidents, frequent and worse.
The curriculum of war as taught at our great military institutions
must be enhanced to include tuition, instruction, and practical training
on how to handle the urge to maim, murder, desecrate and outrage our
opponents. For if you do not make the act reprehensible and make it
clear what must be done and how it must be done, you are surely inviting
its frequent occurrence. In other words, silence on this aspect of war,
every war, is tantamount to condoning what you say is reprehensible.
And so swift, positive action is necessary… so that America and the
world need never wake up again to graphic, tangible evidence that we say
one thing but do and accept another.
Too much brought to our attention, too little time for thoughtful
consideration and response. Sadly, the very process that brought us the
intelligence on this incidence will bury it and fast. For the shear
amount of data on so many subjects of significance and importance acts
to sweep this outrage away… replacing it — for just a minute — with
others. We once thought that bringing outrages to wide attention would
be sufficient to effect reform… but the very ease of disseminating and
posting information, its shear volume, has submerged the desired goal.
And so, as information explodes and its demands on us grow onerous, the
urge neither to see nor to hear evil grows apace… evil proliferating,
evil tolerated, evil condoned, thinly condemned, broadly ignored, a fact
of life that dismays us but which we will not seriously confront, and
less so every single day .
God help us.
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