Friday, December 28, 2012

Another war criminal bites the dust

General Norman Schwarzkopf is dead. You might think of him as the Pentagon’s own General Omar Suleiman. Schwartzkopf was the US commander of the first US war against Iraq in 1990-1991, codenamed Operation Desert Storm by the Pentagon. Many refer to it as the “video game war” since that is precisely how the media treated it to distance viewers from the barbarism of that siege against the people of Iraq. It was a war noted for the US use of depleted uranium & other chemical weapons. The weapons caused a debilitating, incurable illness among US combatants called the Gulf War syndrome. But most importantly, it left a legacy in Iraq of unimaginable human suffering, especially for the children. Hundreds of thousands died or have since been born with deformities & disabilities--& without resources to cope since so many hospitals were bombed.

Civilians were a deliberate target of the thousands of sorties flown against Iraq cities, civilian shelters, hospitals, schools, factories (including those for medical supplies), roads, power stations, & the entire infrastructure of the country. (Now we know where Israel learned its tactics in Gaza!) There were tens of thousands of civilian casualties & no possible accurate accounting since the intention was to bring the Iraqi people & any possible resistance to their knees.

The sanctions against Iraq as a result of this war led to the death of 500,000 Iraqi children. The then US secretary of state, the despicable Madeleine Albright, notoriously made the statement on the 60-Minutes TV program (in 1996) that the US considered the price paid by these innocent children “worth it” to accomplish US goals.

The war was so daunting in its barbarity that it had a dampening affect on antiwar activity in the US & weakened a vibrant, active movement--from which it is still recovering. But be assured it will.

There’ll be eulogies galore for this war criminal. Our only regret is they weren’t written decades ago & delivered to his prison hospital. May he rest comfortably in the fires of hell. And we look forward to writing the obituary for Madeleine Albright.  (Caricature by Gene Haas)

5 comments:

  1. Good riddance..The world is a better place without this sac of excrement celebrated as a hero by the nauseating war-loving culture. Who would forget his direct responsibility in the death of thousands, including civilians, on the "highway of death" that even attorney general Ramsay Clark called a violation of the third Geneva Convention which outlaws the killing of forces out of combat.
    There's also the killing of disarmed soldiers who had also surrendered. Seymour Hersh alleges American combat vehicles opened fire on a large group of more than 350 disarmed Iraqi soldiers who had surrendered at a U.S. military checkpoint after fleeing the devastation on Highway 8 on February 27.[3]
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highway_of_Death

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    1. Amen to your comment! I wish had thought of the term "sac of excrement" when I wrote this.

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    2. Amen to your comment! I wish had thought of the term "sac of excrement" when I wrote this.

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  2. In the film "My Beautiful Launderette" a Pakistani father tells his British-born son, "You're not a real man until you've killed a man" (words along those lines). I sometimes wonder if this is an idea with widespread appeal among Americans. The opportunity to shoot and kill an unarmed opponent appears to be preferred. I remember when the killer Gary Gilmour was to be executed in Utah by firing squad. The authorities asked for volunteers to do the shooting, and was overwhelmed by the stampede of would-be participants.

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    1. I didn't know that about the Gilmour execution, Jemmy. Creepy as hell! (And btw, "My Beautiful Launderette" is a lovely movie as I remember it.)

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