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While Iraq Burns
By BOB HERBERT
November
27, 2006
Americans
are shopping while Iraq burns.
The
competing television news images on the morning after Thanksgiving
were of the unspeakable carnage in Sadr City — where more than 200
Iraqi civilians were killed by a series of coordinated car bombs —
and the long lines of cars filled with holiday shopping zealots that
jammed the highway approaches to American malls that had opened for
business at midnight.
A
Wal-Mart in Union, N.J., was besieged by customers even before it
opened its doors at 5 a.m. on Friday. “All I can tell you,” said
a Wal-Mart employee, “is that they were fired up and ready to
spend money.”
There
is something terribly wrong with this juxtaposition of gleeful
Americans with fistfuls of dollars storming the department store
barricades and the slaughter by the thousands of innocent Iraqi
civilians, including old people, children and babies. The war was
started by the U.S., but most Americans feel absolutely no sense of
personal responsibility for it.
Representative
Charles Rangel recently proposed that the draft be reinstated,
suggesting that politicians would be more reluctant to take the
country to war if they understood that their constituents might be
called up to fight. What struck me was not the uniform opposition to
the congressman’s proposal — it has long been clear that there
is zero sentiment in favor of a draft in the U.S. — but the fact
that it never provoked even the briefest discussion of the
responsibilities and obligations of ordinary Americans in a time of
war.
With
no obvious personal stake in the war in Iraq, most Americans are
indifferent to its consequences. In an interview last week, Alex
Racheotes, a 19-year-old history major at Wesleyan University in
Connecticut, said: “I definitely don’t know anyone who would
want to fight in Iraq. But beyond that, I get the feeling that most
people at school don’t even think about the war. They’re more
concerned with what grade they got on yesterday’s test.”
His
thoughts were echoed by other students, including John Cafarelli, a
19-year-old sophomore at the University of New Hampshire, who was
asked if he had any friends who would be willing to join the Army.
“No, definitely not,” he said. “None of my friends even really
care about what’s going on in Iraq.”
This
indifference is widespread. It enables most Americans to go about
their daily lives completely unconcerned about the atrocities
resulting from a war being waged in their name. While shoppers here
are scrambling to put the perfect touch to their holidays with the
purchase of a giant flat-screen TV or a PlayStation 3, the news out
of Baghdad is of a society in the midst of a meltdown.
According
to the United Nations, more than 7,000 Iraqi civilians were killed
in September and October. Nearly 5,000 of those killings occurred in
Baghdad, a staggering figure.
In a
demoralizing reprise of life in Afghanistan under Taliban rule, the
U.N. reported that in Iraq: “The situation of women has continued
to deteriorate. Increasing numbers of women were recorded to be
either victims of religious extremists or ‘honor killings.’ Some
non-Muslim women are forced to wear a headscarf and to be
accompanied by spouses or male relatives.”
Journalists
in Iraq are being “assassinated with utmost impunity,” the U.N.
report said, with 18 murdered in the last two months.
Iraq
burns. We shop. The Americans dying in Iraq are barely mentioned in
the press anymore. They warrant maybe one sentence in a long roundup
article out of Baghdad, or a passing reference — no longer than a
few seconds — in a television news account of the latest political
ditherings.
Since
the vast majority of Americans do not want anything to do with the
military or the war, the burden of fighting has fallen on a small
cadre of volunteers who are being sent into the war zone again and
again. Nearly 3,000 have been killed, and many thousands more have
been maimed.
The
war has now lasted as long as the American involvement in World War
II. But there is no sense of collective sacrifice in this war, no
shared burden of responsibility. The soldiers in Iraq are fighting,
suffering and dying in a war in which there are no clear objectives
and no end in sight, and which a majority of Americans do not
support.
They
are dying anonymously and pointlessly, while the rest of us are free
to buckle ourselves into the family vehicle and head off to the
malls and shop.
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