Posted on 11/17/2004 10:23:29 AM PST by cgk
By David D. Perlmutter
November 17, 2004
It's an irony that the week that some American television stations pulled "Saving Private Ryan" because of harsh language, many others aired parts of a video that purports to show an American Marine shooting a wounded and unarmed civilian in Fallujah.
The link between Steven Spielberg's fictional (but realistic) film about World War II and a real event in the Iraq war is a reminder that, with so few of us having combat experience or studying warfare in school, the historical context of modern combat needs to be explained better.
Television networks were responsible in that most of them edited the Fallujah images when, apparently, a Marine thought an Iraqi man was faking death and shot him in the head. But the incident also requires a detailed discussion (and visualization) of its historical context. The truth is that this is how you fight a war against an amoral terrorist enemy. Further, what that Marine did was commonplace in the history of America at war: if you condemn him, then you also attack the "greatest generation" veterans of World War II.
Take a famous scene from "Saving Private Ryan." At Normandy Beach, American soldiers, after terrible losses, finally knock out one enemy bunker with a flamethrower and Germans tumble out on fire, screaming in agony. "Let 'em burn," responds one GI without remorse. Witnessed from the comfort of our living room, it is a shocking statement and scene. But in the context of the film and of war it is understandable.
I show this clip regularly to my students and invite reactions. One young woman said, "I can imagine being so angry, so vengeful at the enemy that just killed your buddies that you don't care what happens to them." I would only add one factor to her analysis: uncertainty. In a study I conducted on police work, the most fearful thing about a cop's job, I felt, was that you never knew who would pull out a gun and who wouldn't. In a war against terrorists everybody is a potential combatant and every doorway a potential deathtrap.
American warriors of the past knew this. Michael Lee Lanning wrote in his account of "Vietnam, 1969: A Company Commander's Journal" that Viet Cong or North Vietnamese army fighters regularly feigned surrender, incapacitation or death in order to lure GIs into grenade or rifle range. Even the actual dead were booby-trapped. The average GI learned quickly to "shoot and throw grenades at the body" rather than risk enemy treachery. No surprise that war historian and analyst James F. Dunnigan estimated that, "Historically 50 percent of those surrendering [in war] do not survive the process."
In Iraq, American servicemen and women face insurgents who hide, store weapons and fight from hospitals, homes and religious places and from among civilians, booby-trap their own dead as well as those of our soldiers, disguise themselves as women and noncombatants, and, yes, fake surrender as a prelude to murder-suicide. Early in the war, British soldiers even reported insurgents picking up small children to use as human shields during a fire fight.
So what was that young Marine in Fallujah to do: wait until faking Iraqis blew him, his buddies and the camera crew up? He played it safe: he's alive, and so are the embedded journalists.
In fact, we can estimate that a sizable number of U.S. casualties in Iraq were because of the basic decency of the America soldier, sailor, Marine and flier.
That is the story that needs more reporting.
Prison scandals aside, the record of the American combatant for humanity even in the most chaotic circumstances is unequaled. In World War II, Japanese and German troops were often astonished at how well they were treated. Axis POWS in the United States, for example, were fed better food than found on the average (rationed) American civilian dinner plate. One German POW, asked about his experiences, commented that the smartest thing to do in war against America is to "get captured you'll have it made." An exaggeration? Yes, but also the most important message for the world about our latter-day Private Ryans in Fallujah and elsewhere. If you want to fight America and die, then your wish will be fulfilled. If you want to live, surrender to American mercy.
For ourselves, we now have two generations of Americans whose only experiences of battle have been watching the news and movies and playing "Halo." Years ago I did a study of the pictorial depiction of warfare in high school history textbooks. Among my findings: actual grim combat received almost no attention. It was censored as being too disturbing for young minds. We need to upturn that illogic by teaching all Americans what combat entails: the good, the bad and the necessary.
So9
Double tap him and the embedded traitor.
Excellent point - one I heard thankfully, made by a caller on the Michael Reagan show last night (was that you?)
Actually the "Look I've washed my hands for supper" scene would fit better to the story.
Yep! That cartoon I posted should be titled "Embedded Reporter at War" more than "Moral Values Voter at War."
I'm ticked and Danzinger for the Condi cartoon, but I gotta admit this one is pretty darn funny.
And Sandy Burglar belongs in jail.
One could go on ....
Thank you for posting that! Just signed it.
I am so angry they are smearing this Marine, and through this story - our entire military. If it were not for our military and allies Saddam would still be burying "babies and children clutching toys", raping women, maiming, torturing and murdering men women and children, extorting and bribing and selling the souls of Iraq's country for his luxury digs and paying for suicide bombers to continue their own mission of terror & martyrdom. Oh.. yes.. and buying and seeking WMD. Why did they ignore the stories of the R-400 bombs found with weaponized anthrax? Why is Sarin not a WMD?
Screw the MSM! Are they so unhappy they cannot continue the light stories of "Saddam receives unanimous vote by his people! (breathless)" that they will fight the men who are protecting them with their own lives? Protecting them so they can fax and phone in those bogus stories?
re: the Condi cartoon...
I couldn't find it over here... (http://cagle.slate.msn.com/politicalcartoons/pccartoons/archives/danziger.asp?Action=GetImage)
where'd you see it?
it's on rush's site
I'm not sure which scene that was.
But the scene that I think is most comparable is at the very end when the little guy shoots the burly German prisoner (Steamboat Willy). The kid convinced the other GIs to let this German go free about midway though the movie. At the end, this same Nazi soldier, who has taken up arms again, slowly plunges a knife through the heart of the Jewish GI (one of more gutwrenching scenes). After the Nazi is captured again, the kid walks up to the line of prisoners and shoots him.
Course, if all you saw was that end scene out of context, you'd think what a cold-blooded murderer this kid was.
I know it is not a popular position, but I think it is entirely appropriate for the military justice system to investigate exactly what happened and then handle it in compliance with military law. I believe the stresses and circumstances faced by the Marine will be taken into consideration appropriately.
Dunnigan's a smart guy, and he doesn't know, either. But he's trying to make is that surrendering is very dangerous.
There's a factor for any soldier intent on surrender needs to consider: it's very dangerous. The ground between contending forces is patrolled or observed by BOTH sides. That ground is likely to be mined & swept by automatic weapons & mortars.
The best way to survive is therefore to wait for the enemy to come to you. But there's a catch: Do not attempt to surrender to the enemy's assault troops (his first echelon). These men have a mission to consider, they have probably taken casualties, and they aren't very well equipped to take prisoners. If you pose any threat to them, or their mission YOU ARE DEAD.
So there's truly no way to know how many prisoners actually survive the "surrender process".
"Slandering Private Ryan"
IMHO that phrase resonates
Yes... I did see that one. Atrocious...
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