The Age of Innocence, Moctezuma's Warriors |
by Daniel Cano
The First World War, boys, it came and it went
The reason for fightin' I never did get
But I learned to accept it, accept it with pride
For you don't count the dead when God's on your side
We forgave the Germans, and then we were friends
Though they murdered six million, in the ovens they fried
The Germans now too have God on their side
(Bob Dylan “With God on Our Side”)
“We submit to pragmatists, profiteers, and
the paranoiacs who insist that war is part of our humanity, our identity.”
Viet Thanh Nguyen, Vietnamese American professor and
novelist, University of Southern Cal
“War is a racket. It always has been. It
is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It
is the only one international in scope.”
Gen. Smedley Butler, USMC, recipient of two
Congressional Medals of Honor
As a veteran
who saw enough death to last me a lifetime, I often think about these quotations,
pointing out society’s contradictions, paradoxes, and justifications for war. I’m
also intrigued by Tennyson’s words in his epic poem Charge of the Light
Brigade, “Theirs is not to reason why/theirs is but to do and die.”
Maybe that’s
why governments encourage teenagers to enlist in the military. They’re malleable, easy to manipulate and control.
They don’t know enough to ask intelligent questions, yet, about politics or war,
and even if they did, the reasons societies go to war is usually wrapped up in patriotic
soundbites, “For Liberty and Freedom,” “For God and Country,” “So we don’t have
to fight on our soil,” “They’re communists,” “They’re fascists,” or something,
like, “Khrushchev, Fidel, Ho Chi Minh, Saddam, Putin, Noriega, and Kaddafi are all
evil, or insane.”
I remember a
few years after 9-11. I was teaching at a community college and things were heating
up in the Middle East. Bush and Cheney threatened their national security people to find Saddam’s weapons of mass destruction. When neither international inspectors,
nor their own national security teams could find such weapons, Bush, Cheney,
and Rumsfeld did their best to hide the truth. They went a step further. They put
their errand boy, a respected general, Colin Powell on television to show the
American public, and the world, grainy photos of Iraqi trucks carrying huge tubes and claiming
those were the so-called “smoking guns,” obviously to be used for, none other,
than WMD’s. People bought it, didn't question it, or didn't even care.
“Shock and
Awe” followed, and it mesmerized Americans and proved that nobody should mess
with us. USA! USA! USA!
I’d walk
across the campus quad and see Army and Marine recruiters set up recruitment
tables right next to college and university recruiters who were there to
provide information about higher education to students. By that time, I’d researched
the Vietnam War, and many wars, friend and foe, and I realized most wars could
have been avoided, except many politicians failed to heed the calls. Other interests were in play.
I saw it as
a duty to convince my students, Latinos and African Americans, to stay in school, transfer, and earn their degrees
before making life-changing decisions. By this time, the country had transitioned
to an all-volunteer military, so students had a choice. They weren’t breaking
any laws by rejecting a draft, as in my war. I wanted them to make informed decisions.
So, it
angered me when I saw that, unlike university recruiters who would sit at a
table and wait for students to come to them and request information, the
military recruiters, often young, “strac,” African American and Latinos decked
out in sharp class-A uniforms, were much more aggressive.
If a
student came up to them to inquire, the military recruiter wouldn’t just
provide information, but like used-car salesmen, pressured the kids, with a sweet pot of gold, to sign up right there. If no students came to them, the military
recruiters would walk out among the students, targeting Latino and African-America
more than the Anglo and Asian students, as if stalking them.
Sometimes
I’d listen, and I’d hear the military recruiters promising these kids the sky,
world travel, job training in the highest paid professions, Officer Candidate
School, free education after the military, not a word about war or the Middle
East. A couple of times, I approached the military recruiters, identifying
myself as a vet. I’d tell them, “You know, we’re trying to get these kids just to
finish college. What you’re promising is false. You're painting a rosy picture.
Why don’t you tell them if you don’t meet your recruitment quota, you’ll lose
your cushiony job and probably get sent to Afghanistan or Iraq?”
I’d say it
tongue-in-cheek, like we both knew the scam. They wouldn’t admit it, but they understood
and say something like, “Look, Professor, we’re just doing our job,” which I
understood, but how many students would buy their sales’ pitch and find out it, too late, it was all a lie?
Some
students who knew I was a veteran would come up to me and tell me they were
considering enlisting. I’d tell the recruiters needed to make a quota each
month and much of what they were being promised wouldn’t come true. More than
likely, they’d find themselves in a Humvee patrolling the streets of Iraq.
I remember
one student, a smart Chicano, high grades, and a bright academic future. He
fell for the military line, especially about getting his education paid for
once he got out, and how it would help his parents. I told him whatever
professional training they promised him, if he didn’t pass all their tests and the
training, his contract with Uncle Sam would be void. The military could do
whatever it wanted with him, probably the infantry, fighting a war most
Americans didn’t really care about. What good would it do his parents if he was
dead? I didn’t hold back.
I could see
his eyes were blank. He already saw himself in a uniform and everybody proud of
him. He said if he died in combat that was just a part of being in the
military. That’s when I knew I’d lost him.
I made it a
habit in my classes to talk to both male and female students about military
recruiters, their promises, and tactics. They were as bad as the credit card
companies getting them to take out cards, loans, and no way to pay back the
banks. They’d end up in debt, possibly having to drop out of school.
I attended administration meetings and supported plans to ban military recruiters from campus. On Fox News, Bill O’ Reilly called teachers like me traitors for discouraging college student to join the military. Funny, I didn’t’ see Jeb Bush’s or Mitt Romneys gaggle of sons rushing to join the military. The Bush administration threatened to withhold government subsidies from any institution of higher education who did not admit recruiters on to their campuses. Then, little by little, the media began publishing stories coming out of the Middle East. How the military had created false stories about Jessica Lynch and football star turned Army ranger, Pat Tillman, turning them into heroes, all lies.
Nobody knew what to believe, and whether anyone other than Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda was responsible for 9-11. Most Americans had no idea about Sunnis, Shiites, Wahabi, or the myriad of other Muslim factions. They didn’t know the difference between the Northern Alliance, provincial war lords, or communist Muslims, all taking a cut of the money the U.S was pouring into the region.
Like
Vietnam, wars in the Middle East had been fought by war lords, oil
corporations, real estate and construction conglomerates, religions, and puppet
governments going back generations. Americans, and hundreds of thousands of
innocent Afghanis and Iraqis were dying, and for what?
It took
twenty years to get out, and still, nobody could really answer why we were
there, except the world’s manufacturers of weapons and military equipment, who
walked away making billions of dollars in profits, giving rise to new war
profiteers, like Haliburton and Blackwater, whose employees earned hundreds to
thousands of more dollars than the Army, Navy, and Marine forces fighting and
dying. Luckily, when the media began reporting this to the public, some people
began to understand the waste, and the military recruiters slowly disappeared
from campus.
So, as this
Veteran Day nears, I think about some friends who never made it home from
Vietnam, like Wayne Podlesnik, a handsome nineteen-year-old lady’s man, a real
charmer from a steel town in Pennsylvania; Nathaniel Dabon, a buck sergeant, a
husband and a new father, from Chicago, who just wanted to get home to his
family, and a guy we knew only as Mac, something of a hustler, but a joker with
a great laugh, all gone on the same day, their bullet riddled bodies found scattered around the battery area after an attack.
Eventually,
many in the government, like Robert McNamara, ex-Secretary of Defense, admitted
that the country had made a terrible mistake going to Vietnam.
Yes, and for all of us vets, as this day, our day nears, only we can answer for ourselves what Alfred Lord Tennyson may have meant when he wrote, “Theirs is not to reason why, theirs is but to do and die.”
Maybe we should do a little
more reasoning before engaging in wars with other countries, especially when we
all believe that “God is on our side.”
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