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Chicago Sun Times , November 12, 2004
How Many More
Iraqis Must Die for Our Revenge?
by Andrew Greeley
The election is over and so we can forget about
the Iraq war. It is no longer a political issue
and hence matters to no one. The American electorate
has followed the tradition of standing by a
wartime president and thus endorsing the president's
war. It was once his war. Now the election
has made it our war. The issue is closed.
A recent report suggested that if one compares
the number of deaths that usually occur in
Iraq per year with the number since Bush's
invasion, the cost of the war in dead Iraqis
may be more than a hundred thousand human beings.
Now Iraqi deaths don't count because they look
funny and talk funny and have a funny religion.
Besides they're Arabs, and we have a score
to settle with Arabs because of their attack
on the World Trade Center. Yet if we are able
to sustain the number of deaths that have happened
as a consequence of the invasion, we will soon
have accounted for as many as Saddam Hussein
did. That's a lot of dead Arabs -- and a lot
of bereaved spouses, parents, children, other
relatives and friends. How many before will
we have to kill before we're satisfied with
our revenge?
Someone might say that when leaders of a country
have caused so many deaths that they might
just deserve to be hauled before an international
court of justice as war criminals -- especially
if the war was based on false premises and
conducted with an ineptitude that staggers
the mind. It is an unnecessary, unjust, stupid,
sinful war. The majority of Americans have
assumed responsibility for the war. Therefore
they share responsibility for all the Iraqi
deaths.
OK, lets say there's only 50,000 extra dead.
So that's not so bad, right? Americans are
never going to have to render an accounting
to their Creator for having supported such
a massacre. Right?
I don't judge the conscience of anyone, leader
or follower. I am merely saying that there
is objective sin in the Iraq war, and our country
as a country is guilty of sin. I'll leave it
to God to judge the guilt, because that's God's
job. I also leave it to God to judge whether
there ought to be punishment for that sin.
However, I think Americans -- so serenely confident
that the Lord is on our side -- should live
in fear and trembling about punishment.
The terrorists blew up the World Trade Center
because they believed that the United States
has done terrible things to Palestinians. The
next explosion will be revenge for what we
have done to Iraqis. We may not have been responsible
for the plight of the Palestinians -- though
very few Muslims believe that. We are certainly
responsible for what we have done and will
do to the Iraqis during the next four years
of folly. God help us all.
Because we are the only superpower, there is
little chance that our leaders will be indicted
as war criminals or that an invading army will
punish the American people the way we punished
the Germans after the war.
Don't give me that stuff that the Iraq war is
not comparable to World War II. That argument
deliberately misses the point that a country
is responsible for the deaths it causes because
of an unjust war, even if the deaths are numerically
small compared to deaths from another war.
An unjust war is an unjust war and the death
of innocents is the death of innocents. Where
does one want to draw the numerical limit after
which the unnecessary deaths of the innocent
become a horrible crime? How many hundred thousand?
The United States has fought unjust wars before
-- Mexican American, the Indian Wars, Spanish
American, the Filipino Insurrection, Vietnam.
Our hands are not clean. They are covered with
blood this time, and there'll be more blood
this time.
The one faintly bright spot is that our victorious
wartime president, now that he has been re-elected,
might be able to extricate himself from Iraq
more quickly than John Kerry. The war will
never end unless and until the American government
or the American people say that it's time to
get out.
Will that require four more years?
(And before Catholics write me hate mail saying
that I'm a disgrace for attacking the war,
they should ponder writing a letter to the
pope who has made no secret of his opposition.)
© 2004 The Sun Times Company
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