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Boston Globe, January 7, 2005
The 'tsunami'
victims that we don't count
By Derrick Z. Jackson
SECRETARY of State Colin Powell tours tsunami-stricken
Banda Aceh and says, "I cannot begin to
imagine the horror that went through the families
and all of the people who heard this noise
coming and then had their lives snuffed out
by this wave."
Richard Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, issued a resolution that
said: "The tsunami disaster constitutes
a humanitarian tragedy of incredible proportions.
. . . My heart goes out to the victims of this
tragedy."
Last and hardly least, President Bush said: "The
devastation in the region defies comprehension.
. . . Our flags will fly at half-staff to honor
the victims of this disaster. We mourn especially
the tens of thousands of children who are lost.
We think of the tens of thousands more who
will grow up without their parents or their
brothers or their sisters. We hold in our prayers
all the people whose fate is still unknown."
In the abstract, the outpouring was appropriate.
In context, the sympathy was a stench unto
itself. Tens of thousands of people die by
an act of nature and we say we cannot imagine
the horror. We say it defies comprehension.
We call it a catastrophe.
In Iraq we kill off thousands, perhaps tens of
thousands of innocent civilians with our own
hands, and we reject any attempt to comprehend
what we have done. Countless Iraqi civilians
are homeless. We call it liberation.
Bush quoted all the numbers for the tsunami in
speeches this week: 150,000 lives lost, including
90,000 in Indonesia; perhaps 5 million homeless;
millions vulnerable to disease. That stands
in hypocritical contrast to the refusal to
count the Iraqi civilians killed in his invasion
over false claims of weapons of mass destruction
and the crime-ridden chaos of an occupation
that did not plan on an "insurgency."
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former
Iraqi commander Tommy Franks both said, "We
don't do body counts." Then, right in
our faces, Powell said civilian casualty figures
were "relatively low." Central Command
spokesman Pete Mitchell hailed the invasion
for its "unbelievably low amount of collateral
damage and needless civilian death." Paul
Bremer, Bush's former civilian reconstruction
envoy, said, "We have freed people with
one of the great military battles of all time,
in a period of three weeks, with almost no
collateral damage, very few civilian deaths,
and they are now free."
The White House left the counting to journalists,
doctors, think tanks, and human rights groups.
The numbers range from conservative guesses
of 3,200 in the first few weeks of the war
and occupation estimates ranging from 15,000
to 100,000. No matter if the number was 3,200
or 32,000, this atrocity of silence makes the
torture in Abu Ghraib pale in comparison.
No flags have been flown at half-staff for Iraqi
civilians. There have been no moments of silence
in Congress. There have been no speeches by
Bush mourning "the tens of thousands of
children who are lost." Americans have
not been asked to think of the "tens of
thousands more who will grow up without their
parents or their brothers or their sisters."
In a nation that supposedly reelected Bush on
"moral values," there have been no
prayers from the White House for "all
the people whose fate is still unknown"
in Iraq. This was a bipartisan hypocrisy. Even
Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader,
fell into the trap of favoritism, fueling the
appearance that this war was a religious crusade.
At the beginning of the war she said, "We
pray for the swift and successful disarmament
of Iraq with the least possible loss of life
among our forces and the civilians of Iraq."
But then she closed her message with: "May
God bless our courageous forces and their brave
families. May God bless the president of the
United States. And may God bless America."
Not once did Pelosi or any American politician
say in the last two years, "God bless
Iraqi civilians" or any variant. Only
one time has Bush uttered "God bless the
people of Iraq," and that was in announcing
Saddam Hussein's capture. Not once has he asked
God's blessing for the courageous civilians
and the families of Iraq who had no choice
but to brave our bombs.
Let us do what we can for the victims of the
tsunami. But no matter how much we weep for
them, no matter what donations we spare, the
offerings will not spare us from history's
judgment, if not God's. Lugar said his heart
goes out to the victims of the tsunami. No
hearts have gone out to Iraqi civilians in
this heartless coverup.
Powell said of the tsunami, "The power of
the wave to destroy bridges, to destroy factories,
to destroy homes, to destroy crops, to destroy
everything in its path is amazing." He
said, "I have never seen anything like
it in my experience."
Yes, he has. It was in Iraq. The tsunami was
us.
Derrick Z. Jackson's e-mail address is jackson@globe.com.
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