by Chris Hedges and Laila Al-Arian
Over the past several months The Nation has interviewed fifty combat
veterans of the Iraq War from around the United States in an effort to
investigate the effects of the four-year-old occupation on average Iraqi
civilians. These combat veterans, some of whom bear deep emotional and
physical scars, and many of whom have come to oppose the occupation, gave
vivid, on-the-record accounts. They described a brutal side of the war
rarely seen on television screens or chronicled in newspaper accounts.
Their stories, recorded and typed into thousands of pages of transcripts,
reveal disturbing patterns of behavior by American troops in Iraq. . . .
Many of these veterans returned home deeply disturbed by the disparity
between the reality of the war and the way it is portrayed by the US
government and American media. The war the vets described is a dark and even
depraved enterprise, one that bears a powerful resemblance to other
misguided and brutal colonial wars and occupations, from the French
occupation of Algeria to the American war in Vietnam and the Israeli
occupation of Palestinian territory.
"I'll tell you the point where I really turned," said Spc. Michael Harmon,
24, a medic from Brooklyn. He served a thirteen-month tour beginning in
April 2003 with the 167th Armor Regiment, Fourth Infantry Division, in
Al-Rashidiya, a small town near Baghdad. "I go out to the scene and [there
was] this little, you know, pudgy little 2-year-old child with the cute
little pudgy legs, and I look and she has a bullet through her leg.... An
IED [improvised explosive device] went off, the gun-happy soldiers just
started shooting anywhere and the baby got hit. And this baby looked at me,
wasn't crying, wasn't anything, it just looked at me like--I know she
couldn't speak. It might sound crazy, but she was like asking me why. You
know, Why do I have a bullet in my leg?... I was just like, This is--this is
it. This is ridiculous." . . .
FULL TEXT
Robert Dreyfuss, "Our Monsters In
Iraq," TomPaine.com, November 18, 2005
Nir Rosen, "Iraqis were not primarily Sunnis
or Shiites," Washington Post, May 16, 2007
Dahr Jamail, "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded
Journalist in Occupied Iraq," Haymarket Books (October 2007)