By Irwin Ozborne
Contributing writer for Wake Up World
“We were told to just shoot people, and the Officers would take care of us” – Iraqi War Veteran
Abeer Qassim al-Janabi, was a 14-year-old girl who was gang-raped by U.S. Soldiers while they killed her family before ending her life. It was all pre-meditated, and they targeted her because there was only one male living in that house.
“During the time me and Barker were raping Abeer, I heard five or six gunshots that came from the bedroom,” Sgt. Paul Cortez admitted. “After Barker was done, Green came out of the bedroom and said that he had killed them all, that all of them were dead. Green then placed himself between Abeer’s legs to rape her,” he added, “When Green was finished, he stood up and shot Abeer in the head two or three times.”
The entire crime took about five minutes and the girl knew her parents and sister had been shot while she was being raped.
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However, this was clearly not an isolated incident as Kelly Doughetery, former director of Veterans Against the War, explained:
“The abuses committed in the occupations, far from being the result of a ‘few bad apples’ misbehaving, are the result of our government’s Middle East policy, which is crafted in the highest spheres of US power.”
Disclaimer of Cognitive Dissonance:
Before reading any further, I would like to inform the reader that this article will likely provoke strong emotional reaction and some will find it offensive. In fact, I already am aware of many of the negative remarks that will arise, so I will just address them now.
- I do not hate the troops and I do not hate people associated with the military. Quite the contrary, I feel badly for them because they are being brainwashed, manipulated, and used to fight bogus wars under the disguise of protecting our freedom; when in reality they are only fighting to secure financial interests for the elite and corporations. Then when they return with PTSD, injuries, mental health, addiction, unemployment, homelessness, anger, and violence, they VA does not provide the services they need. They are treated like pawns to profit those at top.
- Some will say, “Not all the troops misbehave and you are focusing on the minority.” This is true, the majority of the troops are good people who follow orders. However, the orders that they are following are destructive and evil. Many of Hitler’s Gestapo were probably good people following orders, but they will always be viewed as evil by association.
- Some will say, “How can you not support the troops, when they are protecting your freedom?” They do not protect my freedoms. All military interventions since World War II have been solely to secure resources from third world nations to help profit American businesses. This is all done under disguises of threats – such as the Cold War with no clear enemy and the threat of Communism; the War on Drugs with no clear enemy; and the War on Terror. (To learn more, please see the article: Ending the U.S. Doctrine of Perpetual War.)
- Death threats and personal attacks: I can handle personal attacks, as that just shows me that you have nothing to argue the statements of the article. However, death threats are always quite ironic. The death threats come from veterans or military supporters because they have so much love for their country. They tell me that they dedicated their lives to protecting my freedoms. First, see number three, you did not protect my freedoms. And second, if you care so much about my freedoms, you should be happy that I am exercising them. To threaten to end my life for stating my point of view is not protecting my freedom, that is actually imposing on me that I am not allowed these freedoms unless it follows a certain point of view.
The U.S. Doctrine of Perpetual War
Immediately after World War II, the United States has been intervening in countries as a means to making the world safe for American corporations; enhancing financial statements of defense contractors and members of congress; preventing the rise of any society that might serve as a successful example of an alternative to capitalism.
In 1953, the United States overthrew the Iran government after they tried to nationalize and profit off their own resources, oil. This led to oppression and torture of the Iranian people, while foreign powers took over control of their oil.
Similarly in Guatemala, the democratically elected government was seeking to nationalize the United Fruit Company. The United States turned this into a death field under the disguise of a Soviet threat, in reality the US had huge commercial interests in the United Fruit Company.
The same things happened if you were neutral in the Cold War, you would soon get paid a visit by the United States to provide you “Freedom.” It happened in Italy, Greece, Albania, Indonesia, and the list goes on. Of course the Korean War and Vietnam Wars as set out in our history books, seems to conveniently miss any mention of the ‘Secret Wars’ in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand during the Veitnam War..
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In the Congo, their first democratically elected president called for economic liberation which was later deemed as communism. Eleven days later he was assassinated by the request of President Eisenhower. The area is one of the richest in the world with natural resources, but the people live in extreme poverty as there is constant genocide in the area as people work in the mines to sell diamonds and cobalt to Western powers.
This list goes on-and-on (Indonesia, Chile, Nicaragua, Libya, El Savlador, Haiti, Panama, Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.) with more than 70 different countries in which we, the US, have intervened in the past seventy years. That is on average of one country per year we have invaded for nearly a century to support American interests, not protect my freedoms.
As Ethan Indigo Smith explained in a 2015 article,
The fact is, the United States has been at war for 222 years out of the last 239 years. That’s 93% of the time! Since the Declaration of Independence was written in 1776, the U.S. has actually been at peace (albeit planning for further wars) for a total of only 21 years. [source] Not one U.S. president actually qualifies as a solely peacetime president, and the only time the United States lasted five years without going to war was between 1935 and 1940 — during the period of the Great Depression…
Since U.S. involvement in World War II began in 1940, most of the world’s military operations have been initiated by the U.S., [source] and U.S. military spending today exceeds the rest of the world’s military spending combined. [source] … Today, the U.S. economy is now so dependent on war, there is no incentive for the U.S. government to strive for peace — it simply isn’t profitable. The U.S. defense industry employs a staggering 3.5 million Americans, while the private companies supporting the military generate in excess of $300 billion in revenue per year. [source]
Supporting the Troops
“Why did you shoot me?”, asked a six-year-old child. “That’s not fair. I’m just a girl. I do not do anything, I just had my doll in my hand. Why you shoot me?… I was just riding in my car with my family and I got injured so I had to have surgery,” said the child, “… because I got shot [by the] American people.”
She lived, but her family members are among the 165,000 Iraqi civilians killed in the Iraq War since 2003. However, that number is only based on officially reported information; household surveys estimate between 400,000 and 650,000 deaths.
So what exactly am I supposed to be supporting? That they are just doing their job?
Supporters of the war in Iraq should realize that the function of mainstream news is to garner your consent to war, not report on it accurately, and do some outside research as to what is really happening without just blindly supporting the troops — just because they are American.
“I guess while I was there, the general attitude was, a dead Iraqi is just another dead Iraqi”, said Spc. Jeff Englehart, 26, of Grand Junction, Colorado.
“I remember one woman walking by”, said Jason Washburn, a corporal in the US Marines who served three tours in Iraq. He told the audience at the Winter Soldier hearings that took place March 13-16, 2008, in Silver Spring, Maryland, “She was carrying a huge bag, and she looked like she was heading toward us, so we lit her up with the Mark 19, which is an automatic grenade launcher, and when the dust settled, we realized that the bag was full of groceries. She had been trying to bring us food and we blew her to pieces.”
In 2007, WikiLeaks revealed footage of U.S. Soldiers killing 12 civilians and wounding two children.
In 2012, former United States Navy SEAL Chris Kyle wrote an autobiographical book, “American Sniper”, referring to the Iraqis as the ‘savages’. This (fictional) book was turned into a propaganda film in 2014, and used to promote further killings.
This is what we are supporting when we say “We Support the Troops.” We are supporting systematic and barbaric killings of countless innocent people, to provide for a war that benefits corporations and the political interests they profit from. The Yellow Ribbon we proudly display to show our pride is the modern-day equivalent of the Swastika, showing our support for militant savagery.
“Collateral Damage”
There have been a few cases in which these stories actually make it into the mainstream media. In Afghanistan, an army squad commander was reported to have led a “Kill Team” in which innocent civilians were killed for sport and their body parts collected as trophies. And in 2006, the Al Ishaqi massacre in Iraq was reported to have included the killing of 11 innocent civilians including five children and four women. The Pentagon portrays this as part of an operation directed at Al Qaeda.
However, so many more everyday occurrences like this never reach the headlines; a boy with both his arms lost, a dead baby on the pavement, or cars full of dead families that were trying to escape the war zone.
But what happens, when you are an eye-witness to these slayings and reveal the information to the American public? You get sent to prison. United States Army soldier Bradley Manning released thousands of documents to WikiLeaks that provided evidence of U.S. torture, abuse, and soldiers laughing as they killed civilians. Were the soldiers involved punished? No, but in 2013 Manning was sentenced to prison for 35 years for violating the United States Espionage Act — for exposing the truth.
The Haditha killings in 2005 left 24 civilians dead – including women, elderly and children – who were shot multiple times from close range and were unarmed. The court case dragged on for six years before charges against six officers were dropped, another was found not guilty, and the eighth was convicted of negligent dereliction of duty and sentenced — to the lowering of his military rank.
In a few interviews with Marines it was later said that so many civilians were found dead after being killed by unknown factions in the Iraq conflict that civilian deaths seemed routine, and one sergeant testified that he would order his men to shoot vehicles that failed to stop at military checkpoints even if it were possible that children could be in the car.
One of the wars most iconic photographs (pictured) is Chris Hondros’s image of Samar Hassan, age 5, covered in blood screaming after just witnessing her parents being blown away by U.S. soldiers, as well as her 11-year-old brother severely injured. Her brother then went to the United States for treatment, and was later killed by insurgents in retaliation for going to the United States for treatment.
Then there is three-year-old, Dalal, sitting in her home with her family in late March of 2003. At 3-years-old, we are still exploring the world and trying to figure out how things work. But, for Dalal, she would figure out more truth about how the world works at age 3 than most Americans will learn in a lifetime. Her home was hit with a missile, which killed her brother and injured her mother. She also lost her right leg that day.
And Omar, age 7, was traveling to Bahgdad to visit relatives when they came upon ‘confused’ U.S. troops who opened fire. Omar’s father was shot twice in the back trying to rescue his son. He got him out of the car, but could not rescue his wife – Omar’s mother – as she burnt to death.
“My whole family was devastated by what was happening,” said Omar’s father, “The most devastating was losing my wife.”
The United States refers to these losses of life as “collateral damage.”
An estimated four-percent of Iraq’s population has been killed due to the war since 1991 and that does not include the ongoing poverty, starvation, disease, cancer from depleted uranium and birth defects. That “collateral damages” sounds more like genocide.
Khalid Hamdan Abd lost two of his sons, three cousins, and has his infant daughter was wounded with 17 pieces of micro-shrapnel in one eye and 11 pieces of micro-shrapnel in the other eye, and a detached retina. He was brought to America by a group called No More Victims who helped provide surgery for his infant daughter to prevent her from going blind. He states:
“It is kind of scary to go back, because even if you are just driving your car peacefully in the street, you might be shot by the American troops for no reason.”
These stories don’t even begin to include the families being wiped away by drone strikes in Pakistan. An estimated 200 children have been killed due to drone strikes, about which one 16-year-old states, “we no longer like when skies are blue, because drones don’t fly in gray skies.”
President Obama refers to drone strikes as “targeted killing”; however the reality is that they have targeted 41 men, which has resulted in the deaths of 1,147 others.
Buried deep in the $800-billion defense budget, the Pentagon agreed to add in five million dollars to fund families killed by American airstrikes. I guess the next logical step, would be to admit to the ongoing war crimes committed daily in these wars.
An Understanding Perspective
When two kids get into a playground argument and turns into a fight, the teachers, principal, or other adults will pull them aside and ask each to tell their story. The two kids hear the other’s perspective and they can understand how the argument started and they teach the children how to resolve conflict in the future.
In political life, it doesn’t work like this. Only the winner gets to tell their side of the story. In turn, they blame the other party for the troubles and turn themselves into the heroes. Anytime two cultures clash, this is the result. The winners write history.
As we go through school, we are taught that we have always been the “good guys” fighting for freedom and justice and peace, and everyone else was always bad. How is this possible? A country that has been at war in 223 out of their 240 years of existence and currently has more than 800 foreign military bases worldwide is not protecting their freedoms, they are invading and occupying others.
Read the stories above again and imagine if that was taking place in your home country. Would you be thankful that these troops are “bringing you freedom?” The fact is, they don’t hate us for our freedom, they hate us for raping, maiming and killing their families.
About the author:
A writer and avid historian, Irwin Ozborne (a pen-name) is a survivor of childhood abuse and torture over a period of 13 years, and a recovered alcoholic. As a mental health practitioner, today Irwin practices holistic care and incorporates eastern philosophy into his work with clients. Irwin is also a contributing writer for Taking The Mask Off, a website dedicated to shining a light on the mental health industry, as well as other areas of our society that are shrouded in deceit and misinformation.
Irwin is available for speaking engagements as well, and can be contacted via email: [email protected]
Also by Irwin Ozborne:
- Over The Rainbow: The (Yellow Brick) Road to Enlightenment
- The Other Side: The Spiritual Gift of Borderline Personality Disorder
- The War On Drugs: How the “Land of the Free” Became the “Home of the Slaves” for 2.3 Million Americans
- Celebrating Genocide – Christopher Columbus’ Invasion of America
- Licensed to Kill: Psychiatry, Big Pharma and the State-Sanctioned Drug Cartel
- The Craving Behind the Craving: Addiction as a Spiritual Disease
- Bipolar? Or Gifted? The Modern Day Epidemic of Medicated “Madness”
- Suicide: Falling Through the Cracks of Stigma
- The Fictions Surrounding ADHD and the “Chemical Imbalance” Theory of Mental Illness
- Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: The Implicit Oppression of Women
- Ignorance Is Not Bliss – The Truth About the Diamond Industry
Taking the Mask Off: Destroying the Stigmatic Barriers of Mental Health and Addiction Using a Spiritual Solution
“Taking the Mask Off” is the new book by Cortland Pfeffer and Irwin Ozborne. Cortland Pfeffer spent years as a patient in psychiatric hospitals, treatment centers, and jails before becoming a registered nurse and working in the same facilities. Based on his experience, this story is told from both sides of the desk. It offers a unique and valuable perspective into mental health and addiction, revealing the problems with the psychiatric industry while also providing the solution – one that brings together science, spirituality, philosophy, and personal experience.
“Taking the Mask Off: Destroying the Stigmatic Barriers of Mental Health and Addiction Using a Spiritual Solution” is available on Amazon, and Balboa Press.
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