Custom Search
  
Cowardice, American Style
by Sherwood Ross
  
  does it take to pummel a man tied to a  chair or chained to a wall? CIA interrogators don't have even the "sporting"  attitude of the schoolyard bully who attacks a weaker child. That might be  called a "fair fight" as the weaker could put up a defense. But those five-man  teams that torture the defenseless, by definition, have got to be the most  cowardly thugs on the planet. Somehow, this perspective has eluded the "24"  fiction writers at Fox television network who extol U.S. torturer Jack Bauer the  way Goebbels once extolled the SS. It has also eluded President Barack Obama, a  former employee of a CIA-front organization, who lavishly praised the CIA in a  speech at its Langley, Va., headquarters last year.
According to one reliable published report, more than 100  prisoners have died in U.S. custody since President Bush launched his "War on  Terror," yet this figure may be a pale shadow of the ugly reality, for there are  repeated tales of prisoners dragged from their cells in the dead of night and  "disappeared"---men whose murders may not appear in any Pentagon or CIA box  score. The actual figure could be in the many hundreds or thousands. Bear in  mind, too, that U.S. officials running the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan  are responsible for the crimes committed by any and all of their hired local hit  men as well as for the horrendous conditions in the detention  camps.
Put yourself for a moment in the shoes of a civilian suspect  arrested in Afghanistan by U.S. or U.K. soldiers' who is innocent of any  wrongdoing, as the vast majority of them have been said to be by impartial  observers. Without being allowed to hire a lawyer or to go before a judge, you  are imprisoned for months or years and tortured. Wouldn't being subjected to  these criminal acts against the law of nations invest you with a sense of  righteousness as well as defiance? As your martyrdom unfolds before your eyes  and the frustration of your torturers increases as they try to extract  information from you that you do not possess, wouldn't each thorn unjustly  impressed into your brow confer upon you a sense of nobility? Conversely,  wouldn't each cowardly slap by your torturers further demean them? Who is the  nobler: the torturer shouting "god damn you!" or the victim crying out "god help  me" or perhaps, even as Jesus once uttered, "father, forgive them"? How  different is the CIA practice of banging prisoners' heads into a wall from the  acts of the SS men sixty years ago who killed Jewish boys by slamming their  heads into walls? It is said the Muslim victims today "only" get concussions,  sort of like NFL quarterbacks, but what the CIA agents, like the Gestapo before  them, share in common in every case, is cowardice---the powerful thrashing the  defenseless.
This cowardice is not confined merely to those who torture. It  pervades the White House and Congressional leadership that makes wars against  smaller countries that cannot retaliate in kind. Cowardice was also the hallmark  of the Office of Legal Counsel hacks who authorized punishments the usually  reticent Red Cross felt obliged to describe as "tantamount to torture" that  turned the civilized world against America as surely as the evidence of the Rape  of Nanking and the Holocaust turned the civilized world against the Japanese and  Germans during World War Two. Their cowardice has also spawned in our midst a  generation of torturers who inflict ghastly punishments on human beings at no  risk to themselves as the Obama regime, under the guise of "looking ahead," will  not obey its constitutional obligation to enforce America's statutes against  torture. This is not merely political cowardice. It is complicity in a  nauseating scenario that degrades America before the world and shows us up for  the cowards we are.
It might be recalled that the U.S. and U.K. together engaged  in terror bombing during World War Two that massacred defenseless civilians;  that these two allies jointly built the atomic bombs that incinerated Hiroshima  and Nagasaki; and that the U.S. covered Viet Nam with Agent Orange and Iraq with  irradiated ammunition that go on claiming innocent civilian lives to this day.  Now the U.S. has unleashed the drone pilotless warplane that is indiscriminately  killing civilians as well as "suspects," the latest example of national  terrorism and cowardice. Tragically, America has become a nation of cowards,  from the political weasels in Congress who vote up the $700 billion Pentagon  budgets for war to the man in the White House who will not enforce the law to  the gutless hirelings in the CIA and the Pentagon who perform the tortures  ordered from the top. This July 4th, the American national holiday, the national  anthem will resound across the nation. Its final stanza asks the question of  whether the flag still flies over "the home of the brave?" How I wish I could  say that it did!
  
		