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Recent
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April
9, 2003
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April 9,
2003
Saving Private Lynch
Hollywood
and War
By DOUG LUMMIS
I have been hearing (I only have radio, no TV)
over and over about the Heroic Rescue of Jessica Lynch. Bless
her soul, I hope she gets well. But the reports raise doubts
at a couple of levels.
1) They say her arms and legs were broken.
Hard to think of an accident that would do all that. And there
were 8 or 9 dead GIs where she was. If they had been killed
in the battle, the Iraqis would not have dragged them to the
hospital. Maybe they were wounded, and all died of their wounds,
but that sounds unlikely.
What seems likely is that those deaths,
and Jessica's broken limbs, were the indirect result of the Heroic
Rescue. It's common sense that one of the dangers in a rescue
attempt like that is that when the captors see that rescue is
coming, they kill the prisoners rather than have them taken away.
If it turns out that the 8 or 9 died just when the rescue was
taking place, that would be pretty strong evidence that it was
the rescue that killed them.
Which leads to 2) To what extent was
this Heroic Rescue designed as a media event? Nothing new in
that: it has been pretty well proven that the assault on Mount
Suribachi at Iwojima (not just the flagraising, but the whole
assault) was largely a USMC media event. If it turns ou to be
true that the Heroic Rescue was also a media event, then the
8 or 9 dead and Ms Lynch's broken arms and legs will be something
that the US planners will be hard put to to explain (not that
I absolve whoever did the killing and breaking).
Which leads to 3) One of my heros, Allen
Nelson, a Vietnam vet who turned pacifist and comes to Okinawa
a lot, once told me, "You know what surprised me the most
the first time I went into combat? (long pause) There was no
music." For us movie goers and TV viewers, war is something
that is accompanied by music. It's the music that gives it its
dignity. But on the battlefield, no music. But now on Fox
and all the crap I get on the radio, the music has been restored.
I get musical background to Bush's speeches, music between battle
descriptions, music backing up Central Command briefings. This
is a movie.
The advocates of the New American Century
talk about the Roman Empire as a model, but I had been thinking,
at least we don't do the Circus: battles to the death as entertainment.
But now it has begun. Today I listened to(and I guess people
with TVs watched) a live battle in which people were killed.
You could see dead and dying bodies on real time. With music.
After experiencing live (live-to-dead?) entertainment like this,
can we hope that the viewers will be willing to go back to ordinary
sitcoms?
Douglas Lummis
is a political scientist living in Okinawa and the author of
Radical
Democracy. Lummis can be reached at: ideaspeddlers@mpd.biglobe.ne.jp
Today's
Features
David
Lindorff
Killing the Messengers: It Doesn't
Matter If It's Deliberate or Accidental
Richard
Lichtman
Dr. Phil in the Trenches
John
Brown
Why Uncle Ben Hasn't Sold Uncle Sam:
a Former Foreign Service Staffer on Bush's Policy Failures
Ben
Terrall
Report from the Oakland Docks: "The
Cops Had No Reason to Open Up on Them"
Jason Leopold
FERC and Wall Street: Conversations
May Have Violated Federal Law
Anthony
Gancarski
Conyers Heeds the Call on Perle
Linda Heard
Journalists Die, the Networks Lie, Iraqis Ask "Why?"
Ahmad
Faruqui
Wallowing in Hypocrisy
Wallace
Gagne
Baghdad Babble
Harry
Browne
Report from the Protests at the Bush/Blair
Summit
Larry Kearney
I Understand There's a Boy in
a Baghdad Hospital
Steve
Perry
War Web Log 4/8
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