Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

The 20th Anniversary of the Abu Ghraib Scandal

 The 20th anniversary of the Abu Ghraib scandal passed rather quietly in recent weeks, most likely due to the world's focus on Gaza, and all the campus protests in the United States and around the world.

Twenty years ago, I had been living in Baghdad, along with the rest of our Christian Peacemaker Team, and we had spent the year carefully documenting dozens of testimonies from the survivors of U.S. human rights abuses at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere throughout the country.
We prepared a report with our data showing the patterns of misconduct, and sent it to every member of Congress, every U.S. and international news outlet, and of course, the White House and military officials.
The response was...underwhelming, at least at first. Rep. Dennis Kucinich responded, and I think we heard a bit of interest from the CBC, BBC, and maybe NPR. For the most part, though, we were pretty sure our report had gone directly into most folks' wastebaskets.
And then a soldier leaked the photos, and the phones began ringing nonstop. Apparently, our report hadn't been thrown out; it was just shelved until something came along to make people take notice.
We were all giving nonstop interviews for a week--some of mine were with CNN, BBC, and ABC, but the rest are now a blur.
And then, because of the enormous anger of the people at everything that had been done to them, at how horribly and humiliatingly abused the prisoners had been at the hands of the U.S. troops-- it was time to evacuate.
I thought I might get to go back in a few weeks once things settled down, but for me, that was the last I ever saw of Baghdad, and all of my friends that I'd made there.
Over the years, of course, with the hope of social media, I've been fortunate to hear from a handful of Iraqi friends who have survived, or who have even gotten out and moved elsewhere.
Barely a day goes by that I do not think of Baghdad; just like barely a day goes by when I do not think of Israel and Palestine, and all the dear people I have known in each place as well.

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

There Is No Justice In War, There Is Only Death

 Yes,

October 7 was
Israel's 9/11.
And what Netanyahu
and the IDF did
to the children of Gaza
is what we did
to the children of Iraq
and Afghanistan.
And yes,
the pro-war movement
outweighed the anti-war movement
just as much then
as it does now
That doesn't mean the war
was right or just
then or now
After all,
There is no justice in war.
There is only death.

Saturday, November 11, 2023

On a Veterans' Day in the Midst of Yet Another War

So very often,

Those who make decisions about waging war
Do not pay the consequences of war

And what I want for you

Although I know you are strong,
and brave,

Is to come home with all your fingers and toes
your arms and legs, yes
your beautiful faces, yes, and

your Whole soul.

I know pieces of my soul
are scattered

across Iraq, Afghanistan,
Syria and Lebanon
Palestine and Israel
and Central America

I saw a lot of war, after all,
and death
even though I never held a gun

I met a lot of young soldiers
who were alive, yet
something in them had died
or was slowly dying

I think about all who left
chunks of their souls
and perhaps also
chunks of their bodies

In Viet Nam, Korea, Germany
All over the earth
In ways most of us can only begin to fathom

And so we might say,
'Thank you for your service' today

It's harder to say,
'How are you...really?'
and to listen

It's painful to say,
'Here we are again...'

Heal your children, O Lord
Inside and out

Set aside the egos of the powerful
so no more of our young must die
or be destroyed

Bring forth among us healers,
so that we may work together
to heal our broken world

Because You have made this world
Beautiful,
O God,

And You
have created it
for Peace.

(c)2023 LCdM

Friday, September 11, 2020

Remembering: September 11, 2001

I was on home leave/ speaking tour from Palestine/ Israel for the month; and I'd had a layover at Newark a few days earlier, looking across the water at the Twin Towers. I considered going for a quick visit; then owing to jet lag and being unsure if I'd be back in time for my next flight, I decided to wait until my way back. I've never been through that way since. I would end up spending a full year in Iraq, before and after the war; appalled at the destruction and the suffering of the people; and eventually becoming one of the first to document what would later become known as the Abu Ghraib scandal. It often seems like yesterday. Such tremendous suffering; not only for us and the 3,000 people our country lost; but so much more so for the 1.5 million Iraqis who were killed for something they didn't do.