Thank
You for Your Valor, Thank You for Your Service, Thank You, Thank You,
Thank You…
Still
on the Thank-You Tour-of-Duty Circuit, 13 Years Later
By
Rory
Fanning
Last week, in a quiet indie bookstore
on the north side of Chicago, I saw the latest issue of Rolling
Stone resting on a chrome-colored
plastic table a few feet from a barista brewing a vanilla latte.
A cold October rain fell outside. A friend of mine grabbed the issue
and began flipping through it. Knowing that I was a veteran, he said,
"Hey, did you see this?" pointing to a news story that
seemed more like an ad.
It read in part:
"This Veterans Day, Bruce Springsteen, Eminem,
Rihanna, Dave Grohl, and Metallica will be among numerous artists who
will head to the National Mall in Washington D.C. on November 11th
for 'The Concert For Valor,' an all-star event that will pay tribute
to armed services."
"Concert For Valor? That sounds like something the
North Korean government would organize," I said as I typed
Concertforvalor.com into my MacBook Pro looking for more information.
The sucking sound from the espresso maker was drowning
out a 10-year-old Shins song. As I read, my heart sank, my shoulders
slumped.
Special guests at the Concert for
Valor were to include: Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, and Steven
Spielberg. The mission of the concert, according to a press
release, was to “raise awareness”
of veterans issues and “provide a national stage for ensuring
that veterans and their families know that their fellow Americans’
gratitude is genuine.”
Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and former
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral Michael Mullen were to serve in
an advisory capacity, and Starbucks, HBO, and JPMorgan Chase were to
pay for it all. "We are honored to play a small role to help
raise awareness and support for our service men and women,”
said HBO chairman Richard Plepler.
Though I couldn’t quite say why, that Concert for
Valor ad felt tired and sad, despite the images of Rihanna singing
full-throated into a gold microphone and James Hetfield and Kirk
Hammett of Metallica wailing away on their guitars. I had gotten my
own share of “thanks” from civilians when I was still a
U.S. Army Ranger. Who hadn’t? It had been the
endless theme of the post-9/11 era, how thankful other Americans were
that we would do... well, what exactly, for them? And here it
was again. I couldn’t help wondering: Would veterans
somewhere actually feel the gratitude that Starbucks and HBO hoped to
convey?
I went home and cooked dinner for my
wife and little girl in a semi-depressed state, thinking about that
word “valor” which was to be at the heart of the event
and wondering about the Hall of Fame line-up of twenty-first century
liberalism that was promoting it or planning to turn out to hail it:
Rolling Stone,
the magazine of Hunter S. Thompson and all things rock and roll;
Bruce Springsteen, the billion-dollar working-class hero; Eminem, the
white rapper who has sold more records than Elvis; Metallica, the
crew who sued Napster and the metal band of choice for so many
longhaired, disenfranchised youth of the 1980s and 1990s. They
were all going to say “thank you” -- again.
Raising (Whose?) Awareness
Later that night, I sat down and
Googled “vets honored.” Dozens and dozens of stories
promptly queued up on my screen. (Try it yourself.) One
of the first items I clicked on was the 50th anniversary celebration
in Bangor,
Maine, of the Gulf of Tonkin incident, the
alleged Pearl Harbor of the Vietnam War. Governor Paul LePage
had spoken ringingly of the veterans of that war: “These men
were just asked to go to a foreign land and protect our freedoms. And
they weren’t treated with respect when they returned home. Now
it’s time to acknowledge it.”
Vietnam, he insisted, was all about
protecting freedom -- such a simple and innocent explanation for such
a long and horrific war. Lest you forget, the governor and those
gathered in Bangor that day were celebrating a still-murky “incident”
that touched off a massive American escalation of the war. It
was claimed that North Vietnamese patrol boats had twice attacked an
American destroyer, though President Lyndon Johnson later suggested
that the incident might even have involved shooting at "flying
fish" or "whales."
As for protecting freedom in Vietnam, tell the dead Vietnamese in
America’s
“free fire zones” about that.
No one, however, cared about such
details. The point was that eternal “thank you.”
If only, I thought, some inquisitive and valorous local reporter had
asked the governor, “Treated with disrespect by whom?”
And pointed out the mythology
behind the idea that American civilians had mistreated GIs returning
from Vietnam. (Unfortunately, the same can’t be said
for the Veterans Administration, which denied returning soldiers
proper healthcare, or the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American
Legion, organizations that weren’t
eager to claim the country’s defeated
veterans of a disastrous war as their own.)
When it came to thanks and “awareness
raising,” no American war with a still living veteran seemed
too distant to be ignored. Google told me, for example, that Upper
Gwynedd, Pennsylvania, had recently celebrated
its 12th annual “Multi-Cultural Day” by thanking its
“forgotten Korean War Veterans.” According to a local
newspaper report, included in the festivities were martial arts
demonstrations and traditional Korean folk dancing.
The Korean War was the precursor to
Vietnam, with similar results. As with the Gulf of Tonkin incident,
the precipitating event of the war that North Korea ignited on June
25, 1950, remains open to question. Evidence suggests that, with U.S.
approval, South Korea initiated
a bombardment of North Korean villages in the days leading up to the
invasion. As in Vietnam, there, too, the U.S. supported a corrupt
autocrat and used napalm on a mass scale. Millions died, including
staggering numbers of civilians, and North Korea was left in rubble
by war’s end. Folk dancing was surely in short supply. As
for protecting our freedoms in Korea, enough said.
These two ceremonies seemed to catch a
particular mood (reflected in so many similar, if more up-to-date
versions of the same). They might have benefited from a little
“awareness raising” when it came to what the American
military has actually been doing these last years, not to say
decades, beyond our borders. They certainly summed up much of the
frustration I was feeling with the Concert for Valor. Plenty of thank
yous, for sure, but no history when it came to what the thanks were
being offered for in, say, Iraq
or Afghanistan,
no statistics on taxpayer
dollars spent or where they went, or on
innocent
lives lost and why.
Will the “Concert for Valor”
mention the trillions of
dollars rung up terrorizing Muslim countries
for
oil, the ratcheting up of the police and
surveillance state in this country since 9/11, the hundreds
of thousands of lives lost thanks to the wars
of George W. Bush and Barack Obama? Is anyone going to dedicate a
song to Chelsea
Manning, or John
Kiriakou, or Edward
Snowden -- two of them languishing in prison
and one in exile -- for their service to the American people? Will
the Concert for Valor raise anyone’s awareness when it comes to
the
fact that, to this day, veterans lack proper
medical attention, particularly for mental health issues, or that
there is a veteran
suicide every 80 minutes in this country?
Let’s hope they find time in between
drum solos, but myself, I’m not counting on it.
Thank Yous
While Googling around, I noticed an
allied story about President Obama christening
a poetic sounding “American Veterans Disabled for Life
Memorial” on October 5th. There, he wisely noted that
“the U.S. should never rush into war.” As he spoke,
however, the Air Force, the Navy,
and Special Forces personnel (who wear boots that do touch the
ground, even in Iraq), as well as the headquarters
of “the Big Red One,” the Army’s 1st Infantry
Division, were already involved in the latest war he had personally
ordered in Iraq and Syria, while, of course, bypassing Congress.
Thank
you, thank you, thank you, thank you! Damn, I voted for Obama because
he said he’d end our overseas wars. At least it’s not
Bush sending the planes, drones, missiles, and troops back there,
because if it were, I’d be mad.
Then there were the numerous stories
about “Honor Flights” sponsored by Southwest Airlines
that offered all World War II veterans and the terminally ill
veterans of more recent wars a free trip to Washington to “reflect
at their memorials” before they died. Honor flights turn out to
be a particularly popular way to honor veterans. Local papers in
Richfield,
Utah, Des
Moines, Iowa, Elgin,
Illinois, Austin,
Texas, Miami,
Florida, and so on place by place across
significant swaths of the country have run stories about dying
hometown “heroes” who have participated in these flights,
a kind of nothing-but-the-best-in-corporate-sponsorship for the last
of the “Greatest Generation.”
“Welcome home” ceremonies,
with flags, marching bands, heartfelt embraces, much weeping, and the
usual babies and small children missed during tours of duty in our
war zones are also easy to find. In the first couple of screens
Google offered in response to the phrase “welcome home
ceremony,” I found the usual thank-you celebrations for
veterans returning from Afghanistan in Sioux
Falls, South Dakota, Ft.
Sill, Oklahoma, and Saint
Albans, Vermont, among other places. "We
don't do enough for our veterans, for what they do for us, we hear
the news, but to be up there in a field, and be shot at, and
sometimes coming home disabled, we don't realize how lucky we are
sometimes to have the people who have served their country," one
of the Saint Albans attendees was typically quoted
as saying.
“Do enough...?” In America, isn’t thank
you plenty?
Oddly, it’s harder to find
thank-you ceremonies for living vets involved in America’s
numerous smaller interventions in places like the Dominican Republic,
Lebanon, Grenada, Kosovo, Somalia, Libya, and various CIA-organized
coups and proxy wars around the world, but I won’t be surprised
if they, too, exist. I was wondering, though: What about all
those foreign soldiers we’ve trained to fight our wars for us
in places like South Vietnam, Iraq,
and Afghanistan? Shouldn’t they be thanked as well? And how
about members of the Afghan Mujahedeen that we armed and funded in
the 1980s while they gave the Soviet Union its own “Vietnam”
(and who are now fighting for al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or other extreme
Islamist outfits)? Or what about the Indonesian troops we armed under
the presidency of Gerald Ford, who committed possibly genocidal acts
in East Timor in 1975? Or has our capacity for thanks been used
up in the service of American vets?
Since 9/11, those thank yous have been
aimed at veterans with the regularity of the machine gun fire that
may still haunt their dreams. Veterans have also been offered special
consideration when it comes to applications for mostly
menial jobs so that they can “utilize
the skills” they learned in the military. While they continue
to march in those welcome home parades and have concerts organized in
their honor, the thank yous are in no short supply. The only question
that never seems to come up is: What exactly are they being thanked
for?
Heroes Who Afford Us Freedom
Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz has said of the
upcoming Concert for Valor:
“The post-9/11 years have brought us the longest
period of sustained warfare in our nation’s history. The less
than one percent of Americans who volunteered to serve during this
time have afforded the rest of us remarkable freedoms -- but that
freedom comes with a responsibility to understand their sacrifice, to
honor them, and to appreciate the skills and experience they offer
when they return home.”
It was crafty of Schultz to redirect
that famed 1% label from the ultra rich, represented by CEOs like
him, onto our “heroes.” At the concert, I hope Schultz
has a chance to get more specific about those “remarkable
freedoms.” Will he mention that the
U.S. has the highest
per capita prison
population on the planet? Does he include among those
remarkable freedoms the guarantee that dogs, Tasers, tear gas, and
riot police will be sent after you if you stay out past dark
protesting
the killing of an unarmed Black teenager by a representative of this
country’s increasingly
militarized police? Will the freedom to be too
big to fail and so to have the right to melt down the economy and
walk
away without going to prison -- as Jamie
Dimon, the CEO of Chase, did
-- be mentioned? Do these remarkable freedoms include having every
American phone call and email recorded and stored
away by the NSA?
And what about that term “hero”?
Many veterans reject it, and not just out of Gary Cooperesque modesty
either. Most veterans who have seen combat, watched babies get torn
apart, or their comrades die in their arms, or the most powerful army
on Earth spend trillions of dollars fighting some of the poorest
people in the world for 13 years feel anything but heroic. But
that certainly doesn’t stop the use of the term. So why
do we use it? As journalist Cara Hoffman points out at Salon:
“‘[H]ero’ refers to a character, a
protagonist, something in fiction, not to a person, and using this
word can hurt the very people it’s meant to laud. While meant
to create a sense of honor, it can also buy silence, prevent
discourse, and benefit those in power more than those navigating the
new terrain of home after combat. If you are a hero, part of your
character is stoic sacrifice, silence. This makes it difficult for
others to see you as flawed, human, vulnerable, or exploited.”
We use the term hero in part because it makes us feel
good and in part because it shuts soldiers up (which, believe me,
makes the rest of us feel better). Labeled as a hero, it’s also
hard to think twice about putting your weapons down. Thank yous to
heroes discourage dissent, which is one reason military bureaucrats
feed off the term.
There are American soldiers stationed
around the globe who think about filing conscientious objector status
(as I once did), and I sometimes hear from some of them. They
often grasp the way in which the militarized acts of imperial America
are helping to create
the very enemies they are then being told to kill. They understand
that the trillions of dollars being wasted on war will never be spent
on education, health care, or the development of clean energy here at
home. They know that they are fighting for American control
over the flow of fossil fuels on this planet, the burning of which is
warming our world and threatening human existence.
Then you have Bruce Springsteen and
Metallica telling them “thank you” for wearing that
uniform, that they are heroes, that whatever it is they’re
doing in distant lands while we go about our lives here isn’t
an issue. There is even the possibility that, one day, you, the
veteran, might be ushered onto that stage during a concert or onto
the field during a ballgame
for a very public thank you. The conflicted soldier thinks twice.
Valor
I’m back at that indie bookstore
sitting at the same chrome-colored table trying to hash all this out,
including my own experiences in the Army Rangers, and end on a
positive note. The latest issue of Rolling
Stone appears to have sold out. Out
the window, the sun is peeking through a thick web of clouds. They
sell wine here, too. The sooner I finish this, the sooner I can start
drinking.
There is no question that we should honor people who
fight for justice and liberty. Many veterans enlisted in the military
thinking that they were indeed serving a noble cause, and it’s
no lie to say that they fought with valor for their brothers and
sisters to their left and right. Unfortunately, good intentions at
this stage are no substitute for good politics. The war on terror is
going into its 14th year. If you really want to talk about
“awareness raising,” it’s years past the time when
anyone here should be able to pretend that our 18-year-olds are going
off to kill and die for good reason. How about a couple of concerts
to make that point?
Until then, I’m going to drink wine and try to
enjoy the music over the sound of the espresso machine.
Rory Fanning walked across the
United States for the Pat Tillman Foundation in 2008-2009, following
two deployments to Afghanistan with the 2nd Army Ranger Battalion.
Fanning became a conscientious objector after his second tour. He is
the author of the new book Worth
Fighting For: An Army Ranger’s Journey Out of the Military and
Across America (Haymarket, 2014).
Copyright 2014 Rory Fanning
This article is from TomDispatch.com (without the image).
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