The Not-So-Small Price of Iraq
by Dante Zappala,
The Philadelphia Enquirer
October 8th, 2007
UNTIL RECENTLY, I thought America agreed that the death of over 3,800 troops in Iraq is a tremendous loss to this country.
My brother, Sgt. Sherwood Baker, is just one in that number. He was a
soldier in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard, and was killed in an
explosion in Baghdad on April 26, 2004.
Sherwood, like other fallen heroes, was a leader in his community, a
vital link in the fabric that binds us as Americans. His son, growing
into a young man, has the loss etched into his long, penetrating
stares. Who could look at him and say his father's sacrifice was, in
actuality, not a large one?
A chorus of war enthusiasts is giving it a shot. House GOP leader John
Boehner said it best when asked recently about the monetary and human
price tag of the war. He categorized these costs as a "small price to
pay."
The death and dismemberment in Iraq is being spun as the pro-war lobby
tries to shore up support for more blank checks from Congress. Pay no
attention to the devastation behind the curtain, they tell us.
Of course, anyone who's lost a relative, anyone caring for a wounded
vet, anyone whose marriage has been destroyed, anyone with skin in the
game will tell you that the cost of war is, indeed, great. That was
spelled out again for me when we visited my brother's grave. It would
have been his 34th birthday. He's still young, I'm reminded.
But the effort now is to paint these tragedies that dot the landscape as random and obscure.
The goal is to keep the machine rolling. Rep. Boehner knows his audience is much greater than Gold Star and military families.
The war, in reality, is a small price to pay for this country. We, the
affected, represent an incredibly limited portion of the population.
Less than one percent has served in Iraq. The breadth of the sacrifice
has maybe hit 10 percent of the country.
What Americans must rely on is their empathy. The emotional
vulnerability of our citizenry again becomes the strategic
battleground. And just as distortions led us into this war, they are
being used to keep us there.
The numbers aren't really that bad, they tell us. Perhaps 100,000 or
more Iraqi citizens have been killed. Shamefully, we can't tell you for
sure because their lives never mattered as much. "We don't do body
counts on the other people," as Donald Rumsfeld said.
If the public blinks, they'll miss the truth about our own casualty
figures. To put a better face on what's happening, the Department of
Defense decided that non-combat injuries won't make the most
prominently published totals. The average person might be surprised to
learn that more than 50,000 armed service members have been wounded or
killed in Iraq.
BUT THE REAL cost of the Iraq war is yet to be defined. The impact of
the first Gulf War, a four-day ground war, is revealing. Of those
veterans, more than one out of every four has been granted a
service-connected disability.
What does this portend for the almost million and a half vets of this
war, many of whom have served multiple deployments in a conflict
approaching its five- year anniversary?
Still, Congress will remain partly unable but mostly unwilling to take
a stand. They have succumbed to the false pressure that they must
"support our troops" by keeping the money flowing.
The question is: What are we funding? Are we really benefiting our
military by leaving them under-equipped and stretched thin? What is
their mission amidst a civil war fought, in part, with weapons we
flooded into the country? Does continuing this morass not somehow
benefit al Qaeda?
Politicians will gloss over these questions and the brunt of the
unending carnage will be absorbed by people like my nephew. Some
pundits, meanwhile, cheer from the sidelines and ask these children to
accept their tragedy as historically insignificant. How awful will we,
as a nation, become to maintain this war?
For four and a half years, the reported deaths of soldiers, Marines,
airmen, sailors, Coast Guardsmen and contractors has been
heartbreakingly painful. The magnitude of their sacrifice has been a
crucial part of the debate. Politically savvy war supporters want to
change that.
They will try to keep the blinders on with their morally defunct
contextualization. They want the focus out front, even as their
policies and ideologies leaves broken bodies and broken lives in the
rear-view mirror. *
Dante Zappala is a member of Military Families Speak Out (www.mfso.org).