The morality of the pro-war left

Does the fact that US soldiers have engaged in torture in Iraq demand of those on the left who supported the war to re-evaluate their position?

Wasn’t the main reason given by those on the left who supported this war why they did so, the chance to remove a dictatorial regime, rather than any of the official reasons given by the Bush administration?

Than surely, the fact that the liberators themselve engage in torture and rape, must cause some soul searching? After all, what does liberation matter if torture still happens?

Anarchists

In a never ending political joke, the anarchists, led by CLAC who were at the back of the march, got bored of waiting and decided to have their own march of about two thousand. They marched down a street parallel to the main march. They did anarchist things (looking and acting like idiots), ccomplished their goals (be more radical than the rest of us bourgeois sell-outs) and ended up becoming what
they always do (irrelevant).

From If there is hope…

Torture

We’ve all seen the photos by now and been disgusted by them. US and UK soldiers torturing prisoners? Surely that’s something
that couldn’t happen, shouldn’t have happened. Surely it is only an isolated occurrence, done by a few psychopaths and this should not reflect on the UK or US military as a whole. Even Bush himself said:

“I share a deep disgust that those prisoners were treated the way they were treated,” Bush said.
“Their treatment does not reflect the nature of the American people. That’s not the way we do
things in America.”

Isn’t it?

I genuinely would like to believe that, but I’m not sure I can. I don’t think these were isolated incidents. Ever since the September 11 attacks, the US leaders have fostered an atmosphere in which civil liberties and human rights are to be shoved aside in the name of security. Guantanamo Bay, the way in which Josef Padilla and others are held indefinately without charge, the prisoners taken during the Aghanistan campaign and in Iraq who are still held in the region, the alleged transfer of prisoners from US custody to countries who don’t have great moral objections against torture, the support for dictatorial regimes who make the appropriate anti-terrorist noises, all of them point to the inescapeable conclusion that this is how “we do things in America”.

If their leaders give such sterling examples, can you blame these soldiers for being extra zealous?

Consider also the wider content. First, you have this atmosphere of fear drummed into us by the Bush administration, where we are told drastic measures are needed to keep us safe, that we don’t have time for legal niceties and where civil and human rights are luxuries. Second, there is the inevitable wartime dehumanisation of the enemy, combined with the US military’s emphasis on keeping its troops safe, no matter the cost in enemy or bystanders’ lifes. If nobody bats an eye at US snipers killing ambulance drivers during the battle for Fallujah, why the outrage about what happens after the battle is over?

Third, this is made worse by the framing of the war against Iraq and the wider War Against Terror, as a struggle between good and evil, where “we” are Good and the enemy is Evil and so anything “we” do is automatically right, while anything the enemy does is automatically wrong. Finally, this Manchurian worldview has always had a strong attraction for a lot of Americans; in a culture where quite a lot of people consider prison rape not as much an unfortunate excess as an integral and welcome part of the prison system, is it strange that enemy prisoners are sexually abused?

This is not to say that all or even most US and UK soldiers would do these things, but these are not “isolated incidents” either.

Welcome

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Welcome to the EU: Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland,
Slovakia, and Slovenia.

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Hefner

cover of We Love the City

I discovered the UK band Hefner sometime in 2000, when a friend pointed me at their song “I stole a Bride“, one of the few pop songs to be written about the Trojan War and the abduction of Helena by Paris. I quite like their sound, sort of indie but with a bit more bite than a band Like say Belle and Sebastian and clever but not too pretentious lyrics. Their best album was We Love the City, released in 2000, sort of a thematic ode to London, which sort of captures my feelings about London as well.

The band is no longer active, but their site is still up. The best part of it is the discography, with extensive notes by Darren Hayman, the driving force behind the band. I wish more bands took the trouble to do something like this.

Darren Hayman since then has started a new band, The french with one of his Hefner mates, which has abandonded the indie sound Hefner had for most of its existence, instead going for a more early electronica feel. A sample of their work can be downloaded from their site, again something I wouldn’t mind more other bands doing.