The 50-Year Anniversary of the My Lai Massacre
Duty to Warn
The 50-Year Anniversary of the My Lai
Massacre
How Can
Professed Christians Defend Wartime
Atrocities?
Gary
G. Kohls, MD – March 16, 2018
50 years ago today, on
March 16,1968, a company of green, battle-untested US Army
combat soldiers from the Americal Division, swept into the
un-defended Vietnamese hamlet of My Lai, rounded up the 500+
unarmed women, children, babies and old men, and efficiently
executed almost all of them in cold blood, Nazi-style. No
weapons or Viet Cong soldiers were found in the village. The
entire killing operation took only 4
hours.
Although
there was a prolonged attempt to cover-up the operation
(which involved a young up-and-coming US Army Major named
Colin Powell), those who participated in the massacre did
not deny the details of the slaughter when the case came to
trial two years later. Despite the cover-up, the story did
eventually filter back to the Western news media, thanks to
a some courageous military eye-witnesses whose consciences
were still intact. An Army court-marital trial eventually
convened against a handful of the soldiers, including Lt.
William Calley and Company C commanding officer, Ernest
Medina.
According
to many of the soldiers, Medina had ordered the killing of
“every living thing in My Lai”, which was interpreted,
of course, to mean all the civilians as well as their farm
animals. Calley was charged with the murder of 109
civilians. And convicted of murdering 20. In his defense
statement he stated that he had been taught to hate all
Vietnamese, even children, who, he had been told, “were
very good at planting mines”.
The end-result of the My Lai raid,
which was part of a larger mission called Task Force Barker,
had been recorded by military photographers, and eventually
the Army had to abandon its cover-up. The military tribunals
were conducted in censored military courts with juries of
Army officers who had no legal credentials to try war
crimes, which is still standard operating procedure in the
US Army.
All the
charges against the soldiers involved were dropped, except
for Calley’s murder charges. Medina and all the other
shooters of the 500 dead Vietnamese went free. Out of the
initial 109 murder charges, Calley was convicted of the
murders of “at least 20 civilians”, and he was sentenced
to life imprisonment for his crime. However, under pressure
from thousands of very vocal, very patriotic, and very
pro-war Americans, President Nixon pardoned him within weeks
of the verdict.
By
the time of the trial, many thoughtful and ethical
Americans, including many soldiers and veterans, were sick
and tired of the war and the killing. And after everything
that had happened since 1968, it was clear to thoughtful
people that the psychological and physical costs to the
returning wounded soldiers were unacceptable. The Calley
trial provoked a lot of interest because it occurred at the
same time that the antiwar movements around the world were
ramping up. The Vietnam War was becoming widely acknowledged
as an “overwhelming atrocity”.
At the time of the trial, 79% of
Americans, according to one poll, objected to Calley’s
conviction. Some veteran’s groups even voiced the opinion
that instead of condemnation, Calley should have received
the Congressional Medal of Honor “for killing commie
gooks”.
Just
like the Jewish Holocaust during World War II or the
dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the
realities of the My Lai Massacre deserve to be revisited so
that perhaps none of those atrocities will never happen
again. The Vietnam War was an excruciating time for both
conscientious civilians, soldiers and veterans because of
the numerous moral issues surrounding the mass slaughter of
millions of civilians in a war that also physically killed
58,000 American soldiers, physically wounded hundreds of
thousands more, spiritually wounded millions and
psychologically traumatized uncountable millions of others -
on both sides of the conflict.
Of course, the Vietnam War was much
worse for the farm families of that doomed land than it was
for the American soldiers who could at least go home to
intact homes, jobs and infrastructure. Over the previous
century, the Vietnamese people had been victimized
repeatedly by invading and occupying armies. Brutal,
trigger-happy, frightened, racist, adolescent soldiers from
foreign lands such as China, France, Japan, and then France
again before America foolishly stepped into the quagmire.
All the soldiers were taught that the “little yellow
people” of Vietnam were somehow sub-humans who deserved to
be killed - with some of the soldiers soldiers preferring to
inflict torture or rape before doing the
killing.
“Shoot
first and ask questions later” is, all-too often, standard
operating procedure for frightened, well-armed combat units,
and it is that fear that motivates the willingness to kill
of every soldier, of every era, of every political
persuasion, especially in jungle
warfare.
<<
Many Vietnam veterans that I have
talked to or read about have said that there were scores,
maybe hundreds, of smaller My Lai-type massacres in that
futile war that were never written about in the mainstream
press. Not surprisingly, the Pentagon refused to acknowledge
that reality. Execution-style killings and torturing by
American soldiers, Marines and Special Ops units were not
uncommon in that war, nor has it been uncommon in
America’s current wars all around the
globe.
In Vietnam,
many combat units “took no prisoners” which is a
euphemism for murdering captives, rather than having to
follow the nuisance Geneva Conventions which require humane
treatment for prisoners of war. The only unusual thing about
the My Lai Massacre was that it was found out, despite the
above-noted cover-up attempts by the
Pentagon.
There is
something about a cover-up and the web of lies necessary to
sustain it that proves the cowardice of the orchestrators of
the cover-up. Truly honorable soldiers that have taken
seriously their oath of allegiance to the US Constitution,
will, instead of lying, admit their guilt and submit
themselves to the appropriate punishment. Avoiding just
punishment by cheating, lying or hiding is what cowards do.
Admitting one’s guilt and “taking your punishment” is
the honorable, manly thing to do.
Very few soldiers ever get punished for
the all-too-frequent war crimes that they commonly commit
– and get away with - in the dense “fog of war”. Those
in charge of giving the orders to kill always rationalize
the raping and pillaging, killing and torturing of innocent
civilians as having been necessary “to save lives”. The
euphemism used for the killing of civilians is “collateral
damage”. Another phrase that is another euphemism for
collateral damage is ”stuff happens” which was made
popular by the lamentable Chicken Hawk (who received 5
deferments during the Vietnam War, the one-time US Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and eventually Vice President of
the United States.
Water-boarding, the infamous torture
technique that we know is an international war crime, but,
nonetheless, it was aggressively used in Viet Nam. The
“stuff that happened” to the suspects
that were indiscriminately imprisoned and falsely
charged at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay is nothing new in
the history of American wars.
<<
Those who
plan wars, profit from them, and send their unaware sons or
daughters into war and yet profess to be followers of the
nonviolent Jesus, have huge ethical problems that seem to be
totally ignored. Professed Christians who are willing to
kill combatants but know the great risks of also killing
non-combatants have to studiously ignore the stated ethics
of their Jesus that are so clearly outlined in the Sermon on
the Mount (Matthew 5, 6 and 7 and Luke 6) and in Matthew
25:31-46.
Professed Christians who are also war
supporters have to explicitly reject what their religion’s
namesake repeatedly taught about the issue of homicidal
violence. Jesus taught, in so many words, that “violence
is forbidden for those who wish to follow me”. And of
course, what is equally blasphemous for Christian killers in
wartime is the fact that pro-war Christians also have to
reject Jesus’ Golden Rule command to “do onto others as
you would have them do unto you”.
The moral conflicts felt by Christians
who try to both follow Jesus’ ethical teachings while
simultaneously engaging in acts of cruelty and homicide
against fellow children of a loving god must be enormous,
indeed, impossible to do without tremendous cognitive
dissonance. It is impossible to be willing to kill upon
command while also following the command to be merciful and
hospitable to the stranger, the hungry, the naked, the
captive, the enemy and any person that is in need of mercy
and understanding.
The follower must choose between two
irreconcilable realities – homicidal violence or
nonviolence.
Full
understanding of the gruesome realities of war (and the
inevitability of the resultant physical, spiritual,
psychological and economic consequences for both the
perpetrators and the victims of violence) usually doesn’t
happen before the unaware soldier enlists and is trapped in
the killing machine with few options of escaping. Church
leaders have to accept responsibility for that reality. If
civilians ever truly experienced the horrors of combat war
before enlisting, the abolition of war would become a
priority.
If
grown-up, clear-headed Americans could simply comprehend the
immorality of the nation having wasted trillions of dollars
on war and war preparations over the 50 years since My Lai
while hundreds of millions of people were starving and being
made homeless, they would refuse to cooperate with the
things that make for war. If that totally rational notion
will never become reality because world peace is not good
for war-profiting corporations, their banks or the
uber-wealthy investors that make money in the many war
industries.
There
are many lobbying groups for the many “merchants of
death” that are fearful about the prospect of world peace.
Those lobbying groups will always try to glorify America’s
wars while simultaneously hiding the gruesome realities of
war from our eyes in order to make the average voter unaware
of the lethality and deviousness of our military
machine.
These
well-paid pro-war propagandists in every manor political
party try to convince the soon-to-be-childless mothers of
doomed, dead or dying child-soldiers that their loved one
had died fighting for God, Country and Honor instead of for
profit-making corporations and their unquenchable selfish
desire to control the world’s oil, gas, water, minerals,
opium, cocaine, lithium, etc and the building of more
permanent US military bases around the
world.
Let’s
face it, the US’s standing army system that is continually
training, engaging in war games and seemingly itching for
another war, has been bankrupting America at the rate of 500
to 700 billion dollars a year, even in times of so-called
“peace.” The cost of maintaining one soldier in a war
zone for one year is $1,000,000! The warmongering spirit of
the Pentagon (not to mention the White House and the
Congress) is alive and well, particularly in those who had
wanted to “nuke the gooks” in Viet
Nam.
Un-elected
policy-makers of the ChickenHawk persuasion (politicians or
policy-makers who never served in the military but who still
loved to play war games) are still in charge of US foreign
policy today, and they have been consolidating their power
with the huge profits made off the blood, guts and permanent
disabilities of those hood-winked soldiers who were deceived
into believing that they were ”making the world safe for
democracy” when in fact they were making the world safe
for predatory capitalism and obscene profits for the few.
And the politicians, most of whom are well-paid lapdogs for
their war profiteering campaign “contributors”, don’t
want the gravy train to be derailed
either.
It is
obvious that things haven’t really changed much from My
Lai when one witnesses the political mentality that allowed
the massive numbers of deaths of innocent Iraqi civilians in
the aftermath of Gulf War I or the millions of civilian
deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq in Gulf War II or what is
happening in Palestine, Yemen, Syria, Kurdistan, Congo, etc,
etc.
It is obvious
that our military and political leaders haven’t really
learned much since My Lai. And neither have the so-called
Christian churches that are quite comfortable just existing
in our highly militarized, flag-waving nation that refuses
to either teach about of follow their nonviolent
Jesus.
And as long
as America’s professed Christian leaders and their
followers refuse to renounce war and violence (as their
Jesus surely would have had them do), humanity will be
condemned to engage in future My Lai massacres and the
victims will have to endure the poverty, pain, pestilence,
starvation and homelessness that inevitably follows, the
perpetrators will have to continue to endure the spiritual
deadness, the psychological trauma and the physical pain and
the planet will become increasingly unlivable and
increasingly unendurable.
What has happened to all tyrannical
militarized nations and empires throughout history will
inevitably happen to the highly militarized United States
that cannot afford to finance both its bloated military and
fulfill the needs of its people simultaneously. There will
be serious blow-back consequences for the perpetrators of
the great evil that our tyrannical empire-builders have
perpetrated upon the earth.
International war crimes such as My
Lai, Nagasaki, Fallujah and Abu Ghraib will somehow be
avenged, but our current leaders, both political and
religious, seem incapable of comprehending that and then
doing the ethical
thing.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
To view important censored-out photos of the My Lai Massacre, go to: http://allthatsinteresting.com/my-lai-massacre-photos
To view important censored-out photos of the unpunished
Agent Orange International War Crime (both America’s and
Monsanto’s) go to:1) http://allthatsinteresting.com/agent-orange-victims
and
2) https://www.google.com/search?q=Agent+Orange+images&rlz=1C2CHZL_enUS756US756&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjz7-TthvTZAhVR22MKHc2gDuYQ7AkIQg&biw=1163&bih=536
Dr Kohls is a retired physician from Duluth, MN,
USA. He writes a weekly column for the Duluth Reader, the
area’s alternative newsweekly magazine. His columns deal
with the dangers of American fascism, corporatism,
militarism, racism, malnutrition, Big Pharma’s psychiatric
drugging and over-vaccination regimens, and other movements
that threaten the environment, prosperity, democracy,
civility and the health and longevity of the planet and the
populace. Many of his columns are archived at http://www.globalresearch.ca/author/gary-g-kohls;
http://duluthreader.com/search?search_term=Duty+to+Warn&p=2;
or at https://www.transcend.org/tms/search/?q=gary+kohls+articles
___________________________________________________________________________________