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Hundreds of thousands of protesters around the US have demonstrated against
the coming war against Iraq, decrying the inevitable civilian
casualties and expressing fear for the safety of "our boys" in
the armed forces. Proponents of the war have expressed similar
concerns, though from a different angle. This is as it should
be, but there is one major element missing from the
discussion--the young Iraqi soldiers who will die in this war.
The Defense Intelligence Agency estimates that in the last Gulf
War 100,000 Iraqi soldiers were killed and another 300,000 were
wounded, compared to less than 10,000 Iraqi civilians killed or
wounded. The Iraqi government puts its military losses at 75,000
to 100,000 and its civilian losses at 35,000 to 45,000.
The carnage was particularly gruesome on the road from Mutlaa,
Kuwait, to Basra, Iraq, dubbed the "Highway of Death," upon
which tens of thousands of young Iraqi soldiers were killed as
they tried to leave Kuwait. Some of the charred and dismembered
bodies littering the highway were those of child soldiers, whom
Iraq used in both the war against Iran and the Gulf War.
Today the young Iraqi male is the damned of the earth. Drafted
by force at 18 or younger into the service of a regime he may
despise to fight an enemy with whom he has no quarrel, this
generation of young Iraqi men can see nothing but pain and death
both in front of it and behind it.
In 1994 Saddam Hussein decreed desertion punishable by the
amputation of hands, ears or feet, and the tattooing of
deserters' foreheads. According to Reuters, thousands of these
mutilations have taken place since then, often performed without
anesthesia and without treatment for post-amputation bleeding
and infection. Such punishments were reportedly later abolished,
in part because Iraqi veterans who had lost arms or feet in
battle did not want to be confused with deserters. Generally the
punishment for desertion has been the firing squad.
In addition, Iraqi boys who refuse to fight often bring
government repression down upon their families, who sometimes
plead with their sons to do their duty in the army for the sake
of their brothers and sisters. Even without these punishments,
usually few young men are willing to face the social stigma that
most societies attach to males who do not want to fight. Such
refusals can render them social pariahs, whom few women would
want to marry and few parents would want to claim as sons.
By decrying the death of "innocent" civilians, those on both
sides of the war debate backhandedly ascribe guilt to these
young draftees. Yet if they are not innocent victims of this
war, who is?
Placed in an impossible situation, most young Iraqis will pray
to their God, hope that it will be someone else who takes the
bullet, and do the best they can to stay alive. In Dr.
Zhivago, Russian novelist Boris Pasternak described the
cruel fate of the young World War I Russian draftee, writing
that the soldiers often went to war knowing that "those who made
it home at the price of an arm or a leg" would be the lucky
ones. In A Farewell to Arms Ernest Hemingway depicted the
way desperate young Italian soldiers threw their rifles off
bridges in the vain hope that if they didn't have their weapons
their officers couldn't make them fight. While the Iraqi boys'
faces and tragedies will be invisible to us, can there be any
doubt that thousands of similar dramas will be played out in
this coming war?
Proponents of the war argue that despite the suffering it will
bring, in the end this generation of young Iraqis will benefit
because it will topple the dictatorship and pave the way for a
brighter future for them and their children. They may be
correct. But in the debate over the war let us not forget the
one group of inevitable casualties in whom neither the war's
opponents nor proponents have taken sufficient interest--Iraq's
young men. We should care about their lives, too.
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This column first appeared in
the
Pasadena Star-News & Affiliated
Papers (2/27/03) |
Glenn Sacks writes about gender issues from the male perspective.
He can be reached at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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