The Iran Disaster
Today I sent the following letter to our local weekly
paper, the Carbondale Times:
Editor,
Kudos to Scott Thorne for
his letter of March 13 questioning the purpose of bombing Iran.
Our various media outlets
offer endless analyses of both the causes and possible consequences of this
newest violence. Yet I see almost nothing about the plain old wrongness of
it.
To cite one noticeable
example, U.S. explosives with nearly unimaginable destructive capacity recently
incinerated some 170 Iranian civilians, mostly children, at an elementary
school. The best scientific evidence suggests that those children and their
families are no less human beings than we are over here in the great U.S. of A.
Their parents and aunts and uncles will grieve just as hard as will those of
the US forces killed in retaliation, even if their skin is a little darker than
some of ours.
The above incident was,
it is true, widely reported. Yet there has been no thoughtful discussion of the
moral depravity underlying this incident.
* * *
There is, remarkably, one item of good news in the
Iran disaster. It seems that a high-ranking, extremely conservative (!) and
otherwise hawkish Trump official, has resigned in protest to it. This is one
Joe Kent, who was, until yesterday, Director of the National Counterterrorism
Center.
Kent’s resignation letter offers a glimmer of hope that
some tiny crumbs of sanity might still exist somewhere in the upper reaches of the
Empire. He says, for instance:
I cannot, in good
conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no immediate threat to
our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from
Israel and its powerful lobby.
Kent was the kind of warrior that phonies like SecDef
Pete Hegseth try so hard – yet clownishly fail -- to imitate. He (Kent)
demonstrates -- I hope for many other young people -- that warriors don’t have
to be conscienceless robot:
As a veteran who deployed
to combat 11 times and as a Gold Star
husband who lost my beloved wife Shannon in [another] war manufactured by
Israel, I cannot support sending the next generation off to fight and die in a
war that serves no benefit to the American people nor justifies the cost of
American lives.
I’m not getting my hopes too high, but maybe Kent’s
statement indicates we have finally reached some kind of turning point in our
attitudes toward violent domination of the world.
End
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