CommonDreams.org
by Robert C.
Koehler
Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Fallujah
. . .
And so it turns out that
there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, though not until we arrived and
started using them.
Along with whatever else we
did to Fallujah - exacted collective punishment on a defiant city (a war crime) in
November 2004, killed thousands of civilians, shattered the infrastructure
(nearly six years later, the sewage system hasn't been repaired and waste flows
in the streets) - we also, apparently, nuked the city, leaving a legacy of
cancer, leukemia, infant mortality and genetic
abnormality.
Freedom isn't free.
Remember when that was the go-to phrase of the citizen war zealots among us,
their all-purpose rebuttal when those of us appalled by this insane war cited
civilian casualty stats? Discussion over. Thought
stops here.
This is the power of
language. Call it "war" and along come glory, duty, courage,
sacrifice: the best of humanity writ large. The word is impenetrable; it sets
the heart in motion; God makes an appearance, blesses the troops, blesses the weapons. Operation Iraqi Freedom: They'll greet
us with open arms.
At what point do we learn
our lesson, that "war" is a moral cesspool of horrific consequences,
especially, and most troublingly, unintended ones?
Thus last November, a group
of British and Iraqi doctors petitioned the U.N. to investigate the alarming
rise in birth defects at Fallujah's hospitals. "Young
women in Fallujah," they wrote, ". . . are
terrified of having children because of the increasing number of babies born
grotesquely deformed, with no heads, two heads, a
single eye in their foreheads, scaly bodies or missing limbs. In addition,
young children in Fallujah are now experiencing
hideous cancers and leukemias."
The official U.S. response was that the doctors'
letter was anecdotal: There have been no studies to verify that anything is
truly amiss in Fallujah, beyond the devastation
caused by U.S. troops and bombs. Now that has
changed.
The International Journal
of Environmental Research and Public Health has just published an
epidemiological study, "Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in
Fallujah, Iraq 2005-2009," which has found, among much else,
that Fallujah is experiencing higher rates of
cancer, leukemia and infant mortality than Hiroshima and Nagasaki did in 1945.
Perhaps most eerily, the
study, conducted by a team of 11 researchers this past January and February, in
711 households, found a radical shift in the ratio of female-to-male births. Under
normal circumstances, the human constant is approximately 1,050 boys born for
every 1,000 girls. In post-invasion Fallujah, 860
boys have been born for every 1,000 girls - similar to a shift seen in Hiroshima after the atom bomb was dropped.
Dr. Chris Busby, one of the
study's authors, said only "some very major mutagenic exposure" could
account for such an aberration. The most likely culprit, he said, is depleted
uranium, a dense metal with extraordinary penetrating ability used in the
manufacture of missiles, shells and bombs. DU explodes on impact into an
extremely fine, radioactive dust that settles on the ground or is carried by
the wind. While the U.S. military continues to deny that
breathing it is harmful, many scientists insist that it is highly toxic and a
likely contributor to Gulf War Syndrome - that it is, in short, a nuclear
weapon, with fallout as dangerous as a nuclear bomb.
To read about this is to
grow increasingly sickened and disturbed at who we are and what we are doing:
still debating "the war," still dignifying this ongoing hemorrhage of national values with the term; still
murdering civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and resolutely fleeing from
any responsibility for the ecocide we have committed in Iraq; and still
silently, inevitably, preparing for the next one.
Would that we could bring
the suffering of Fallujah to the heart of America, or at least to the heart of
Congress, which just OK'd another $59 billion to "fund
the troops" (notice the delicacy of the Pentagon's phrasing) in Afghanistan.
Enormous, future-devouring
numbers turn over in Congress with such ease, if the money is demanded by the
war machine. Money dedicated to building the future, or repairing the damage
from old, dead wars, is another matter entirely: Suddenly it's real, like a
pound of flesh, and meted out only with howls of anguish.
To help clean up our legacy
of Agent Orange in Vietnam, for instance, Congress has
appropriated $9 million since 2007. We sprayed 19 million gallons of this
highly toxic defoliant on the country between 1962 and 1971, causing harm to at
least 3 million Vietnamese in the process. Our sense of responsibility amounts
to $3 per person. And such money becomes available only after decades of denial
that we have any responsibility at all.
I think again about Fallujah. The city's suffering will haunt our national
dreams for decades to come. It is our future. In a generation or so, our
children will face the consequences of what we have done there; but in the
meantime, we'll keep trying to buy "victory" and ultimate justification
in multi-billion-dollar increments until our financial bankruptcy equals our
moral bankruptcy.
© 2010
Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Robert Koehler is an
award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated writer. His
new book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound (Xenos
Press) is now available for pre-orders. Contact him at koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at commonwonders.com.