Incalculable
Recent polls suggest that while a majority of U.S. people disapprove of the war in Afghanistan, many on grounds of its horrible economic cost, only 3% took the war into account when voting in the 2010 midterm elections. The issue of the economy weighed heavily on voters, but the war and its cost, though clear to them and clearly related to the economy in their thinking, was a far less pressing concern.
U.S. people, if they do read or hear of it, may be shocked at the apparent unconcern of the crews of two U.S. helicopter gunships, which attacked and killed nine children on a mountainside in Afghanistan’s Kumar province, shooting them "one after another" this past Tuesday March 1st. ("The helicopters hovered over us, scanned us and we saw a green flash from the helicopters. Then they flew back high up, and in a second round they hovered over us and started shooting.").
Four of the boys were seven years old; three were eight, one was nine and the oldest was twelve. "The children were gathering wood under a tree in the mountains near a village in the district," said Noorullah Noori, a member of the local development council in Manogai district. "I myself was involved in the burial," Noori said. "Yesterday we buried them." General Petraeus has acknowledged, and apologized for, the tragedy.
He has had many tragedies to apologize for just counting Kunar province alone. Last August 26th, in the Manogai district, Afghan authorities accused international forces of killing six children during an air assault on Taliban positions. Provincial police chief Khalilullah Ziayee said a group of children were collecting scrap metal on the mountain when NATO aircraft dropped bombs to disperse Taliban fighters attacking a nearby base. "In the bombardment six children, aged six to 12, were killed," the police commander said. "Another child was injured."
In the Bamiyan province of Afghanistan, Zekirullah, a young Afghan friend of mine, age 15, rises at 2:00 a.m. several mornings each week and rides his donkey for six hours through the pre-dawn to reach a mountainside where he can collect scrub brush and twigs which he loads on the donkey in baskets. Then he heads home and stacks the wood — on top of his family’s home – to be taken down later and burned for heat. They don’t have electrical appliances to heat the home, and even if they did the villagers only get electricity for two hours a day, generally between 1:00 a.m.-3:00 a.m. Families rely on their children to collect fuel for heat during the harsh winters and for cooking year round. Young laborers, wanting to help their families survive, mean no harm to the United States. They’re not surging at us, or anywhere: they’re not insurgents. They’re not doing anything to threaten us. They are children, and children anywhere are like children everywhere: they’re children like our own.
Sadly, more and more of us in America are getting used to the idea of child poverty – and even child labor — as our own economy sinks further under the burden of our latest nine years of war, of two billion dollars per week we spend creating poverty abroad that we can then emulate at home. Things are getting bad here, but in Afghanistan, children are bombed. Their bodies are casually dismembered and strewn by machines already lost in the horizon as the limbs settle. They lie in pools of blood until family members realize, one by one, that their children are not late in returning home but in fact never will.
In October and again in December of 2010, our small delegation of Voices for Creative Nonviolence activists met with a large family living in a wretched refugee camp. They had fled their homes in the San Gin district of the Helmand Province after a drone attack killed a mother there and her five children. The woman’s husband showed us photos of his children’s bloodied corpses. His niece, Juma Gul, age 9, had survived the attack. She and I huddled next to each other inside a hut made of mud on a chilly December morning. Juma Gul’s father stooped in front of us and gently unzipped her jacket, showing me that his daughter’s arm had been amputated by shrapnel when the U.S. missile hit their home in San Gin.
Next to Juma Gul was her brother, whose leg had been mangled in the attack. He apparently has no access to adequate medical care and experiences constant pain. The pilot of the attacking drone, perhaps controlling it from as far away as Creech Air Force Base here in the United States, knows nothing of this family or of the pain that he or she helped inflict. Nor do the commanders, the people who set up the base, the people who pay for it with their taxes, and the people who persist in electing candidates intent on indefinitely prolonging the war.
But sometimes the war is like it was this past Tuesday March 1st. Sometimes the issue is right in front of us – as it was to those helicopter crews — it’s up close so there can be no mistake as to what we are doing. According to the election polls we see the cost of war, dimly, but, as with the helicopter crews, it doesn’t affect — or prevent — our decisions. Afterwards we deplore the tragedy; we make a pretense of acknowledging the cost of war, but it is incalculable. We can’t hope to count it. We actually, finally, have to stop making people like the nine children who died on March 1st, pay it.
Read more by Kathy Kelly
- Afghan Screams Aren’t Heard – April 20th, 2012
- Will Anyone Debate the US-Afghan Strategic Partnership Agreement? – March 18th, 2012
- Cold, Cold Hearts – February 14th, 2012
- Start of the Season – July 8th, 2011
- Staying Human: Preparing to Sail to Gaza – June 27th, 2011





Todd
March 5th, 2011 at 6:41 am
Part I. The growing callousness of our nation, shown either by indifference or increased militarism, is another cost to us as a nation. As "conservatives" like to point out about the effects of normalizing behavior by the "community," as conveyed by TV or movie entertainment, such as single parenthood, there is such a thing as "social conditioning" and the study of it by the field of social psychology. But what sort of psychological conditioning are we subjecting ourselves to by "permanentizing" a state of "war," with all of the attendant military conditioning which must go along with it.
lizviering
March 5th, 2011 at 6:42 am
I care, and spend time every day doing all I can to change U.S. foreign policy. If we all work at it, maybe we can change it sooner rather than later.
Powerful article. Thank you.
Todd
March 5th, 2011 at 6:42 am
Part II. Just as the military inculcates military values and indifference to the casualties on the battlefield, we, as a nation, are doing that to ourselves, with little dissent. It is impossible to predict exactly what form this change in our national psyche will be manifested, although we've seen it multiple times in history. The obvious is increased militarism as our national culture and politics; with insistent support for, and deference to, the military. But what about the effect on the personality of the individual? Who can say the shooter in Arizona wasn't affected, or so much other types of behavior that results from the moral nihilism and relativism which always grows out of the perceived needs of "war."
David Kennedy
March 5th, 2011 at 7:55 am
As ever, Kathy Kelly has written a heart-rending piece about the slaughter of the innocent. It reflects her deep humanity within a landscape the is almost devoid of such qualities.
The United States, as a country, is without compassion, just as it is without humility. Although it may be hard for most USians to accept this, it has it fact been true from the start as witnessed both by the butchery of the indigenous inhabitants of North America (and the lies that were propagated to cover this up) and in the subsequent treatment of its African slaves.
The same callous disregard to the suffering of 'other' humans has continued unabated. Wogs, Chinks, Kikes, Niggers, Gooks and a thousand other derogatory names have been given to dehumanise those that the USians wished to defraud, torture, and kill.
Much of the wealth of the mightiest nation on earth is devoted to the development of more efficient ways of exterminating those they do like like, or whose assets they wish to steal, just as they stole the land from the indigenous Americans.
Why should this be? Well, Lord Acton observed 150 years ago that "power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely". Perhaps this has much to do with the mentality and attitude that has become part of the American psyche: a belief in its superiority over all others and the 'exceptional' role chosen for it by 'God'? Part of this might have been adopted from the Jewish belief that Jews were God's chosen people, and part from the arrogant English attitude of the 'New Jerusalem'; all wishing to implicate God in their evil undertakings, thus making them appear more acceptable to the naive and simple-minded. Saving the souls of benighted heathens has long been an excuse for robbing others of their lives, land and wealth.
Why do you climb mountains? Because they are there! Why do you kill people? Because you can!
Power is an evil thing. Too much power is the greatest evil of all.
John_Muhammad
March 5th, 2011 at 8:20 am
In the afterlife, what will you say when each child killed by useless violence asks you, "When you learned of this, why didn't you do anything to stop it from happening again?"
Why indeed. As long as we have our fast foods, decaying morals, and DWTS to distract us we couldn't care less what happens on the other side of the world, or if atrocities are being perpetrated in our name.
When nine innocent Afghan children are killed in cold blood, it's a 'mistake' (move along, nothing to see here). When the father and brother come to America to exact their revenge by killing nine innocent American children in cold blood, it's 'terrorism'- what part of Cause and Effect do Americans not understand?
John Watson
March 5th, 2011 at 9:55 am
Petraeus is just a load of shit.
tommauel
March 5th, 2011 at 10:18 am
How would any American know about this incident? If there was any mention of it at all in the main stream press it would be a short clip buried deep in the paper. The article would be more about Patreas and his apology than any details about who was killed and how. The main stream press has totally buried this war.
A major problem of this war is that there is no information on the continuing unfolding disaster in Afghanistan getting to the general US public.
David Kennedy
March 5th, 2011 at 10:27 am
Why has my comment been withheld? Is this a form of censorship? Are you afraid of contrary opinions?
tommauel
March 5th, 2011 at 10:52 am
The American people are poorly informed by the main stream press concerning Afghanistan. If there is a story about Afghanistan it is buried deep in the paper. Information is than so obfuscated by the embed reporter that no clear picture of the situation is reported.
Oprah had a badly wounded US soldier along with Michelle Obama on her show on about the third week of January 2011. When the soldier pointed out that 17 US soldiers had already died in Afghanistan in 2011 Oprah replied, "I did not know that". And when informed that 500 US soldiers died in Afghanistan in 2010, Oprah said again, "I did not know that."
Jaime
March 5th, 2011 at 1:10 pm
The "poorly-informed" American public is a poor excuse indeed. It is true that the prostitute American media is not interested in letting the truth be known. However, the Internet is full of sources that show a more balanced view. Antiwar is, after all, one of them.
tioche
March 5th, 2011 at 8:40 pm
Working together a seemingly small # of people can and will make a great change… no action is too small, it all counts. " Never give up on Peace" the Dali Lama
siempre por Paz, tioche, Mexico
MvGuy
March 6th, 2011 at 7:47 am
He is one of our monsters which we must exorcise…………. Another American Genocidalist!!
VietnamWarVet
March 6th, 2011 at 7:59 am
In all wars it can be said: "Some gave all and all gave some" – all too many die in war and all too many suffer wounds that never heal; and families suffer too.
Sherman was correct: "War is all Hell".
Lee was WRONG: "It is good that war is so terrible less we grow fond of it" – wrong because the American people love war; love killing hundreds of thousands; love destroying countries; love sending someone else's son and daughter off to war.
A dumbed down American public has created a nation of cowardly sheep who continue to vote into office crooks and thieves, idiots and morons, TRAITORS, even perverts who rule the sheep for their own benefit.
Yes – "go USA" – let's continue to rule the world while committing war crimes all over this green Earth!
MvGuy
March 6th, 2011 at 10:03 am
We are lucky to have Kelly on the job at least trying to keep'em honest….. and to David Kennedy Re censorship……..I have also found out that the links which I have sent to the antiwar.com ["Submit Links, Volunteers help "us "keep up with the news, so send us those links!"] NEVER see the light of screen…
"There was this: The Aafia Siddiqui case: A new turn as lawyers release explosive, secretly recorded tape" http://www.cageprisoners.com/our-work/opinion-edi…
Of course no one at antiwar.con would deign to type fifteen words of acknowledgement ..or the reason WHY this HOT story on the Afia Siddiqui tragedy did not get linked…
One excerpt from the article pertaining to Afia's missing children:
"After Ms Bartosiewicz left Pakistan, she had an email from Dr Khan
saying that he had received “confidential good news” from the ISI that
Mariam and Suleman were “alive and well” with their aunt Fowzia. (In
fact at that point one was in prison and the other was dead.)"
Here is the bio of the author: Victoria Brittain is a former associate foreign editor of the Guardian, and a Patron of Cageprisoners. Her books include Hidden Lives, Hidden Deaths and Death of Dignity. She has spent much of her working life in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
"Also there was this: "New War Rumors: U.S. Plans To Seize Pakistan’s Nuclear Arsenal" http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/10/15/new-wa…
If this place isn't a clearing house for news that main stream downplay…isn't it just an MSM echo…
wdgray
March 6th, 2011 at 2:39 pm
A good brief analysis of our nation's inconsistecy by Kathy.
As a 1964 U.S. Army length of service miltary retiree I saw many of today's ills in the making. Trouble is in getting a valid report of what our wars are really doing. Much of he blame mustbe placed with the news media which down plays our vicious actions in other parts of the world. In the mean time the industrial sector has made money. This with the total knowledge and collusion of the legislative branch.
Debbie(aussie)
March 6th, 2011 at 8:34 pm
great comment! Might I add the USians lack empathy also.
Nike
March 11th, 2011 at 1:59 am
The bottom line is that the American people simply don't care how many civilians they've butchered in Afghanistan, tortured, etc, they're too 'outraged' over seeing their beloved Big Brother embarrassed by Wikileaks. Time to quit making excuses for them…