By Jackie Mason & Raoul Felder on 5.19.04 @ 12:07AM
There never was a war where the participants, on both sides, did not commit atrocities.
NEW YORK -- Let's get something straight. We hate anyone who
would torture a prisoner of war. But we also hate getting old,
paying taxes, and square dancing. The point is, some things just go
with the territory. Soldiers who go off to fight in a war are not
going to a Bar Mitzvah. They are ordinary people who are subjected
to extraordinary pressures while separated from family, friends,
the Saturday night wrestling in back of a pickup truck, and the
structured life a civilized society provides. Without any life
experience that could prepare them for what they will encounter,
they live under constant or near constant threat of attack and the
daily deaths or mutilations of friends and colleagues. Worse yet,
they risk their lives to free a people who are more than just
ungrateful -- people who have turned on them, and now often seek to
destroy them.
There never was a war where the participants, who are usually
barely old enough to shave, on both sides, did not commit
atrocities. Yes, it happened in the last great war by both the
Germans and Americans, and for the Japanese this was
"business as usual." The difference between us and them is
that we do not treat this as acceptable behavior, we do not condone
it; we investigate, we make it public, and we punish. They
celebrate it.
It is of singular importance that under Saddam Hussein, in that
very same prison, Abu Ghraib, that is now being scrutinized by the
American authorities, rape, murder, the cutting off of limbs, and
whatever tortures the ingenuity of a highly technologically
advanced society could devise were a routine daily occurrence. The
whole world knew of this Arab-on-Arab torture. Yet not a peep. Now
when a few individuals out of hundreds of thousands of American
soldiers have acted inappropriately, the Arab world is
outraged.
IRONICALLY, IN THE ARAB world, torture is still practiced and
enjoys an historical precedent dating back to, at least 608, when
the Prophet's favorite grandson had his head cut off in Iraq and
sent first to Damascus and then to Egypt. Today, a thief in Arab
countries worries about forfeiting his hand as well as his freedom,
and a wife who is romantic with the wrong man has more to worry
about than being sued in a divorce case. The message is clear: one
standard of conduct for Arabs, another for Americans.
If Arabs enjoy the pleasure of a double standard, we claim no
less a right. To be very clear (readers of the New York
Times avert your gaze), if it is Arab discomfort as opposed to
American young men and women being turned into chop meat, in our
eyes it is no contest. It must be borne in mind that the abuse
victims were all in cell block 1-A or 1-B, which basically means
that there was evidence to believe that they were murderers,
terrorists, or insurgents. If the new standards for their treatment
now being put in place will prevent the obtaining of information
that could have saved American lives, in our book, our politicians
and military brass should have a lot more to answer for than the
mistreatment of a few thugs.
If anyone questioned the necessity for our attacking Iraq the TV
beheading of the 26-year-old businessman Nick Berg should have been
an awakening experience. It should be clear to the world that what
we are unwillingly faced with is a clash of cultures. It was not
sought, it was thrust upon us on 9/11. Can any American in a modern
world, where the furthest is but hours away from the nearest, feel
safe where there is loosed upon the world a society where the
cultural norm for a showing of dissatisfaction is the television
beheading of an innocent person?
President Bush, in his address to Congress after 9/1, made the
most important, and obvious but unspoken, policy declaration since
the Monroe Doctrine: friend to our friend is our friend, friend to
our enemy is our enemy. In the velocity of events in the modern
world it cannot be otherwise.
PICTURE A WORLD IN which we did not take action. Of course, it
would have been a more peaceful world today, and President Bush
would have had an easier chance for re-election. But the same
people who complain that our deficit will burden the next
generation should apply the same thinking to the Iraq situation. If
America had done nothing, Iraq would continue to try to shoot down
our planes who were conducting fly-overs pursuant to a peace
treaty. We could do either one of two things: let American planes
be shot down and the pilots, if alive, subjected to Hussein-style
Iraqi justice, or discontinue the flights. To allow the former
would be criminal inaction by the people in Washington; in the
latter case we would be humiliated before the Arab world and our
timidity would be interpreted as license. If we wrote off the
search for WMD, could any one this side of a lunatic asylum believe
that Saddam Hussein, who has sought, and has previously used some
of them (and who but for the Israelis' destruction of the facility
at Osirak would have already gone nuclear) would not, fueled by his
own and other Arab wealth, eventually acquire all of them?
Americans should understand that self-flagellation only satiates
a deranged individual. They should also take note of Lincoln's
observation that the dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate for
the stormy present.
topics:
Taxes, Television, Business, Military, Iraq, Israel