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“We’re committing genocide in Iraq”
Iraq
veteran Jimmy Massey speaks to the WSWS
By Jeff Riedel 11 November 2004
Former Staff Sergeant Jimmy Massey, a 12-year Marine veteran,
lives in Waynesville, North
Carolina, a small town in the Smoky Mountains
just outside of Ashville, where he spoke to the World Socialist Web
Site. He is one of a growing number of American soldiers returning
from Iraq
who have become outspoken opponents of the war. Massey entered Iraq as part of the initial US
invasion in March 2003. He witnessed—and in some cases participated
in—the killing of innocent civilians. During a single 48-hour period, he
says, he saw as many as 30 civilians killed by US gunfire at highway
checkpoints.
The brutality of the US military’s retaliation
against the growing resistance of the Iraqi people transformed his view
of the occupation and changed him for life. Massey, horrified and unable
to reconcile himself to what was taking place, began to speak out to his
superiors. He was eventually medi-vaced out of Iraq and diagnosed with
depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Labeled as a conscientious
objector by his commanders, Massey sought legal counsel and won his honorable
discharge in December 2003. Massey grew up in the mountains of western North Carolina.
His father was a truck driver who was shot and killed during a
confrontation with the Florida State Police when Massey was still in his
early teens. He then moved with his mother to Texas, where she took a job with the
Texas Board of Corrections. He grew up in a household where at times
there was very little money and little to eat. He would eventually join
the Marines and became a recruiter himself in the late 1990s. He was sent
to Kuwait in December
2002, in preparation for the invasion of Iraq.
Massey’s disillusionment with the military began as a recruiter,
when he started to question the methods used by the Marines in preying on
young people from economically depressed areas. His feelings would soon
be deepened by his experience in Iraq. “When I was on
recruiting duty, I really began to question what was going on,” he said.
“I’m not going to say that the Marine Corps is
all flat-out lies, but it is very misleading the way we enlist recruits.
A lot of the kids joining the military are from the ‘barrios’ and
‘hoods,’ or the poor parts of the Appalachian Mountains, where we’re
sitting right here. Appalachia has some
of the poorest counties in the country—so they’re sweeping them up.
“You know, these kids are just thankful that they’ve got some
health care—for a lot of them, the first time they even went to the
dentist is when they joined the Marine Corps. Then you pump them full of
patriotism and intangible benefits—self-confidence and what not—and now
you’re indoctrinating a young person with an ideology. “Boot camp is
designed to dehumanize and desensitize a person to violence. I was a
Marine Corps boot camp instructor for two-and-a-half years, and I know
that it is designed to strip you down and rebuild you. The only purpose
of the Marine Corps is to meet the enemy on the battlefield and destroy
them.”
Massey asserted that, given the economic conditions in the US
today, there exists what amounts to an economic draft of young Americans
into the military. “Here’s the problem in America, what we’re living in
is becoming an increasingly militaristic society, where poor people have
been encouraged to sign up as the front line,” Massey said. “A large
percentage of the so-called growth in this country is associated with the
military. The bottom line is, for the Halliburtons and Enrons war is
good, but for the poor and for all of the soldiers coming home,
especially the ones coming home wounded, there’s not much of a future.
But for a lot of the kids getting ready to graduate high-school, the
military is looking pretty good because their families have no money to
send them to college.”
Massey’s career as a recruiter ended after he wrote a mission
statement to his commanding officers, outlining his personal concerns
with the issues of recruitment. The process of reaching the point of
speaking out was not an easy one, he recalled. “I’ll be honest with you,
when you’re in the military, it’s a lot like
being in a mafia family. You don’t step outside the family, and it’s a
very sheltered environment. I mean, you’re taken care of. You’ve got a
guaranteed paycheck on the 1st and the 15th, and when you’re living on a
Marine base, it’s a bit like a utopia. But with the utopia comes the
conformity to the ideology, which allows the utopia to continue. If you
break away from the family, they’re going to do whatever they can to keep
you quiet.
“It’s very hard to break away from—you have to reach down deep in
your soul for answers to questions that begin to come up. And what
happened with me was, I was coming into contact
with groups like the War Resisters League while I was out on recruitment
duty. They were out there counter-recruiting. I started reading some of
the literature that they were passing out at the high schools. I became
curious and started doing my own research, finding out certain things
about America’s
involvement in other countries.”
In Iraq,
Massey was brought face to face with this involvement. The initial
invasion took on the character of a one-sided slaughter, with the world’s
strongest military power armed with the most technologically advanced
weapons, on the one hand, and a disarmed and virtually defenseless
military of a country already devastated by a decade of sanctions, on the
other. “You have to look at what was the overall goal of the mission.
That was pretty evident when, eight months before we even left to go to Kuwait,
the Marines were training to shut down and take over the Ar Rumaylah oil
fields. We had detailed schematics and terrain models of all of the oil
fields outside of Basra, and once we took
care of those, all that was left was the ride into Baghdad.
“We were like a bunch of cowboys who rode into town shooting up
the place. I saw charred bodies in vehicles that were clearly not
military vehicles. I saw people dead on the side of the road in civilian
clothes. As a matter of fact, I only remember seeing a couple of bodies
in military uniform the whole time. “There wasn’t a whole lot of direct
fighting to speak of. There were some firefights—I mean I had bullet
holes in the side of my Humvee—but it wasn’t like major combat action. We
took the highway the whole way up to Baghdad. They had no artillery; they
had no air support. They were so weakened by all the sanctions. All of
their equipment was in very bad shape. Most of their hardware was left
over from the war against Iran.
The first Gulf War just devastated them. I don’t think they had the will
or the opportunity to fight.”
Massey said that the hostility of the Iraqi people to the presence
of the US
military grew exponentially over the time he was there in direct response
to the brutal methods employed by American troops against the entire
Iraqi population. “As far as I’m concerned, the real war did not begin
until they saw us murdering innocent civilians,” he said. “I mean, they
were witnessing their loved ones being murdered by US Marines. It’s kind
of hard to tell someone that they are being liberated when they just saw
their child shot or lost their husband or grandmother.”
Massey manned a number of US military checkpoints on Iraqi
highways in the months following the invasion. He described how, when
cars failed to stop, out of confusion or otherwise, the order was to
‘light them up’ or open fire. It was at one of the checkpoints that
Massey’s attitude toward the war reached its turning point. “We signaled
a car to stop and when it didn’t we opened fire. They were innocent
civilians. We found no weapons, no explosives—nothing. Somehow, and I have
no idea how he could have done it, but one guy got out of the car and he
wasn’t badly wounded. He was the brother of one of the men bleeding to
death in the car. He looked at me and asked, ‘Why did you kill my
brother. What did he do to you?’ There were 30-plus civilians killed over
two days at these checkpoints.”
Massey described the chaotic and reckless character of the
roadside checkpoints and the indifference of the military leadership to
the culture of the people that they were there supposedly to help. “When
you put your hand up in the air with a closed fist, in the Marines it
means you want them to stop,” he said. “But, as we later learned, it’s
actually the international sign of solidarity. It has a totally different
meaning for the Iraqis—to them it was a sign like hello. And that was
just one example of how we were not trained properly to understand the
cultural differences between us and them. “The bottom line is they [the
military command] don’t see the need to teach culture and humanity to men
whose singular purpose is to kill. And that was just one of the cultural
miscues. I blame the top of the chain of command, from the President down
to Tommy Franks [the former commander-in-chief of US occupation forces]
to General [James] Mattis [commander of the First Marine Division]. They
all knew that the military was not trained properly when it comes to
dealing with Muslim culture and a foreign land. But that was not our
purpose for being there.”
In the midst of the widespread killing of civilians, Massey was
struck by the callousness of the military command and the lack of
humanitarian assistance they were offering the Iraqi people. This further
deepened his doubts about the true purpose of the war. “We actually left
all of the humanitarian MRE’s [Meals Ready to Eat] in Kuwait,” he recalled. “We
were supposed to give these out for relief, and we left them in Kuwait.
They were just for show when the film crews came into the camps. We also
had this big show with the medical supplies that we were prepping for
Iraqi casualties. We were supposed to get in there and take care of them.
“But I’ll give you an example of what we actually did. After we
shot up this car with civilians, I called in the corpsmen to bring in
stretchers. They came in and put two men on stretchers. Five minutes
later, they brought them back and dumped their bodies on the side of the
road. They were still alive. They were riddled with bullets—one guy was
just rolling in agony on the side of the road.” At the time, intelligence
reports were streaming in describing insurgents and rebels driving
ambulances and civilian cars. In a growing atmosphere of fear within US
military ranks, the entire Iraqi population was now viewed as the enemy.
“We’re thinking everyone is a terrorist,” Massey recalled. “Here
we are on no sleep, and there are intelligence
reports coming in right and left about suicide attacks and the Republican
Guard and so on—attacks being mounted against American forces. So cars come
driving through our checkpoints, and our orders are to light them up. The
amazing thing about it is that we were telling the Iraqis the exact
opposite. We were telling them to keep their schools open, keep the
hospitals open, to go about their normal routine—‘we’re not here to hurt
you, we’re just here to overthrow Saddam.’ So these people were just
doing their normal routines, and they were getting frickin’ blasted for
it.”
A recent study estimated the number of Iraqi deaths since the
start of the war in March 2003 at around 100,000. When asked if this
number seemed accurate, Massey responded: “Yes, but that of course does
not include the thousands more who will be dying from disease because of
a lack of medical supplies, clean water, or proper sanitation. It does
not include the hundreds of thousands that died in Iraq before the war even
began from the sanctions. We are committing genocide in Iraq, and that is the
intention.”
It is now well established that all of the pretexts for launching
the unprovoked war in Iraq
were based on manipulated intelligence and lies. In its drive toward war,
the Bush administration fraudulently exploited the September 11 attacks
to spread fear and panic throughout the country, and this, as Massey
notes, was very effective in the South, where he is from. “This started
with Nixon,” he said. “The South was always predominantly Democratic, but
Nixon began this campaign to turn the Southern mentality into Republican
mentality, which he did very successfully by taking advantage of the
religious orientation of the southern population—the Southern Baptists
and what not. And Bush has been able to tap into the religious base here
and get into the minds of Southerners, using Christianity, where anything
he says is considered the gospel.
“He used this influence in part to sell the war in Iraq,
based on fear. But the tide is turning. I think a lot of Southerners are
saying ‘enough is enough - it’s time to get out of Iraq.’ I just read a letter
to the editor in the Mountaineer, a small local newspaper down
here. The lead article on the front page is about a high school football
game—I mean this is a small-town paper. The letter is called ‘Country
needs to get out of Iraq’
and here’s what it says: “‘Hindsight is 20/20 and this is a war that
should have never been fought. As a Navy veteran with more than 20 years
of service, I would be the first one to step forward in the defense of
our country. This is not the case here—President Bush has a personal
agenda. Arab oil is not worth any American life. We need to get our
troops home now! Let’s redirect our talents and energies to finding
alternate energy sources.’”
Diagnosed with depression and post-traumatic stress disorder,
Massey was sent home to argue his case against a dishonorable discharge
in the summer of 2003. “I told them, ‘If you want to label me a
conscientious objector for not wanting to kill innocent civilians, then
I’ll see you in court.’ The psychologist that I went to see said ‘Well, I
don’t deal with conscientious objectors, that’s something the chaplain’s
going have to do.’ So the next day I had a meeting with the regimental
Sergeant Major—who’s pretty high ranking, in charge of about 4,000
Marines.
“I had a seat in his office, and he said that the Sergeant Major
over in Iraq had sent him an e-mail explaining everything, and that I
should stop worrying, that he was going to fix everything and it would
all be okay. But just before I started to speak, I saw him reach into his
desk drawer and pressed what I know was the record button on a tape
recorder, and then he closed the drawer really fast and acted all
nonchalant. I was thinking, ‘Damn, if you’re going to entrap me then at
least try to cover it up a little.’ “So I sat there saying nothing, and
finally he says, ‘You know, you only have another seven years to
retire—we’re going to move you to a nice little office somewhere or
passing out basketballs or something like that...you’ve got a lot vested
in the Marine Corps and you need to think about your retirement.’
“I stood up and said ‘Well, Sergeant Major, I don’t want your
retirement and I don’t want your benefits. We killed innocent civilians,
and you have to face that responsibility, and I’m going to tell everybody
what happened.’ I remember his face turned red, and he said that there
was going to be legal repercussions that go along with that decision. I
told him that I would not expect anything less from the Marine Corps.”
Massey recalls walking directly from the meeting to the Base Exchange,
where he picked up a copy of the Marine Corps Times and called a
lawyer who was listed in the back. The lawyer was Gary Meyers, whose
practice dates back to the My Lai trials
during the Vietnam War. There was no trial for Massey. In the end, the
Marines backed down and agreed to his honorable discharge. He is
currently working on a book and plans on using whatever proceeds there
are from it to start a post-traumatic stress disorder foundation.
“What do you tell a kid that just came back from war with the
economy the way it is and the lack of jobs, who’s just got finished
murdering innocent civilians because his government has violated every
law in the Geneva Conventions?” Massey asked. “You expect him to come
back to the US
and be a productive citizen? What do you do? For me, I keep hanging on to
one thing that my grandfather used to say: ‘The truth shall set you
free.’ I’ll keep talking as long as people listen.”
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© 2006 by St.Clair
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