Captain May and the 3/7 Cavalry
... Such dilemmas are the price we pay
for the freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution, the first and foremost of which
is freedom of the press. But we didn’t pay the price for freedom.
Plugged into the media matrix, we didn’t blink and we didn’t ask
questions. We ceased to function as
Americans.... I look at my
oath of commission as an Army officer and see that I swore to defend the
Constitution. The commander in chief took an oath in which he swore to do the
same. He betrayed
it.
Ghost
Troop Home Page April Fools Part 1
April 13,
[2003] essay, 3/7 Cavalry, tragedy and
travesty(Letter to Frank Michel,
associate editor, Houston Chronicle)Dear
Frank,Since I talked with you the day
after the 3/7 Cavalry was attacked at the Baghdad Airport, you have been the
only media person to take me seriously. Thanks for encouraging me to write. I
have tried to spark other media interest in the fate of the 3/7 Cavalry, but
have been ignored by television and radio. I have been dismissed as crazy more
than once.For the last week I have been
taking up a collection for the unit’s Army Emergency Relief fund. The
donations bucket carries the sign: “Please donate to the relief fund of
the 3/7 Cavalry, which took losses over the weekend.” I have collected
for 22 hours, and have exactly twenty dollars in donations. Although the public
has no reason to doubt the unit that was the spearhead of the advance has taken
casualties, it has not been told to grieve yet, so it renders no gifts to the
dependents of the dead.Nothing would
make me happier than to be wrong in my inferences. I hope the facts will
disprove me. Should my fears about the 3/7 Cavalry be realized, I ask that you
publish this essay.Captain May, MI,
USAI wept as I watched CNN Friday night.
It was pre-dawn, April 5 in Iraq, the end of the night when Saddam Hussein had
promised us an attack. With a background in military intelligence and public
affairs, I could see and hear the confusion, fear and tragedy in the faces and
voices, and I could read between the lines used to keep the disaster hushed. It
was apparent to me that the 3/7 Cavalry, the avant-garde for our assault across
the desert, had been blown off the Baghdad
Airport.“There but for the grace
of God go I,” I kept thinking. I had been a volunteer for Operation
Desert Storm, and was a former
cavalryman.The attack made military
sense for the Iraqis. The airport was key terrain for the control of Baghdad,
and had been fiercely contested. It would have been a surprise to me if they
had not rigged it as a booby trap, targeted it for a counterattack, or
both.Saddam had banked on winning the
war by repeating the debacle of Mogadishu, in which a handful of well-publicized
casualties had swung American public opinion against military involvement in
Somalia. At the Baghdad Airport he had executed the best ambush since the
Little Big Horn, where Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull destroyed the same Seventh
Cavalry Regiment. By morning writers would pen the name George
“Custer” Bush and national resolve for the war would
plummet.Such dilemmas are the price we
pay for the freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution, the first and foremost of
which is freedom of the press. But we didn’t pay the price for freedom.
Plugged into the media matrix, we didn’t blink and we didn’t ask
questions. We ceased to function as
Americans.Saturday and Sunday following
the disaster were part J. Edgar Hoover and part P.T. Barnum. The tail wagged
the dog. The rescued Private Jessica, a tragic battle casualty, was morphed
into another “Baby Jessica” to hold national attention. The 3/7
Cavalry breakout from the attack was labeled a “foray” into Baghdad.
The U.S. body count, a pesky statistic from the Vietnam era, was hidden in the
fog of war. Monday morning offered a new scenario to dazzle the public: Four
one-ton bombs had “probably” killed Saddam in one of his lairs. We
had already been told that the first night of the war; it worked again. We
focused on Saddam and we focused on victory. We stayed on message…, and
we stayed in the dark. Middle Eastern media carried stories of a massacre of
U.S. forces at the airport, but we knew not to trust
them.I didn’t sleep at all the
night the 3/7 Cavalry fell into a trap, and I haven’t slept much since.
If my conviction about the unit’s bad luck is right, many fears, strange
to me as an American who has spent a lifetime of service to his country, keep me
awake at night:· I fear we can no
longer trust the president to tell the truth, since he clearly did not trust us
to know the truth when the chips were
down.· I fear his military
actions go against to the parting advice of two former ones, both men who had
fought wars. In his valedictory George Washington admonished us to beware of
foreign entanglements, and the Middle East is likely to be as entangling as
quicksand. The departing Dwight Eisenhower bade us beware of the military
industrial complex, and that complex seems mightier than ever, now that it has
either co-opted or coerced the
media.· I fear the public will
not feel outraged at being offered a desert mirage instead of the gritty reality
of a desert war. Will media “package” the unlucky 3/7 Cavalry as a
band of martyred brothers rather than as grim casualties? Will media make our
children think of what is inside each flag-draped coffin: the torn, cold body
of a youth who dreamed of the future, but was buried twice, first in the news,
then in the earth? Our children must be our reason for reason itself, since
they are the warriors of our future wars. Or will our children absorb images of
fallen heroes, saluted by three farewell salvos of rifle fire? Will they want
to grow up to fight wars, too? Are we training our own suicide volunteers for a
Disney world war?· I fear the
media has signed a Faustian pact in exchange for a close-up of the best story of
the new millennium: a successful American incursion into the Middle East. Has
media/military collaboration ceased to be a public affairs operation conducted
for the American people and become a psychological operation conducted against
them?· I fear my president
ordered assassination in the “bad luck” incidents of Army tanks
shelling the Baghdad hotel that housed foreign journalists. The Arab media
believes it was murder, and they were telling the truth about the 3/7 Cavalry.
Was the “truth” we saw, heard and read in the embedded media the
only version of truth admissible to an Orwellian cover-up, and was there a death
penalty for dissent?· I fear the
tentacles of the federal government have stretched too far. In suppressing the
biggest negative story of the war, it has shown a mighty grasp over a
professional group dedicated to the truth, but embedded with lies. Twisting the
arms of the professions has always been part of the blueprint for strong-arm
governments, and strong-arm governments tend to be as repressive to their
citizens as they are bellicose to other
countries.These are my fears, based on
my belief that since the night we lost the 3/7
Cavalry:· our president has lied
to us and our representatives in order to insure that the country did not
function according to its
Constitution;· our Congress has
passed a $2.5 trillion national war budget in ignorance of the true conditions
of the war;· our military has
coerced those who professed to be our truth tellers into become purveyors of
lies of omission and commission.I look
at my oath of commission as an Army officer and see that I swore to defend the
Constitution. The commander in chief took an oath in which he swore to do the
same. He betrayed it.Congress should
demand explanations from President George W. Bush, and prepare articles of
impeachment if he can’t or won’t explain himself. As for the media,
perhaps it will realize that although it was willingly embedded by the
government, it is not married to it. A trial of impeachment of the president
would be as good a story as the war was, and might even tempt the media to rouse
itself from its bed and reconsider its spring fling in Iraq. Only then can we
claim to live in the land of the free and the home of the brave. Only then can
we say that the fate of the 3/7 Cavalry was a tragedy, and not a
travesty.Captain May, who served on the
general staff of Houston’s 75th Reserve Division, is a graduate of the
University of Houston Honors
College.Other articles by Captain
May.-->> http://www.spiritone.com/~pazuu/pow-mia/GhostTroopCaptMay.htm
-->> http://www.ghosttroop.net/aprfoolspart1.html
Posted: Tue - August 23, 2005 at 09:08 AM
|
Quick Links
Categories
Calendar
| | Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat
|
Media
LINKAGE
XML/RSS Feed
Archives
Search
Entry Content
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Total entries in this category:
Published On: Nov 04, 2007 08:44 AM
|