Were it not for Amy Goodman's program on Pacifica
Radio - Democracy Now! - the Winter Soldier hearings
at the National Labor College/George Meany Center in Silver Spring, Maryland (March 13-16) would have
gone largely ignored. The remarkable testimony of veterans of
the Iraq
and Afghanistan wars
was disregarded by most of the mainstream media to the point
that one must wonder whether there was a conscious blockade
in order to prevent these stories from being revealed.
Named after the famous Winter Soldier hearings
from 1971 that focused on the real story of the Vietnam War,
the hearings at the National Labor College
focused on what is actually unfolding in Iraq
and Afghanistan. The
testimony, as played over Democracy Now!, detailed the
horrific conditions under which US soldiers are fighting and dying, and Iraqi
civilians are suffering and perishing.
Noteworthy in those testimonies to which I listened
was the combination of fear and sorrow from the participants
in wars that should not have happened. As each day passes it
feels as if there is yet another revelation of how criminal
the Iraq
war in particular has been since the start. A Chilean diplomat
has a book soon to be released detailing the steps that the
Bush administration took to intimidate nations into supporting
their criminal adventure in Iraq. This, on top
of the recent US Intelligence conclusion that, as many of us
in the anti-war movement said all along, there NEVER was any
connection between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda despite the rhetoric
of both Bush and Cheney.
The Winter Soldier hearings, though, brought
the war into one's living room, car or office. The voices that
one heard were not those of policy analysts or military experts.
They were not the voices of major politicians or media stars.
They were the voices of the veterans of these wars, and in some
cases their families, describing what it is actually like to
fight in such conflicts and the toll that it takes upon arriving
back home - if someone is lucky enough to arrive back home safely.
I
did not listen to the entirety of the hearings so I do not know
how many Black Iraq and/or Afghanistan
veterans testified. Yet in listening, I felt that there needs
to be a Black Winter Solider hearing. This is not to
be counterposed to what just took place in Silver
Spring, but rather in addition. In Black America, while we are
talking about the war at a general level - and overwhelmingly
oppose the war and occupation - there is little discussion of
the plight of the returning veterans. Much the same happened
in and around the Vietnam War. In our community we are not only
NOT discussing the details of the war, but we are not discussing
the impact of the war on our communities, including but not
limited to the impact on the veterans. Instead of funds being
prioritized for veterans' services, for instance, there have
been cuts. VA medical facilities are under the crunch, and given
the state of healthcare in the USA, this has a disproportionately negative affect
on Black America.
I could imagine a Black Winter Soldier-like hearing
examining issues such as these, not to mention the racist side
of the war IN Iraq and Afghanistan,
such as the demonization of the people and the religion of Islam.
It would be important for our community to hear of the moral
quandaries of the troops, not to mention how THEY believe the
wars can be stopped.
While my hat goes off to Amy Goodman and the
folks at Democracy Now! I found myself wondering whether
Black radio stations ever thought to cover these hearings and
whether, should we have Black veterans' hearings, they would
cover those.
Bill Fletcher,
Jr. is Executive Editor of The Black Commentator. He
is also a Senior Scholar with the Institute
for Policy Studies and the immediate past president of TransAfrica
Forum. Click
here to contact Mr. Fletcher.