"Stop or I'll Shoot! We're Here to Help You!" By Christophe Boltanski
Libération
Wednesday 08 March 2006
Bitter or with no particular emotion, American soldiers returning from Iraq publish their first testimonial books.
At the end of the invasion of Iraq, Captain Nathaniel Fick <1> and his Marines enter Muwaffiqiya, a village south of Baghdad, without encountering any resistance. They advance slowly. They are nervous. They've just been warned by radio that fedayin are operating in the area and preparing suicide attacks. They establish a road block to allow the rest of the convoy to advance when a car comes up at an intersection. "Vehicle ahead. Blue car. Three or four passengers," shouts a soldier. "Roger. Ascending force. Don't let it pass!" cries an officer. They proceed to a warning round, then open fire. The car leaves the road, then stops. The driver lies across the steering wheel, his tunic stained with blood.
Every American soldier transformed into an author has his story of mortal blunder at a checkpoint. The victims are neither kamikazes nor combatants. They committed the mistake of not stopping in time or of having just popped up in the wrong place at the wrong time. "Everybody was scared shitless," relates Chief-Sergeant Jimmy Massey in "Kill! Kill! Kill!" <2>: "When the tractor truck turned up, one of his men raised his arm to signal the driver to stop. Without effect. We all opened fire. Without notice ... A man on fire, who is around sixty years old, jumped from the cabin and ran to the highway, trying to put out the flames."
Gore Fest The first books follow the first discharges. Three years after the beginning of the hostilities, the testimonies of American veterans returning from the Middle East are multiplying. Every conflict generates its own literary genre: epic for the Second World War, tragedy for the Vietnam War. And "junk" for Operation Iraqi Freedom. The material is composed from blogs, personal letters, raw details furtively thrown on paper between two patrols. The combat scenes oscillate between video games and gore fests. Garrison life provides closed-door secrets worthy of a reality show. Question of the times, the culture, and also of the context. Iraq inspires its conquerors to disjointed tales with no message, no direction, no laurels, no praise, and no critique. No diatribe against the US Army or George W. Bush, but no great patriotic couplets either.
More:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/030906G.shtml