by hilzoy
Two weeks ago, TNR published a piece by their ‘Baghdad Diarist’, who writes under the pseudonym “Scott Thomas”. It contains three stories about soldiers doing vile things in Iraq; in one, the person who does the vile thing is the writer. The point of the piece, as best I could tell, was that war does strange things to your sense of what’s appropriate, and to try to describe these changes. Thus, “Scott Thomas” writes this, about the incident in which he figures:
“AM I A MONSTER? I have never thought of myself as a cruel person. Indeed, I have always had compassion for those with disabilities. I once worked at a summer camp for developmentally disabled children, and, in college, I devoted hours every week to helping a student with cerebral palsy perform basic tasks like typing, eating, and going to the bathroom. Even as I was reveling in the laughter my words had provoked, I was simultaneously horrified and ashamed at what I had just said. In a strange way, though, I found the shame comforting. I was relieved to still be shocked by my own cruelty–to still be able to recognize that the things we soldiers found funny were not, in fact, funny.”
The piece launched a furor on the right, with bloggers falling all over themselves to try to find holes in it. Some of their attempts were pretty lame. For instance, one part of “Thomas”‘ piece involves finding part of a child’s skull while constructing a command outpost. “Thomas” says:
“And, eventually, we reached the bones. All children’s bones: tiny cracked tibias and shoulder blades. We found pieces of hands and fingers. We found skull fragments. No one cared to speculate what, exactly, had happened here, but it was clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort.”
A soldier at the same base wrote this:
“There was a children’s cemetery unearthed while constructing a Combat Outpost (COP) in the farm land south of Baghdad International Airport. It was not a mass grave. It was not the result of some inhumane genocide. It was an unmarked cometary where the locals had buried children some years back.”
This was cited as having falsified “Scott Thomas”‘ claim that he and his comrades had found a mass grave, when in fact he had made no such claim. Similarly, just try to figure out what the big deal is here. Other objections were more substantive, though not, I thought, decisive. In particular, one incident described in the piece involved “Thomas” and his buddies making fun of a disfigured woman; soldiers from the FOB at which this was supposed to have happened deny ever seeing such a woman.
In general, though, the consensus on the right-wing blogs seems to be that this entire piece is an elaborate fantasy cooked up to slur the troops:
“Even if “Scott Thomas” actually exists, and is a soldier serving in Iraq (which most veterans highly doubt) the anti-war cadre of the New Republic intentionally turns off its minimal journalistic standards on this story simply because it hates America, and hates her sons and daughters who go in harm’s way.”
Now, “Scott Thomas” has come forward:
“I am Private Scott Thomas Beauchamp, a member of Alpha Company, 1/18 Infantry, Second Brigade Combat Team, First Infantry Division.
My pieces were always intended to provide my discrete view of the war; they were never intended as a reflection of the entire U.S. Military. I wanted Americans to have one soldier’s view of events in Iraq.
It’s been maddening, to say the least, to see the plausibility of events that I witnessed questioned by people who have never served in Iraq. I was initially reluctant to take the time out of my already insane schedule fighting an actual war in order to play some role in an ideological battle that I never wanted to join. That being said, my character, my experiences, and those of my comrades in arms have been called into question, and I believe that it is important to stand by my writing under my real name.”
Discussion below the fold.
I have not written about this story before now (even when I wrote on part of an article prompted by it) because I had no idea whether or not it was true. On the one hand, some parts of it — especially the ridiculing of the disfigured woman — seemed to me implausible, not because it’s implausible to think that soldiers might be cruel, but because this woman was on base, and was either a soldier or a contractor, and I would have imagined that making fun of people who are, or seem to be, their comrades, and making fun of a disfigurement they probably received in the line of duty, would be Just. Plain. Out. Though, of course, I really don’t know that this is true; I have absolutely no idea what unwritten rules exist on a military base, and so my sense that this is implausible relies solely on my own imagination.
Which is, of course, the whole problem in a nutshell.
On the other hand, I did not find the rest of the article at all implausible. This is not because I think that “Our troops are mentally-disturbed, torturing, baby-killing psychopaths too stupid for college and unable to get work as a janitor, so they had to enlist in the military”. It’s because some people react this way to stress, especially to stress that involves having to make yourself callous in order to steamroll across what feel like moral norms and do things that you would never do in other situations. A few examples from non-military settings:
First case: in medical school, first-year anatomy students generally have to dissect a cadaver. People who donate their bodies for dissection are doing a wonderful thing that not many people would do, and if it weren’t for them, doctors would have to chose between not doing dissections and relying on grave robbers, as they used to. According to my friends who have been to medical school, most people recognize this, and treat their cadavers with respect. But they also tell me that there is generally a group of students who don’t: who make fun of their cadavers, make their dead hands and bodies do silly things, and in extreme cases desecrate them, if they think they can get away with it.
I have always assumed that this is a completely comprehensible, though vile, response to the fact that cutting up a human body is a profoundly uncomfortable thing to be doing. Your head might tell you that it’s a fine thing to be doing in medical school, and that whatever your normal reasons for resisting the idea of cutting up a human body, they do not apply here; but we’re not all head. And one of the things you might do with the rest of your emotions is to deny them by making fun of the thing that provokes them.
(Note: to their credit, medical schools generally go to considerable lengths to impress on their students that they should not do this, and to supervise their dissections.)
Second case: in 1984, the Animal Liberation Front stole some film from a UPenn lab that was doing head injury experiments, and used it to make the film ‘Unnecessary Fuss’. From the Wikipedia entry on the film:
“After the injury is sustained, the baboon’s head is dislodged from the helmet using a hammer and screwdriver. One sequence shows part of the baboon’s ear being torn off along with the helmet. After pulling the baboon’s head from the helmet, the researcher is heard to laugh, saying: “It’s a boy,” then, “Looks like I left a little ear behind.”
The footage shows the researchers laughing at injured baboons, performing electrocautery on an apparently conscious baboon, smoking cigarettes and pipes during surgery, and playing loud music as the animals are injured. A researcher is seen holding a seriously injured baboon up to the camera, while others speak to the animal: “Don’t be shy now, sir, nothing to be afraid of,” followed by laughter, and “He says, ‘you’re gonna rescue me from this, aren’t you? Aren’t you?’,” followed by more laughter.
While one baboon was being injured on the operating table by the hydraulic device, the camera panned to a brain-damaged, drooling monkey strapped into a high chair in a corner of the room, with the words “Cheerleading in the corner, we have B-10. B-10 wishes his counterpart well. As you can see, B-10 is still alive. B-10 is hoping for a good result,” followed by laughter. In another sequence, one researcher is heard to say: “You better hope the … anti-vivisection people don’t get ahold of this film.””
When I saw this for the first time, I was furious for a number of reasons, foremost among them, obviously, the treatment of the animals. (In what follows, I’m not going to focus on the treatment of the baboons; please don’t take that to indicate that I don’t think it’s just abhorrent.) But I was also furious because most of the people the Wikipedia entry describes as ‘researchers’ are, as best I can tell, students; and I was furious at their professors. The students seem to be of age, so it’s not that I don’t hold them responsible for what they did. But I think that the researchers not only completely failed to do right by the animals under their care; they also failed in their duty to do right by their students.
When you hire someone to strap baboons onto an operating table, snap their necks, and then do whatever experiments need to be done on them afterwards, you are putting them in a position in which, as with dissecting cadavers, they have to do things that would, under any normal circumstances, be abhorrent and cruel. (I think that what’s shown in this video was abhorrent and cruel and wrong, but presumably the researchers themselves did not agree.) When you hire people to do that, especially people who are considerably younger than you are, and who would normally look up to you, you have (it seems to me) an obligation to help them find a way of dealing with what they are doing, precisely because you’re not just asking them to grow cell cultures, or fill test tubes, but to traverse very dangerous moral terrain, in which it would be very, very easy to get lost.
Perhaps because I am a professor, when I saw these students making fun of the baboons, holding their hands in the air, zooming in on their stitched-up scalps, saying in baboon voices: “You’re going to rescue me from this, aren’t you? Aren’t you?” I saw not only cruelty to animals, but also a profound failure on the part of the professors who should have been there to prevent this sort of thing from happening. Again: it’s not that I didn’t hold the students responsible; I did. But this reaction — mocking and minimizing something you find profoundly disturbing — is so completely comprehensible that I thought: anyone who puts a student in a morally dangerous situation like this has an obligation to try to see that they get out of it without moral injury. But no one did that for these students. They were left to find their way on their own. And that’s just wrong.
***
Since I think that it’s comprehensible and normal, though wrong, for people who have to do things that would normally be wrong to react by ridiculing the things or people they are asked to do those things to, I have no problem believing that things like this happen in the military, not necessarily often, but sometimes. I do not believe that “our troops are mentally-disturbed, torturing, baby-killing psychopaths too stupid for college and unable to get work as a janitor.” But I also don’t believe that they are all saints to whom the baser human reactions are absolutely alien. And that is what I’d have to believe in order to assume that nothing like this ever happens.
(Note: one reason why I think it’s really important not to confuse supporting the troops with thinking that they are all saints and heroes is that if one thought this, one would not see any need for the kinds of training and leadership that would help to keep them from reacting in this way. I said above that anyone who puts someone, especially someone they’re in some sense responsible for, into a morally dangerous situation has an obligation to help them get through it without moral injury. If our soldiers were all saints, we wouldn’t have to worry about that: saints all do the right thing no matter how morally dangerous the situation, and so we could safely drop them into any situation without having to worry about anything other than their physical safety.
It’s precisely because they are not all saints, but normal human beings, that we need to provide them with the kind of leadership and training that will allow them to get through military service with not just their bodies but their souls intact. Failing to recognize the need for this is no more “supportive” of them than thinking that they are such total superheroes that they don’t ever need to eat, and therefore neglecting to supply them with food.)
Still, as I said, I never thought I had any idea whether this story was true or not. I thought it was perfectly conceivable that it might happen, and not just because people do generic bad things in wartime, but because, for the reasons I tried to explain, some of the things in “Scott Thomas”‘ piece struck me as just the sort of things I’d expect that some soldiers might do in response to being asked to be constantly prepared to do things that people just don’t do in normal life. On the other hand, as I said, some of the details struck me as off.
Fundamentally, I thought: I have no idea, really. Even my judgments about plausibility are based on extrapolating from situations like cadaver dissection and head injury research to the quite different circumstances of being in combat, with which I am (luckily) unfamiliar. So I took a pass on this one.
What I never really understood was why the various right-wing blogs, with the possible exception of military bloggers who had some knowledge of e.g. the actual bases in question, didn’t take a pass as well. It seemed to me just obvious that the veracity of this story was just not the sort of thing that bloggers sitting in our studies were going to make a lot of progress on. (This was especially striking given some of those same bloggers’ uncritical acceptance of Michael Yon’s story about al Qaeda serving baked children to their parents. Michael Yon himself said only that he had heard this story, but that didn’t prevent some bloggers from immediately assuming that it was true.)
What’s interesting is that the right-wing blogs that just assumed that this was some sort of leftist smear job were doing exactly the same thing that they accused “Scott Thomas” and TNR of doing: namely, adopting a story because it fit their preconceptions, and despite having no good reason to think that it was true. There is no standard that I can think of that would imply that TNR was wrong to publish “Shock Troops” in the first place that would not also imply that it was wrong of those bloggers to impugn “Scott Thomas”‘ honesty and TNR’s journalistic integrity based on the facts they had. None at all.
Now “Scott Thomas” has revealed himself. All sorts of people are psychoanalyzing his old blog; Blackfive has already figured out exactly what motivates him (hint: it’s not good); Michael Goldberg at the Weekly Standard has plainly been Googling him, and is posting links to stories from his old college newspaper. Ace is investigating, well, everything. Jonah Goldberg thinks he’s whiny, as does Baldilocks, and Mark Steyn wonders:
“Is this reportage? Or was he just doing a bit of imaginative fiction like the creative-writing classes teach? And into which category do his New Republic pieces fall?”
Dear right-wing bloggers: Stop. Think. Reread the original piece. It’s not about how our soldiers are murderers and scumbags. It’s not a vicious left-wing assault on them. It’s trying to make some sense of how war makes you do things you wouldn’t ordinarily do, and it’s pretty obvious that what sparked it was that “Scott Thomas” saw himself doing these things. (As I said before: the anecdote that starts the piece off features Thomas himself, not someone else, doing something he knows is wrong.)
You have been impugning his honesty and TNR’s integrity on the basis of very little evidence, and demanding that they prove to your satisfaction, as if that were possible, that he is who he says he is. Now he has come forward, and it turns out that despite some people’s confident assertions that “most veterans highly doubt” that he’s actually a soldier, he is. But he and TNR haven’t yet done enough, according to Michael Goldfarb at the Weekly Standard:
“We still want to know:
1) Dates. When did he mock the woman at the mess hall? When was the soldier wearing and playing with the child’s skull? With dates, these incidents can be verified.
2) Names. He can argue that he would get the dog-killer in trouble by naming him, but how about the names of soldiers who witnessed the event at the mess hall and those who saw the guy with the kid’s skull? Real live witnesses can verify the incidents. “
To which I can only respond: Michael Goldfarb, the world does not revolve around you and your demands. TNR has spent a lot of time responding to charges against it that were made on the basis of very little evidence. “Scott Thomas” has come forward; I cannot imagine that this will have no consequences for him in the military, or for that matter that it will not harm other people, like his commanders. It’s Jamal Hussein all over again: people move from the fact that they cannot verify something that is in its nature hard to verify, especially at a distance, to demands that news organizations drop everything to satisfy them, and that people who might have good reasons for wanting to be anonymous come forward, whatever the cost to themselves, simply because some bloggers think his story is not credible, and despite the fact that they don’t have any real evidence for thinking so.
It’s not that I have any particular brief for Scott Thomas Beauchamp (and I certainly don’t have one for TNR.) I read Beauchamp’s old blog, and I didn’t find any reason to think I’d seek him out to be friends. But I completely agree with Matt Yglesias on this one:
“That’s just crazy. All these people need to stop. They need to take a deep breath. They need to apologize to the people at TNR who’ve wasted huge amounts of time dealing with their nonsense. And they need to think a bit about the epistemic situation they’re creating where information about Iraq that they don’t want to hear — even when published in a pro-war publication — can just be immediately dismissed as fraudulent even though the misconduct it described was far, far less severe than all sorts of other well-document misconduct in Iraq.”
***
UPDATE: Andrew Sullivan is interesting:
“So why the craziness?
Partly, I think, new media hatred of TNR. Partly that Thomas is obviously a liberal Democrat who’s also a soldier. But mainly, it seems to me, the conservative blogosphere has taken such an almighty empirical beating this last year that they have an overwhelming psychic need to lash out at those still clinging to sanity on the war. This Scott Thomas story is a godsend for these people, a beautiful distraction from the reality they refuse to face.
It combines all the usual Weimar themes out there: treasonous MSM journalists, treasonous soldiers, stories of atrocities that undermine morale (regardless of whether they’re true or not), and blanket ideological denial. We have to understand that some people still do not believe that the U.S. is torturing or has tortured detainees, still do not believe that torture or murder or rape occurred at Abu Ghraib, still believe that everyone at Gitmo is a dangerous terrorist captured by US forces, and still believe we’re winning in Iraq. If you believe all this and face the mountains of evidence against you, you have to act ever more decisively and emphatically to refute any evidence that might undermine this worldview.”
Hugh Hewitt, on the other hand, is currently in the lead in my “ridiculous grasping at straws” contest:
“I note that the second post on a blog believed to be Beauchamp’s, the soldier notes “I’m reading On The Road again.” Amazon.com notes that this book “is not only the soul of the Beat movement and literature, but one of the most important novels of the century. Like nearly all of Kerouac’s writing, On The Road is thinly fictionalized autobiography, filled with a cast made of Kerouac’s real life friends, lovers, and fellow travelers.””
OMG he read a thinly fictionalized autobiography over a year ago! STOP THE PRESSES!!!
Just to let you all know: I read Harry Potter over the weekend. That doesn’t mean that whatever I write here is fiction. Nor does the fact that I once read Paradise Lost mean that my blog posts are actually an epic in very, very well-disguised blank verse.
Just in case anyone was wondering.
Thou shalt not speak of soldiers in unflattering terms – it’s the new PC.
It’s not about “unflattering terms” — it’s about whether or not “Scott Thomas” actually witnessed the conduct that he said he witnessed and that he ascribed to fellow military personnel.
I’d say that the TNR should strive for a higher standard than “fake but accurate.”
No doubt, some troops have engaged in horrific offenses. But to suggest that that justifies Thomas’s allegations is to say that it’s perfectly fair to call Bill Clinton a rapist — after all, *some* people are rapists, right?
Incidentally, I’m not sure why you insist on ascribing all of the commotion to “right wing bloggers.” There are plenty of veterans who have complained about this incident on their “milblogs” — are their criticisms so easily dismissed?
I don’t follow blogs too closely, so maybe there’s some aspect to this that I’m missing. But to me it seems that what we have is that TNR published serious allegations against U.S. troops, and that TNR has not been able to document those allegations. Your ad hominem responses seem pretty lame to me.
hilzoy – don’t try to deprive them of their Two Minutes Hate.
There are plenty of veterans who have complained about this incident on their “milblogs”
Could you link to some of these?
… unless the soldier in question has himself dared to speak of soldiers in unflattering terms, in which case doing whatever you can to destroy his reputation is obligatory.
In this case, I’d say the two-minute hate is the rage directed at Mike Goldfarb et al.
Here are some of the milblogs:
http://op-for.com/2007/07/scott_thomas_exposed_1.html
http://www.outsidethewire.com/blog/
http://www.blackfive.net/main/
http://www.mudvillegazette.com/archives/009075.html
Like I said, I’m not much into blogs, so these are the ones I’ve found merely by following links from Goldfarb.
But to me it seems that what we have is that TNR published serious allegations against U.S. troops…
No it didn’t. Which serious allegations are you referring to? The clowning with a skull cap? One soldier running over dogs?
While distasteful, these are not “serious allegations” in any stretch of the imagination, and even if they were, they reference two soldiers, not “the troops”.
Adam: I think that when a magazine publishes something, it has an obligation to verify what it publishes. I don’t think this means establishing it beyond any conceivable doubt — if five eyewitnesses independently testify that they saw someone they knew do something, they could all be lying — but it means making sure that you have the confidence to stand behind it.
I do not think that they are under the same obligation to disclose their reasons for that confidence to the entire world. There are particular situations in which they might be — for instance, when it matters enormously, not just to them but to their public, to be able to assess the veracity of the particular things they report. But to insist on making their grounds fully transparent all the time would do away with anonymous sources, and while I think anonymous sources have been overused recently, I think they’re also really valuable.
I read, and linked to, a bunch of the milbloggers. And I said, above, that they were the exception to my general claim that right-wing bloggers had no reason to think this story false — people who have been in Iraq, who have some familiarity with the base in question, the digging projects undertaken near it, who was and who was not in the dining hall (or whatever) do have grounds for contesting it. But people like Ace and Jonah Goldberg do not.
I think that most of their complaints abut the piece really don’t hold up. There was a children’s cemetery, apparently, and Thomas never said it was a mass grave. They question whether a dog could be run over in the specific way he claims; I think they’re misreading what he said about how the dog was killed. The one thing I don’t think this about is the claim that no one like the woman Thomas describes was in the dining hall.
But more to the point: there is no reason to think that we, the general reading public, have a real need to assess the credibility of TNR’s sourcing of this story. Its interest, such as it is, is not as a set of allegations: Thomas doesn’t name anyone, and besides, as Matt Y has said, these are by miles not the worst allegations we’ve seen. A woman is mocked, a piece of a skull is taken, a dog is killed. — The interest of the story is as an account of one soldier’s experiences in Iraq. If someone doesn’t think he’s representative, fine: no one is representative. But the only way it would be important enough to justify the amount of time and energy that some people have spent on it would be if TNR had just made it up. And there’s no evidence of this at all, other than the fact that (say) Ace thinks it fits his storyline about how the left hates soldiers.
Actually, KCinDC, Mudville Gazette predicted your sort of rhetorical manuever:
“If ‘Scott Thomas’ actually is a soldier, you’ll see an amazing example of Orwellian double-think. Any attempt by the Army to punish this douche bag for the behavior he confesses to (or for fabricating incidents, if his claims prove false) will be described by leftists in and out of the media as persecution for ‘speaking out’.”
Like I said, this isn’t about referring to soldiers in unflattering terms. It’s just about publishing unverified accusations of serious moral depravity against soldiers.
“And I said, above, that they were the exception to my general claim that right-wing bloggers had no reason to think this story false — people who have been in Iraq, who have some familiarity with the base in question, the digging projects undertaken near it, who was and who was not in the dining hall (or whatever) do have grounds for contesting it.”
Actually, Goldfarb’s spent the past week linking to detailed, substantive criticisms of the facts alleged in the article, submitted by people familiar with the technology at issue (e.g., http://www.weeklystandard.com/weblogs/TWSFP/2007/07/more_from_fob_falcon.asp, http://www.weeklystandard.com/weblogs/TWSFP/2007/07/more_on_scott_thomass_mysterio.asp)
“and besides, as Matt Y has said, these are by miles not the worst allegations we’ve seen.”
Fake but accurate? Seriously? That’s your justification for publication of the essay? Yikes. That’s rather disappointing.
I guess fake-but-accurate is enough to justify your two-minute hate toward the folks who are debnuking Scott Thomas’s disgusting allegations. I look forward to the “third minute,” when you’re better able to control your emotions.
Adam, you’re confusing conservative bloggers (KCinDC‘s subject) with the Army. You’re also confused about the gravity of the alleged misconduct.
“Fake but accurate? Seriously? That’s your justification for publication of the essay?”
You’re entirely confused about what the post says.
Incidentally, is it your position that no soldier in Iraq has done anything wrong?
Fake but accurate? Seriously? That’s your justification for publication of the essay?
I think the point is that these are not the type of allegations, true or not, that is worth the time and energy of the massive right-wing hissy fit that’s taken place.
And KCinDC is referring to the hissy fit, not any attempt by the military for punishing the soldier for his behavior and/or fabrications (which would, assuming they are violations, be fine with me).
There is a great deal of binary thinking on this issue, and it may be seen repeated in the initial reaction in some quarters to Abu Ghraib, the murder of Zeyad’s cousin, and several other incidents. As near as I can tell, it assumes that if some US troops are involved in questionable actions, then the implication is that they are all this way.
Which is ridiculous. I think that the US military is one of the most humane and well-trained on Earth, but there are still going to be circumstances in which atrocities occur, or even plain nasty behavior, like shooting at civilian vehicles for fun, running over dogs, or making Iraqis kids run for blocks after vehicles in the hopes of getting a bottle of water or pop.
These kinds of things are bound to increase as morale decreases. But mentioning them doesn’t mean that the behavior is being extrapolated to all of the troops.
Adam: fake but accurate is not my standard for publication. True is my standard for publication.
I have a different standard for when it is necessary for a media outlet to disclose its sources. That depends in part on things like: what promises of confidentiality has anyone made to those sources, but also on how important it is for the public to be able to assess those sources independently. In this specific case, I do not think that it is that important, and one reason is: that the allegations are not as serious as they would need to be for (not publication of the story in the first place but) disclosure of the sources to be warranted.
Consider a different case: what if some anonymous writer in TNR wrote that it was in fact the US who blew up the mosque at Karbala? What would turn on that was not just TNR’s reputation, but people’s lives. (I am assuming that people in Iraq would react, um, badly to this disclosure.) In a case like that, it might be really, really important to ascertain exactly who the anonymous writer was, and what basis he had for what he said. Nothing like that is true here.
But please don’t put words in my mouth and say that my standard for publication is “fake but accurate”.
“you’re confusing conservative bloggers (KCinDC’s subject) with the Army.”
Only one of my comments responded to KCinDC (5:54). The rest responded to hilzoy and spartikus.
“Incidentally, is it your position that no soldier in Iraq has done anything wrong?”
Hardly. As I noted above, “No doubt, some troops have engaged in horrific offenses.”
“[the allegations] reference two soldiers, not ‘the troops’.”
I didn’t say that they slurred all U.S. troops *collectively.* I only said that they slurred “U.S. troops.” Are you suggesting that the two soldiers are not U.S. troops? Which nation were they from?
OK, back to your two-minute hate. Right-wing bloggers are obsessed … right, right. Goldfarb’s a jerk … right, right. I’m claiming that no U.S. troops have ever done anything wrong … check.
Next, you’ll argue that I’m questioning your patriotism, right?
I didn’t say that they slurred all U.S. troops *collectively.* I only said that they slurred “U.S. troops.”
Yes, I know. So does this mean that anyone reporting something negative about one or two US soldiers is now surring US troops?
surring == slurring
Next, you’ll argue that I’m questioning your patriotism, right?
Mindreading, minus ten point. Biased and incorrect mindreading, minus 100 points.
You’ll be more effective in debate if you wait for the stupid remarks to be spoken instead of anticipating them and acting as though they were actually expressed.
“there is no reason to think that we, the general reading public, have a real need to assess the credibility of TNR’s sourcing of this story. Its interest, such as it is, is not as a set of allegations: Thomas doesn’t name anyone, and besides, as Matt Y has said, these are by miles not the worst allegations we’ve seen.”
Sorry, Hilzoy, but the quoted statement is a flat-out acceptance of fake-but-accurate: You said that there’s no need to for any of us to care about whether or not the accusations are true, because Thomas didn’t name names and, in any event, soldiers have done worse.
If Scott Thomas wants to write about things that actually happened, then more power to him. If he wants to write fictional tales about soldiers’ misconduct and suggest that it actually happened, and if the plausibility of those tales is called into serious question by knowledgable persons, then I’d say that it would be horrific to let this go.
And here’s why: We’ve all seen that stories of U.S. troop misconduct ultimately puts troops in yet greater danger, given the possibility of revenge attacks. (Isn’t that one of the central arguments against the use of torture — if we do it, then they’ll do it to our troops?) Scott Thomas has published, in a reputable magazine, allegations that U.S. soldiers desecrated Iraqi remains and engage in reckless, wanton violence in the streets. Do you seriously suggest that such allegations can be published without placing U.S. troops in yet greater risk of reprisal?
Your eager defense of Scott Thomas and TNR boggles the mind. Please, I know you aren’t a big fan of conservatives, but let’s not race to defend a serious error in TNR’s judgment just because, as they say, “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.”
Scott Thomas has published, in a reputable magazine, allegations that U.S. soldiers desecrated Iraqi remains and engage in reckless, wanton violence in the streets. Do you seriously suggest that such allegations can be published without placing U.S. troops in yet greater risk of reprisal?
And if the allegations are true? Should they still be kept a state secret to avoid a bad PR situation?
Black Five is none too happy with Beauchamp, but he is not suggesting that someone from his company should frag him, not in so many words, anyway.
“So does this mean that anyone reporting something negative about one or two US soldiers is now slurring US troops?”
Well, if was only one soldier, then it would be “a U.S. troop.” But two soldiers would be “U.S. troops.” Are you suggesting that two soldiers would not be “U.S. troops”? What sort of troops would they be? Or are they not troops at all?
While he didn’t use the expression “mass grave”, Beauchamp did refer to the children’s cemetery as a “Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort”. So it isn’t surprising that people assumed he meant a mass grave.
Well, if was only one soldier…
Aside from the tap dance, would that be confirmation that anyone reporting any negative actions by more than one US soldier is “slurring US troops?”
“Incidentally, is it your position that no soldier in Iraq has done anything wrong?”
‘Hardly. As I noted above, “No doubt, some troops have engaged in horrific offenses.”‘
Ok, then you ought to countenance a discussion of the article’s veracity without resorting to your “two-minute hate” nonsense. Ditto the significance of the article’s claims if true – which, if you’ll take a moment to reflect, are argued above to be relatively minor.
Some useful commentary from conservative mil-blogger John Cole, e.g.
Also from that thread, a commenter claims,
So what though?
Maybe we need to take this same standard to these poor idiot shills who still support their 2002 position on this dumb war as we take to the soldiers. War does terrible things to a person’s psyche. So does: being disastrously wrong and having brought a country to the brink of civil war, genocide, and anarchy; having failed; and having lost the very conflict that you puffed your chest up about and barked that you were the only one tough enough to win.
The cognitive dissonance in Goldberg’s skull, were he to accept reality, would be brain-splitting. We just can’t expect people to eviscerate themselves psychologically like that. Not everyone is or needs to be that brave. We’re being too demanding.
So what do people in this pitiable predicament do? They refuse absolutely to let any piece of information in that would falsify their world view. They take the see-no-evil hear-no-evil approach to Iraq. It’s only human.
And they’ve dug themselves so deep that if the house of glass shatters now, they’ll be left doddering in a psychiatric ward somewhere. I mean, they haven’t just stuck to a position about the war. They’ve spent the last five years attacking the honesty of anyone who disagrees with them. They’ve rewritten the rules of argument to accommodate their conclusions. They’d have to begin the wrenching process of revising their opinions about everything. They’d have to find new friends, learn to trust people they hated, and disavow the people they loved.
Imagine if Oedipus ended not with the king blinding himself in admission of what he had done, but having spent a whole ‘nother play insisting that Jocasta wasn’t really his mum, and believing any scrap that suggested the man he met wasn’t his father. Imagine Oedipus prattling on for years about this secret evidence he had and how history would judge him a great king.
Adam: not having enough of an interest in being able to assess TNR’s sources independently to warrant their exposing those sources is not the same as not caring whether or not their stories are true.
Consider a different case, where we had a much larger interest in knowing who the source was in order to assess his credibility: Deep Throat and Watergate. In that case, I think that the Post was right to maintain his confidentiality. For that reason, had I been blogging at the time, I would not have asked them to disclose it. This is in no way an indication that the truth of what Deep Throat was saying didn’t matter to me.
In addition to the priceless Hugh Hewitt quote that I put in the update — oh, heck, I’ll put it here too, it’s too good not to:
Tee hee hee! I’ve read On The Road too! Just thought I’d warn you.
Anyways, in addition to that, our man Ace continues his investigations:
Ace: Wrong. You did not have to ask when that relationship began. There is no reason for you to keep wondering whether Beauchamp had an on-again, off-again relationship. No reason at all.
Adam: The troops are much safer if the US military has a reputation for being open and honest about problems and if it has a reputation for promptly attending to them. Keeping hush about abuse or scandals creates a liability that they’ll be exposed later, and then you’ll have a cover-up. Once it’s shown that you are willing to cover things up, people will believe nearly anything they want to about you.
People everywhere are mature enough to see the difference between a few bad apples and a pervasive structure of corruption. Why build that structure of corruption when you don’t need to? Why build a campaign of silence around something that discredits the integrity of the entire military rather than dealing with the bad apples in an open and diligent way?
I think the most serious criticisms of the piece are from people who served on the same base without seeing anyone that fit the description of the injured woman. If she was there, surely someone saw her and can verify that she was there. If it were the case that no one there fit the description, then we would know that at least one section of the article was completely fictionalized.
“Ok, then you ought to countenance a discussion of the article’s veracity without resorting to your ‘two-minute hate’ nonsense.”
I used the term “two-minute hate” at 5:50, using the term in response to a suggestion by “Ugh” that this was a right-wing two-minute-hate against “Thomas”. I think my interest in the veracity of the “Thomas” claims is quite evident. Indeed, I’ve shown much greater interest in that veracity than have those who have continued to protest that the subject matter of the Thomas essay represents, at best, small potatoes.
In any event, I think I’ve said what I care to say. Like I said, I’m not much into blogs, and I’m just not that interested in, say, a psychoanalysis of Goldfarb or, say, Hilzoy’s continued protestation that he doesn’t care enough about the subject to really critique the allegations (while he continues to write on the meta-story). No thanks.
I’m quite pleased that, with “Scott Thomas” having revealed his own identity, the military can go about the task of checking his allegations. If he told the truth, then I hope that the military justice system deals with Scott Thomas’s targets. And if he lied, I hope he catches hell.
“Nor does the fact that I once read Paradise Lost mean that my blog posts are actually an epic in very, very well-disguised blank verse.”
Two weeks ago, the centrist TNR
Published a piece by their ‘Baghdad Diarist’,
Who writes under the pseudonym “Scott Thomas”.
It tells three stories of soldiers doing vile
Things in Iraq; in one, the person who does
The vile thing is the writer. The point of the piece,
As best as I could tell, was that war
Does strange things to your sense of what’s appropriate,
And to try to clearly describe these changes.
OK, maybe just onme more comment:
“The troops are much safer if the US military has a reputation for being open and honest about problems and if it has a reputation for promptly attending to them. Keeping hush about abuse or scandals creates a liability that they’ll be exposed later, and then you’ll have a cover-up.”
That’s a false dichotomy, of course. The point I raised, and to which you purported to respond, was the question of whether or not false allegations put troops at heightened risk.
Adam: “Hilzoy’s continued protestation that he doesn’t care enough about the subject to really critique the allegations”
That is not what I said.
But then, since you were referring to some unknown masculine hilzoy, perhaps I shouldn’t take offense.
I bet Mr Hilzoy smells like Aqua Velva and hazelnut pipe tobacco.
Resembles a young CS Lewis.
Adam: “he doesn’t care enough about the subject to really critique the allegations”
More complete confusion.
“If he told the truth, then I hope that the military justice system deals with Scott Thomas’s targets.”
The military has better things to do than to investigate rudeness, reckless driving, and finding evidence of Saddam’s atrocities. Judging from the Cole thread I sent you to, that stuff is just how it is over there, and nobody who is informed is sincerely concerned about it.
whether or not false allegations put troops at heightened risk
False allegations of cruel comments about a disfigured U.S. contractor? Nope.
False allegations of crushing a dog with an armored vehicle? Nope. (It might do so, in an Iraq where U.S. troops hadn’t already killed so many Iraqis in checkpoint shootings or by spraying the area with gunfire in the aftermath of attacks or by massive jumpiness about vehicles coming anywhere near convoys.)
False allegations of desecrating the bodies of Iraqis? Could well be. I didn’t read the article, and don’t plan to, and don’t have a sense of how public this was. But given the photographic evidence that already exists of other soldiers doing this kind of thing, people reading the article might be forgiven for assuming that it’s true. That’s not ‘fake but accurate’; it’s ‘unproven but credible’.
Hilzoy’s a guy now?
Congratulations, Hilzoy. Hope you like the new plumbing.
I revise my answer to the third case as ‘Nope’ if the “desecrating of Iraqi remains” turns out to be a reference to merely excavating the bones of the child.
Hilzoy’s continued protestation that he doesn’t care enough about the subject to really critique the allegations.
It’s so much easier to argue with people when you make up both sides of the argument.
Wonder if the people upset about Scott Thomas will turn out to be upset about allegations of serious problems at the US embassy. And if so, why they’re upset…
Y’know, I don’t think Adam’s really into blogs. Strawmen, on the other hand, seem to interest him a great deal.
The thing you don’t seem to be grasping, Adam, is the the allegations in question are not, in fact, serious ones. At best, they’re politically inconvenient, but even then only in terms of domestic politics. If substantiated they would have no serious repercussions. Revelations that US soldiers have been killing dogs are unlikely to have Iraqis rioting in the streets. So why are you, even though you don’t follow blogs, all worked up about an entirely manufactured blogosphere non-scandal?
Y’know, I don’t think Adam’s really into blogs. Strawmen, on the other hand, seem to interest him a great deal.
The thing you don’t seem to be grasping, Adam, is the the allegations in question are not, in fact, serious ones. At best, they’re politically inconvenient, but even then only in terms of domestic politics. If substantiated they would have no serious repercussions. Revelations that US soldiers have been killing dogs are unlikely to have Iraqis rioting in the streets. So why are you, even though you don’t follow blogs, all worked up about an entirely manufactured blogosphere non-scandal?
I revise my answer to the third case as ‘Nope’ if the “desecrating of Iraqi remains” turns out to be a reference to merely excavating the bones of the child.
The incident was stealing an intact portion of a skull and wearing it for a day.
It’s not about “unflattering terms” — it’s about whether or not “Scott Thomas” actually witnessed the conduct that he said he witnessed and that he ascribed to fellow military personnel.
no, it’s not. really.
you see, for some bloggers, truth is not an absolute good. there are different kinds of truth – some which help their cause, and some which don’t. and the time they spend investigating, and what they’re looking for, depends on what kind of truth it is.
plentiful are the examples of righty blogs greedily swallowing anonymously-sourced info the supports the war (starting way back in 2002 with the whole WMD thing and continuing all the way to the “baked child” of last week). that stuff, they take as gospel and berate anyone who challenges their faith.
yet, when things come out which paint any aspect of the war in a bad light, they all put on their sweaters and make like Wikipedia Brown, intrepidly searching out The Truth no matter how many cheetos it takes.
is this exclusively a righty failing? of course not. but, let’s not pretend that’s not what’s going on here.
if this was a story about an al-Queda team playing with skulls and killing dogs, sourced from one person, there’s no chance any of them would be questioning it.
Hilzoy’s a guy now?
Congratulations, Hilzoy. Hope you like the new plumbing.
Don’t forget to get a PSA test.
Adam, what crimes exactly are you talking about here?
Running over a stray dog? This is some giant crime for the military justice system to deal with?
Playing with some bones? Whee.
Ribbing another soldier? Oh, the horror. It wasn’t even sexual harrassment, was it?
What has got your goat here? Why are you making such a big deal about this?
i suppose i should add…
the only time i’ve ever heard lefty blogs talking about this has been in stories like this one (though usually a little more… cutting): look at the asses the righties are making of themselves over this non-issue of a story. i haven’t seen a lefty blog try to use this as anything other than a way to laugh at the freak-out some-truth seekers on the right. the lefty blogs (that i’ve seen) aren’t trying to use this to prove anything about the war – the right is.
A couple things:
(i) Obviously I brought up two minutes of hate. I was thinking of the viciousness of the hissy-fit, not those who might have thoughtfully critiqued the veracity of Scott Thomas’ stories, though obviously I didn’t say so.
(ii) I haven’t re-read hilzoy’s post so this may be completely wrong if there is a gender reference, but I think taking Adam to task for not knowing whether hilzoy is a he/she is a bit unfair.
What has got your goat here? Why are you making such a big deal about this?
This from Andrew Sullivan:
What’s especially weird is that almost all the blogs participating in the dogpile say “Of course there are bad apples among the US military,” or words to that effect. But they’re outraged at the mention of them, or something.
Deeply odd.
Drum’s good, too:
Like a Kabuki story, though, you can already see how this is going to play out. Not only will Thomas’s character be dragged savagely through the mud (Michelle Malkin is leading the charge over at her site), but eventually some small part of Thomas’s account will turn out to be slightly exaggerated and the right will erupt in righteous fervor. They were right all along! Thomas did make up his stories! The left does hate the troops! The war is going swimmingly! At least, it would be if the MSM weren’t undermining it at every turn.
I’d like to pause and admire the phrase “Wikipedia Brown”.
I feel guilty about it, but this whole affair is absolutely fascinating to me. It’s not even the bad side of the political blogosphere — it’s the bright overbelly. It’s the fifth estate, compulsorily expressing its phenotype. It’s a treasure trove of internet sociology.
Well cleek, the lefty blogs wouldn’t use this story since it only confirms, in a small way, what the lefty blogs think they already know. And its from TNR, which, to the left blog sense of smell, still stinks a little from its support of the war in the first place.
To your larger point — I don’t think the right is trying to prove anything about the war with this story. Scott Thomas’ veracity doesn’t tell us much about that. Instead, they’re trying to prove something about the liberal media (even the liberal hawk media) and liberals in general.
Yes, I’d like to also praise cleek’s “Wikipedia Brown.”
the lefty blogs wouldn’t use this story since it only confirms, in a small way, what the lefty blogs think they already know.
and what’s that? i can’t read their minds…
Instead, they’re trying to prove something about the liberal media (even the liberal hawk media
fair enough. do you think that justifies their hilarious and unhinged hysteria ?
Yes, I’d like to also praise cleek’s “Wikipedia Brown.”
thank you. thank you all. *bows. throws roses*
I can hardly believe that no blogger I’ve seen — and only one commenter above — has pointed out the deepest inanity of this tempest in a teapot. Namely: now that it is clear that Scott Thomas is a real soldier serving in Iraq, it follows that it is the right-wing bloggers who are the ones casting aspersions on our troops. After all, what they’re now claiming (or strongly suggesting) is that one of our men in uniform deliberately fabricated a story aimed at slurring his fellow soldiers by accusing them of brutality and baseness. That seems at least as serious a charge as anything in Thomas’s piece. Now I wouldn’t deny (for the reasons hilzoy gives) that a soldier might do such a thing, nor has much of anyone on the left. But then, we’re not the ones claiming that every soldier is a perpetual paragon of virtue.
NEWSFLASH: Ordinary Men Trained to Kill Occasionally Behave in Ways We Consider Inappropriate
When I read Scott Thomas’ Shock Troops it didn’t ring inauthentic. I’ve taught the memoirs and novels of Vietnam veterans and what Thomas described was tame in comparison. So imagine my surprise when I learned that the right had gone
and what’s that? i can’t read their minds…
I can’t either, and so probably should have stayed away from the oblique generalization. I think most left bloggers (and probably most right bloggers) would agree that soldiers at war are capable of a variety disturbing actions across a continuum of vileness, from driving aggressively when in a hurry to extra-judicial killings. In that context, Scott Thomas’ revelations are not very revealing.
do you think that justifies their hilarious and unhinged hysteria
I don’t know that it needs justification from without. There is a complicated identity formation and defense process at play that I don’t understand*, but it provides its own justification. That said, if the pro-war side spent as much effort fighting** the war for which they agitated as they spend fighting the anti-war side, the situation might not be so hideous. Couldn’t all the time and effort spent exposing Scott Thomas be put to better use?
——————-
*Probably because I can’t see outside of my own identity formation and defense processes.
**Not in the chickenhawk sense. In the holding-the-leadership-accountable-for-screwing-it-up sense. In the reevaluating-means-and-ends sense.
Speaking of better things to do — where has John Thullen been?
No. If TNR is publishing the lies of a fabulist as factual accounts, that time cannot be better spent. And if that is the case, nobody owes anyone an apology but TNR, for permitting this moron to turn his Munchausen’s into a profession.
I can hardly believe that no blogger I’ve seen — and only one commenter above — has pointed out the deepest inanity of this tempest in a teapot. Namely: now that it is clear that Scott Thomas is a real soldier serving in Iraq, it follows that it is the right-wing bloggers who are the ones casting aspersions on our troops.
John Cole:
Also, his answer to Blackfive’s response is childish, immature, cruel, and made me laugh.
And thank God there are more and more conservative bloggers like John who, while completely wrong about everything political, have proven themselves intelligent and decent people. This gives us something to compare and contrast those with, well, let’s say some mental issues.
And if that is the case, nobody owes anyone an apology but TNR, for permitting this moron to turn his Munchausen’s into a profession.
good to see you’re withholding judgment! hooray for objectivity!
I too must praise cleek’s bon mot.
If TNR is publishing the lies of a fabulist as factual accounts, that time cannot be better spent.
Really? To take down TNR? It’s such a tiny cog in the machinery of idea generation and distribution. Nobody outside the center-left wonkisphere (and now the right pro war blogs) has ever heard of it.
I suppose one could argue that, like invading Saddam’s Iraq, it’s “doable,” and that discrediting it will send a message to the bigger, tougher cogs, a message they didn’t get when Dan Rather got popped.
It’s unconvincing. TNR is still too small to matter, and sending messages is too indirect to affect any change. As John Cole points out, there is more important work to be done.
What John Cole means is– move along, there’s nothing to see here.
What John Cole means is– move along, there’s nothing to see here.
What John Cole means is — compare the complete lack of skepticism among certain bloggers when presented with a false story that meets and reinforces an internal mental framework with the ferocity of those same bloggers when confronted with something that challenges that framework.
I agree with Dan Collins that “If TNR is publishing the lies of a fabulist as factual accounts, that time cannot be better spent. And if that is the case, nobody owes anyone an apology but TNR, for permitting this moron to turn his Munchausen’s into a profession.”
OK, maybe not “could not be better spent — I mean, if I had the option of curing AIDS, I’d prefer that — but still.
But before I would invest any actual time in trying to disprove this story, let alone speculating about its author’s love life, I would want to see more evidence that there was some reason to think that this guy was a “fabulist”. — I mean, it’s also true that IF Walter Pincus of the Washington Post is a serial liar, it would be very much worth proving that. Likewise, IF Ben Bernanke is actually a hologram whose utterances are all written for him by the International Conspiracy of Esperanto Speakers, that would really be worth demonstrating too. It’s just that one needs to establish the credibility of the antecedent before actually investing any time in it.
And that’s leaving out my real reason for not trying to prove or disprove the TNR story, namely: I am not in a position to do so. In this respect I am in exactly the same position as, say, Ace or Michelle Malkin.
I don’t get it. What we have here is a soldier who presents some of his own experiences in Iraq. There are lots of soldiers who publish their accounts of activity in Iraq. This guy has the guts to admit that he and his buddies did some things that, while not criminal, are not nice.
So why is there an outcry about this? Why are some people (who weren’t there) claiming that this soldier is lying? Why are they claiming that he’s doing a bad thing for the US Army? The man is telling the truth as he sees it. What’s wrong with that?
“What I never really understood was why the various right-wing blogs, with the possible exception of military bloggers who had some knowledge of e.g. the actual bases in question, didn’t take a pass as well.”
Oh come on, Hilzoy, it’s not that hard. I’m loath to psychologise, but in this case it just screams at you. As Ara says, it’s all about the cognitive dissonance. Anything that threatens to burst the bubble, no matter how trivial, has to be discredited or otherwise rationalised. Indeed, as the dissonance gets stronger and the bubble gets more elaborate, the more essential it becomes to account for the most trivial of details, even to the point of absurdity (witness Malkin’s insistence that a clearly destroyed mosque hadn’t actually been bombed).
GY: Well, yeah, but …
Also, an addendum to my last comment: the point I was trying to make was that I can accept “if X is true, then it would be worth demonstrating it” without concluding “I should get to work on demonstrating it right now!” I didn’t mean to imply that the likelihood that Scott Thomas is making anything up is as small as the likelihood that Ben Bernanke is a hologram, etc. I think we’re in the position we’d be in if Bernanke had made an oddly pro-Esperanto speech, or something.
I’d like to add another tidbit: first-person accounts of combat are replete with tales of soldiers committing crimes. The Stephen Ambrose best-seller, Band of Brothers, which was made into a television miniseries, described how one American paratrooper machine-gunned a bunch of German POWs out of pure viciousness. You read this kind of thing in all the first-person accounts from all the wars: the Civil War, WWI, WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. What is so surprising about somebody reporting something much more innocent in Iraq?
To pug it simply.
If these right wing bloggers (excepting such as Cole or Sullivan) hear a story of a soldier saving an Iraqi child, then that is noble and requires no dispute.
If the story is from a soldier and states something negative (even if minor as in this case) then that soldier is lieing, smearing the troops and is a traitor to his partners.
After all Kerry lied to Congress and then made the major mistake of saying he was somewhere on a specific date when it may actually have been a few days later.
What Adam doesn’t realize, as many have stated, the story is not what was written by a soldier in Iraq, but the overreaction by a defensive, going down the drain group of bloggers to something that had little importance and even less circulation.
Because it messes with their internalized American superiority meme.
Really ridiculous and stupid. Idiots all.
Anything that threatens to burst the bubble, no matter how trivial, has to be discredited or otherwise rationalised.
right.
there’s also the apparent constant urge to come up with another Rather affair. everyone wants to be the next guy to crack another Perfidious MSM story. so, they take everything that looks like it isn’t solidly sourced and pick at it till they find a chink. and by the time the real story dribbles out, they’re already too invested in their theories to walk away. and so things spiral and bifurcate, and then we get Malkin saying the mosque isn’t blown-up, it’s only pining for the fjords.
aieee!
italiexo!
john miller sez–
“To pug it simply.”
You go, dawg!
In reading cleek’s last comment, I managed to read “spiral and bifurcate” as “spinal bifidate”, which tells me it’s time to go home.
I find that personally I would be relieved if the mess-hall story wasn’t true, because it is so miserable. I found myself feeling sorry for the woman in the story for several days after reading it.
I should say that for me, there are two maddening things. (1) Both the “soldiers are all monsters” and the “soldiers are all heroes” myths are direct impediments to our trying to figure out what we need to do to support the soldiers, who are, after all, human beings. Any false view of them, but especially a false view that people cling to for reasons other than the truth, is harmful.
The second is more of a surmise, but: I think that for some of the people participating in the frenzy, it really is all about taking down the media, not about the actual people in the actual story. I never like that.
Here’s a hypothetical for anyone who feels like it: what would we think if it turned out that there was a disabled woman in the cafeteria, but Scott Thomas Beauchamp either exaggerated her disability or (for instance) made it a different, more colorful disability, but otherwise everything was accurate? I mean, suppose he was making fun of someone who had not a melted face, but (say) a visible plate in her skull, or an amputated arm, or something.
It would be a deep journalistic sin, but it would also not be the sin that people are exercised about — making stuff up to fit an ideological agenda. (Since in my hypothetical STB is still making fun of a person who was handicapped, presumably in war, and all the other stories are true, so it’s just as bad; it’s just that he changed a crucial detail.) It would be interesting to see how people reacted to that.
(Me: I would think he should not have changed stuff, that he should have understood journalism a lot better than that, and that it’s wrong; but I would also think: the guy is presently having his entire life torn apart, and this particular sin, while it should ensure that he never ever gets a job in journalism again, doesn’t really merit that.)
Needless to say, that’s a hypothetical, not what I expect to happen (I have no expectations, since I don’t know the story.) It just struck me as interesting.
But shouldn’t it be “Conservapedia Brown”?
cleek was showing Liberal Bias!! by calling him Wikipedia 😉
by the time the real story dribbles out, they’re already too invested in their theories to walk away. and so things spiral and bifurcate, and then we get Malkin saying the mosque isn’t blown-up, it’s only pining for the fjords.
cleek, you’re on fire today. You’re not taking any performance-enhancing substances, I hope? ;>
I take it none of these outraged bloggers have ever read any notable memoirs or autobiographical fiction by American soldiers from any other wars, have never read any studies on the social or psychological effects of combat and have never hung out with any soldiers, marines or other troops for any extended period of time. If The Greatest Generation could end up collecting severed ears and suffering from PTSD, then why is one person’s account of being shaken by war and becoming more caloused as a result, fictional or not, worth any outrage? I’ve read worse from every major American war in books that are considered classics and recommended to the troops by our own military.
Hi hilzoy,
Whining is a trait that is very much denigrated among those who serve, as it has a deleterious effect on morale–a factor that is highly prized wrt to mission accomplishment. Not to mention that the practice is annoying.
And why should Beauchamp whine when the veracity of his stories are called into question? Surely he knew that at least a few military persons might read his missive(s) and say “hey, WTF is this.”
The things that got to me the most about the anecdotes that Beauchamp related, however, was the fact that the was no mention of a commissioned officer/NCO who put a stop to the incidents and no mention of Beauchamp himself taking action to stop them. I know how the US Armed Forces are trained–and we got just as much policy training as job training–and specific policy/cultural training before being stationed outside the US. For us NCOs–first-line supervisors– leadership classes (eight weeks for E-5) are required for promotion or to retain rank. The military doesn’t just throw a person in charge and say that he/she is the boss.
What I want to know is this: if Beauchamp’s stories are true, what did he or anyone else do to stop the incidents and/or assist in making sure similar incidents did not repeat? The absence of *correction* in the story is the part that seems to be the most implausible, to me anyway.
BTW, this is a great post.
“People everywhere are mature enough to see the difference between a few bad apples and a pervasive structure of corruption. Why build that structure of corruption when you don’t need to? Why build a campaign of silence around something that discredits the integrity of the entire military rather than dealing with the bad apples in an open and diligent way?”
Jesus Ara you could substitute “Republican Party” for “military” and have their whole modus operandi since 1968. Guys like Adam are circling the wagons around their favorite war just as the old Nixon hands in the WH are circling the wagons to hide their crimes. They do it because it’s what they do. It’s little wonder they’re obsessing about this miniscule tempest in a teapot on a day when there is a call for special counsel, the Director of the FBI directly contradicted Gonzales and Rove and Co. have been slapped with subpoenas.
baldilocks: thanks.
There was a thread on RedState this evening that I think perfectly sums up how absolutely bizarre this has become. Erick does a post, basically going through Beauchamp’s statement sentence by sentence and making sarcastic replies. Some user responds to the post as follows:
“Another Chickenhawk Attacking Our Troops. What will you tell your children about the Battle of Baghdad? That you bravely manned the keyboard, attacking our soldiers in uniform?”
Erick responds to the guy with:
“Are you asking me, the guy defending the troops, or Scott Thomas, the guy attacking the troops?”
Dang good question.
Tee hee hee.
cleek – You stole your own thunder with “Wikipedia Brown” (which, by the way, was brilliant), but I think the rest of what you said was insightful. The internet puts vast amounts of information at our fingertips, and we mostly use it to support what we want to believe. Well, some of us. ObWi seems to be much more earnestly inquisitive than most blogs.
hilzoy – Okay, I was wrong — maybe that sums it up better.
A good friend of mine came back from his third tour in Iraq a few months back. He did well, in the tangible measurable ways that translate into medals and commendations and letters to his family and so on.
But you know what? He shot dogs to kill time. He made jokes about corpses. He saved children and he shot snipers and he watched people bleed out in front of him. He was in hell.
I find it strange that the same crowd that cries, “Liberals are too frail and sensitive to do the tough, ugly man’s work of winning a war!” is shocked and incensed when someone suggests that war is ugly and horrific and that it changes and scars the people who participate, no matter how noble the cause.
cleek, you’re on fire today. You’re not taking any performance-enhancing substances, I hope?
does scotch count?
I hate to rain on cleek’s parade (I like cleek’s posts, a lot), but Google the phrase “Wikipedia Brown” and learn that it’s been done before. Not to say that cleek was aware of it, but still.
oh well. i can say i did come up with it on my own, even if i wasn’t the first to do it…
One of the odd aspects of this is how TNR gets characterized as some kind of lefty publication, whe in fact it was one of the strongest pro-war voices and has a long history of support for rightist postiions on other issues (see, e. g., The Bell Curve) . . .
Ha! “Conservapedia Brown” is new.
Also, the comic “This Modern World” has several times featured “Conservative Jones, Boy Detective”.
oh well. i can say i did come up with it on my own, even if i wasn’t the first to do it…
Does that make you like Newton or Leibniz?
I don’t know hilzoy… I see where you are coming from. OTOH I do see a problem with this guy.
Most of the criticism I saw on the milblogs focused around the fact that any NCOs and officers who would have had to have been witness to these incidents would simply not tolerate the behavior. And if they did then that represented a huge breakdown in leadership that needed to be investigated and rectified.
In the chow hall incident there certainly would have been leaders within earshot. Every Bradley has a vehicle commander (an NCO in most cases) responsible for not just the crew and their actions but the vehicle itself. He is not going to allow his driver to go careening around the streets like that. If he did then he needs to be investigated. The graveyard incident as well – no leader is going to allow that.
So that is what got things going IMO. That if these accounts were true it represented a grave failure in leadership that had to be set right. That is a perfectly fair position IMO.
And to those who are saying that this is minor stuff, we know that certain troops have done much worse so who cares – well, everyone should. It’s this exact type of breakdown in leadership that leads to much worse behavior.
Since they started digging a lot more has come to light. IMO the most damning is that it looks like he may have recently been busted a rank in an Article 15 proceeding. That could most certainly make him want to make his chain of command look bad. Everything points to a less than happy soldier, who wants to be a writer, who has indicated he’s there only to be able to claim that legitimacy later in life. Then he gets a chance to be published. The day to day stuff he has to deal with is probably mind-numbingly boring and wouldn’t make very good copy. So he seems to be taking incidents that have a basis in reality but embellishing them a bit. That is how an unmarked children’s cemetery becomes a “Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort”. But if this is true, in the process he is calling into question the reputations of the NCOs and officers above him.
And certainly TNR needs to do more fact checking on such pieces and not just publish them because they come from the spouse of a staffer.
OCSteve: That is how an unmarked children’s cemetery becomes a “Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort”.
Of all the things you might have picked to criticize in that article, that’s a weird thing to pick out.
Just a bit of historic trivia: In WW2 it was observed that drivers had a predilection to drive over roadkill etc. (and trying to run over geese/ducks trying to escape from narrow roads). This behaviour was considered so common that Britain invested a few pounds in developing explosive dung to get some German vehicles with it (preferably cars with high officers in them). Plans to disperse the explosive s##t by air was, eh, dropped because someone could get suspicious, if he found cowdung on the roof.
I doubt that drivers now are that different from then or that an officer present would do more than reprove the behaviour personally without any consequences (and if it was after a stressful day maybe not even that).
I would guess OCSteve picked the cemetery example because it seems to be a pretty obvious case of embellishment.
OCSteve: see, when I read it, I took the ‘Saddam-era dumping ground’ to be a guess on his part, and not a nutty one, when you find a bunch of children’s bones in Iraq. But he doesn’t present it as fact, just as what he figures is the case. Likewise, when I read about the dogs, I didn’t think: they are going out joy-riding for the exclusive purpose of killing dogs; it was more like: when this guy is driving a Bradley for other reasons, he tries to kill dogs en route. That would be a lot harder to check for: I mean, if he were taking the Bradley out specially, it would be obvious that he shouldn’t do it, and easy to nail him, but if the commander/NCO/whoever instead has to ask something like: did you make every effort to avoid that dog? Are you killing those dogs on purpose, or are dog just unlucky around you? etc., I was thinking that would be harder to nail down, and a commander might just not bother, if the guy was getting where he needed to go.
As I said, the bit about insulting the woman struck me as dodgier.
I would guess OCSteve picked the cemetery example because it seems to be a pretty obvious case of embellishment.
But it’s not who buried the children’s bodies there that’s the point of the story (and, what Hilzoy said): it’s – did one of the soldiers take part of a child’s skull as a trophy/souvenir?
Actually, I tend to think the uproar about Beauchamp is more because of his tone than anything else.
Iraq is full of stray dogs that are kind of feral. At various times and places it’s been official US policy to kill them. Individual soldiers have had problems when they adopted dogs and then hoped to take them home rather than see them abandoned and shot.
The issue isn’t shooting dogs. The issue is talking like you think it’s wrong but you do it anyway.
Beauchamp writes like there’s something wrong with some of the soldiers. Like they’re teenagers or something, people who do stupid things for the fun of it. So we get a whole lot of outrage. They talk about having him tried under UCMJ. For joshing with a woman? For killing dogs? For playing with bones? Hardly. His big crime is visibly having a bad attitude.
But the issue at hand is the veracity of Beauchamp’s claims. So critics are naturally going to focus on a discrepancy like that, particularly since Beauchamp stated in the article that it was “clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort”.
But the issue at hand is the veracity of Beauchamp’s claims.
So, as that’s the issue at hand, why pick on a part of the story that would be very difficult to prove false, and that is inherently plausible? No one has tried to show that the soldiers digging up the bones didn’t assume spontaneously that this was “clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort”, and the only soldiers who could say that it’s definitely true or untrue would be the ones who were there at the time doing the digging. None have come forward. So it’s not a useful point to focus on if you’re trying to prove that any part of his story is untrue.
discrepancy?
“it was clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground of some sort“.
what has caused people to lose the ability to understand simple English ?
given that he didn’t know what it was at the time, what is inaccurate about that sentence ?
The part about running over the dog struck me as a little dodgy…armored vehicles are not very agile, and it’s tough to see anything that gets really close. It probably could be done, and it may well have been done (although certainly were I that driver’s commander I would have been quite annoyed by him swerving about the road, let alone the idea he was doing so to kill animals).
So that is what got things going IMO. That if these accounts were true it represented a grave failure in leadership that had to be set right. That is a perfectly fair position IMO.
Surely you don’t believe Michelle Malkin and her ilk got all exercised over this story because they wanted to get to the bottom of whether some Bradley commander might be guilty of negligent supervision.
Beauchamp probably didn’t know exactly what the grave site was at the time. But I’m assuming that his article was written more recently. The issue is what he should have known about the site at the time he wrote the article.
Graeme has a post which is the closest approximation to my view of this whole thing: this particular account has some odd characteristics which make it seem unreliable. That doesn’t say anything about the fact that war deadens morals and can produce some nasty characters who very well might not have been as nasty without their exposure to the war.
Beauchamp probably didn’t know exactly what the grave site was at the time. But I’m assuming that his article was written more recently. The issue is what he should have known about the site at the time he wrote the article.
“Should have known” and “definitely knew”: and also, what he should have put into the article.
In order to claim that this detail shows he’s not truthful, you have to show: (1) that Scott knew, or at least that it’s extremely likely that he knew, when he wrote the article, that the site they’d speculated was a Saddam-era dumping ground was in fact a species of local graveyard; and (2) that it constitutes a deliberate untruth that Scott did not add, after noting their original speculations, that “Later, we found it was a local unofficial graveyard”.
Supposing for the sake of argument that (1) has been proven (which it hasn’t) so that we can discuss (2): why do you feel it’s ultra-important that a soldier, writing about what was done that day, should clarify that unimportant detail with later information not connected or relevant to what he was writing about?
If you consider that whether the bones they found were a dumping ground or a graveyard to be important in a story about US atrocities in Iraq, please explain why, showing your reasoning. If you agree it’s not relevant, odds are your thinking mirrors Scott’s.
The Life Worth Living
Hilzoy has an outstanding post analyzing the Right-Blogospheric reaction to the Baghdad Diarist. A taste:Dear right-wing bloggers: Stop. Think. Reread the original piece. It’s not about how our soldiers are murderers and scumbags. It’s not a vicious le…
That if these accounts were true it represented a grave failure in leadership that had to be set right.
I am amazed at how Abu Ghraib was dismissed at the time by so many opinion-mongers on right as nothing more than pranks and hijinks, the razing of Fallujah was actually cheered on by some of the same, but that now, rather ordinary examples of the every day coarseness of war are suddenly regarded as a “grave failure in leadership.”
Two things:
Everyone hear should rush out and read Goodbye To All That, The poet and writer Robert Graves’ autobiography of his life through World War I and after. He served as an officer in some of the worst battles that the British fought on the Western Front. Some of his memories were definitely embellished, but no one who reads it will doubt its general veracity; or treat it as anything other than a masterpiece of reportage of combat and its psychological aftermath.
Second. Does anyone think that in a country where feral dogs are routinely killed, an NCO is going to give a rat’s ass over whether or not someone under his supervision is trying to run over dogs?
“If you consider that whether the bones they found were a dumping ground or a graveyard to be important in a story about US atrocities in Iraq, please explain why, showing your reasoning.”
The writer described it as a dumping ground. If you have reason to think that he should have known that it was not a dumping ground, then you have reason to think he is making stuff up.
Hilzoy: see, when I read it, I took the ‘Saddam-era dumping ground’ to be a guess on his part, and not a nutty one, when you find a bunch of children’s bones in Iraq. But he doesn’t present it as fact, just as what he figures is the case.
But if he was there he knows it was a children’s cemetery because the troops involved relocated it. It got reported up the chain as a cemetery. The troops involved would certainly know at that point that it was a cemetery.
Jes: did one of the soldiers take part of a child’s skull as a trophy/souvenir
Quite possible. Did he put a part of a skull, even a small piece, between his head and his helmet for any length of time? No way. That brain-bucket is already one of the most uncomfortable contraptions to have to wear around. A piece of strap or webbing out of place gets painful fast. So I can see a soldier taking a piece of a child’s skull as a trophy, as sick as that is. But the rest is clear embellishment. And anyone who has ever worn one of those things for any length of time instantly says BS upon reading that.
Steve: Surely you don’t believe Michelle Malkin and her ilk got all exercised over this story because they wanted to get to the bottom of whether some Bradley commander might be guilty of negligent supervision.
I was talking about what I had been reading on the milblogs specifically. MM falls into the category Hilzoy is discussing here.
Jes: In order to claim that this detail shows he’s not truthful, you have to show: (1) that Scott knew, or at least that it’s extremely likely that he knew, when he wrote the article, that the site they’d speculated was a Saddam-era dumping ground was in fact a species of local graveyard;
Again, you would not be involved in this and not fully understand it was a cemetery by the end of that same day.
There was a children’s cemetery unearthed while constructing a Combat Outpost (COP) in the farm land south of Baghdad International Airport. It was not a mass grave. It was not the result of some inhumane genocide. It was an unmarked cometary where the locals had buried children some years back. There are many such unmarked cemeteries in and around Baghdad. The remains unearthed that day were transported to another location and reburied.
Good heavens, the effort and speculation that continue to be expended on this story.
Look, everyone agrees that there are likely incidents like this going on. No matter how well soldiers are trained, there are going to be some that that respond to the stress by doing exactly the kind of odd and nasty things described in the article, which is actually the point of the article. There are probably much worse things going on than the three relatively minor incidents discussed.
So why the fuss and bother about this?
The troops involved would certainly know at that point that it was a cemetery.
a) would everyone there know that?
b) would they know it’s a “cemetery” in the sense that it’s some kind of sacred ground; or could they assume it’s a “cemetery” in the sense of “mass grave” ? in other words: did they know the children were buried there for normal reasons, or could they assume “cemetery” was a euphemism for something more sinister ?
c) maybe it didn’t look like any kind of cemetery a young kid from America had ever seen. if your boss said “clear that cemetery” and you came across a pile of children’s bones in a vacant lot – no markers that you could see or understand – would you assume you were in a “cemetery” or “human dumping ground” ?
d) if you were told it really was an ‘official’ cemetery but were a little disgusted at the fact that children’s bones were just scattered around this place, might you not refer to it in less-than-respectful terms? might you even call it a “dumping ground” in disgust at what you perceive is a lack of respect for the dead by the living ?
“d) if you were told it really was an ‘official’ cemetery but were a little disgusted at the fact that children’s bones were just scattered around this place, might you not refer to it in less-than-respectful terms? might you even call it a “dumping ground” in disgust at what you perceive is a lack of respect for the dead by the living ?”
Maybe, but probably not if you aren’t disgusted by someone wearing the remains like a crown.
From photographies and documentaries I know that Arabian cemeteries can look more like a disorderly “dumping ground” than what we would consider a graveyard (orderly headstones and the like). It being an unmarked unofficial one in our case would make it even more likely to make that mistake. Not having seen this one I can of course not comment with authority.
Maybe, but probably not if you aren’t disgusted by someone wearing the remains like a crown.
i could imagine being disgusted at both.
there’s also the possibility that this guy’s just not a great writer, and that trying to parse him like this simply isn’t going to work out.
You’re probably right about the parsing issue. However in his article he explicitly states that he wasn’t disgusted by the soldier wearing the skull, so I really doubt the grave disgusted him.
I think hilzoy is right about the IED victim story though. If anything in the article turns out to be a deal breaker, it will be probably be that story.
There are probably much worse things going on than the three relatively minor incidents discussed.
So why the fuss and bother about this?
I think it’s that they didn’t like his tone. The guy writes like a liberal. He writes like people were doing things they shouldn’t.
If he’d written that an insurgent was running up to the Bradley with a satchel charge and the driver couldn’t think of anything better to do than swerve and run over him before he could trigger it, and they both felt kind of sick about it but there wasn’t any choice, that would have been fine.
Say he’d written about how they absolutely had to swerve to avoid an IED and he had to speed up so the guys with the RPGs would miss him, and the result was he ran over a station wagon with a woman and her 4 beautiful children in it, and they all felt *horrible* about it but there was nothing else he could do. That would have been excellent. It’s war. Tragedy, that civilians get in the way and there’s nothing you can do. If they’d run over the IED that would likely have killed the civilians anyway.
But when it’s a peaceful area and there aren’t any IEDs and the driver is just practicing his evasive maneuvers by running over dogs, and the narrator thinks he ought to think it’s horrible but he doesn’t really care — that isn’t the kind of soldiers we have in iraq. All of our soldiers are superior moral people, they are faced with tragic moral choices sometimes where doing the right thing gets civilians killed, and they feel just as bad about it as they ought to, and they do the right thing regardless. Our soldiers all know that they are doing the most important work in theworld and they will persevere as long as it takes, until the final victory, because it’s what matters most in the world. Everything they do in iraq is directed toward victory, they never do any horsing around and they never pick on anybody who doesn’t deserve it. So if this guy writes that some of them are kind of morally burned out, that they spend some of their time playing games that don’t help the victory, if they do something mean that isn’t necessary, then he must be a fake soldier. And if it turns out that he’s a real soldier, still he’s really a fake soldier or he wouldn’t think that way. If he was a real soldier he’d be completely a good guy like all the others.
He has a bad attitude and they can’t stand that.
cleek@3:04: I can see your (d) best. But there really is structure and organization for almost everything you encounter. If there is any suspicion it is a mass grave, there are procedures, and likely the first one at the line level is “back off and leave it alone”. There are still tens of thousands of Iraqi’s who don’t know what happened to certain family members. I’m guessing here, but I would say that the ranking individual on site spoke to the locals. Once it was ascertained that it had been used as a cemetery they made the decision to relocate it. That in itself may have been offensive. Did the locals agree to that? What does Islam say about it? I don’t know.
But the NCOs share as much information as they can within mission limits with the troops. It is only natural that people want to know why they are doing what they are doing. If it is not “need to know” the NCO is going to keep their troops informed of what is what. No NCO is going to let his troops think they are defiling an uninvestigated mass grave vs. moving a cemetery. It just does not work that way.
Again – something like that will trigger the BS radar of anyone who knows this stuff firsthand (not saying me – the milbloggers).
All – maybe to rephrase a little – If you have been there for a tour or two (not me, the milbloggers), if you have worn one of those damned brain-buckets for days in 100+ heat, if you have ever been under the command of a few officers and a bunch of NCOs, if you have ever eaten in a field mess hall… Many of these things trigger your BS radar.
Not in a minor way – in a major way. When so many minor points don’t mesh you think that it is all BS, at least it is all suspect.
OCSteve: and that I can fully respect. It’s why I held off on it: what do I know about helmets, or how tight the supervision is when you’re doing something like digging, or how likely it is that the supervision is not what it’s supposed to be? Way outside my comfort zone.
I’m just, as I said, baffled that the likes of Jonah Goldberg, who seems to know even less than I do which is saying a lot, didn’t draw the same conclusion.
Mr. Grouchypants: The writer described it as a dumping ground. If you have reason to think that he should have known that it was not a dumping ground, then you have reason to think he is making stuff up.
No, you don’t. As I have just explained. But if you’re not going to pay attention, why bother?
OCSteve: Not in a minor way – in a major way. When so many minor points don’t mesh you think that it is all BS, at least it is all suspect.
The problem I have with that line of argument is that a few years ago, a female Reservist wrote a detailed account of a period of time she’d spent under fire in Iraq. She wrote it on her journal, really just venting about an experience she’d had.
That account got picked to pieces, too, by people who certainly seemed to know what they were talking about, and they came to the conclusion that this woman probably wasn’t even in Iraq, let alone had any military experience, she was just making the whole thing up.
The only problem with that line of argument was: she wasn’t. (Well, obviously, I wasn’t there at the time: but I’d known her online for quite a while, I knew she was in Iraq, and I knew she wasn’t the kind of person who makes stuff up.) So, regardless of what holes could be picked in her story by the language she’d used and the way she’d described things, I knew it had happened.
And it’s given me a healthy sense of skepticism towards people who claim they can tell that someone is BSing by picking apart the details of the story and saying that so many details sound improbable, so the whole story is probably not true.
From Aristotle onwards, critics have noted that reality frequently presents us with incidents that sound far too improbable to be believable. When writing fiction, “better a probable impossible than a possible improbable.” But when considering a narrative presented as factual, trying to debunk it by pointing out that this and that detail sound improbable just doesn’t work.
Jes: was this Ginmar?
I would be more willing to give Beauchamp the benefit of the doubt on the dumping ground issue had he said that it looked like a dumping ground rather than declaring that it was “clearly a Saddam-era dumping ground”.
Of course the graveyard would not be a major issue if someone could identify the injured contractor he verbally abused.
FWIW, I’d have sworn that “dumping ground” for human remains was a straightforward dictionary definition of “unmarked cemetery.”
Over the last year or so there have been a whole series of Youtubes sent in by soldiers on duty in Iraq. The YouTube clips have shown soldiers stoning a paralyzed dog, mocking children by offering them water and then snatching the water back, driving fast down the wrong side of the street and laughing as people scrambled to get out of the way, and laughing while Iraqi soldiers, under their supervision during a training mission, grabbed some young men off the street for the crime of existing while Sunni and arrested them for nothing.
All submitted to YouTube by soldiers who apparently saw nothing wrong with their acts.
Where were the NCo’s? Dunno. Same place the NCO’s in Beauchamp’s articles, I suppose.
The question that intrigues me is why is it so important to some people to doubt his account? No normal person thinks that soldiers are perfect. Why the ego-projection?
Another question: what happens to soldiers when they comme home and the “troop supporters” who greet them make it clear that they don’t want to know what the war experience was really like?
Implict in the behavior of the doubters is the message that troops are only supported if they say what the rightwing wants them to say. Otherwise they are going to be metaphorically spat upon.
If Beauchamp made this stuff up or grotesquely exaggerated, does anyone think we would revel his real name? All of this stuff happened in front of witnesses who can all be tracked down. If he was deliberately lying or exaggerating seems to me that the last thing he would do is go public with hhis real name.
A tempest in a tea pot. If this generation were capable of producing A Rumor of War or another Dispatches, it wouldn’t have even reached a simmer.
As an aside — what’s with all this anthropomorphizing baboons, Hilzoy? You can’t mock a baboon.
Hilzoy: It’s why I held off on it
And to your credit. I think you approached this thoughtfully, but maybe hammered on the MM types too much (they may deserve it) but discounted the milbloggers concerns a little too much. These are guys who have been here and done that.
I can only speak to my experience. I’ve worn a steel (Vietnam era) helmet in Georgia. It sucked. I’ve worn the Kevlar helmet in the Mohave Desert at 100 plus degrees. It sucked bad. Iraq gets 20 degrees beyond that. You can’t imagine how a pea would feel up there, much less a piece of bone, of any kind or shape. Not going to happen.
Jes: I think you have recounted this before, and I agree it is a powerful story in its own right. This woman was deeply wronged and I will make no single excuse for it. I won’t try to.
I’m a little surprised that folks don’t connect a possible breakdown in discipline like this with Abu Ghraib. These are not minor offenses you disregard because “war sucks”.
This is exactly how Abu Ghraib happens. This crap is the first step on the way to Abu Ghraib.
Once discipline collapses and these seemingly minor offensives are overlooked, it goes up a notch. And then another. Any officer or NCO that let this go unchallenged is complicit in the next Abu Ghraib, or worse.
Do you really think that is the case? At this time, with the current media scrutiny?
Exit question – Do you (anybody) really think that officers and NCOs would allow this crap to go on?
Again this is “you all”, and not Hilzoy in particular. (I love the hilzoy as always.)
“Do you (anybody) really think that officers and NCOs would allow this crap to go on?”
At the risk of stating the obvious? Yes.
Exit question – Do you (anybody) really think that officers and NCOs would allow this crap to go on?
Is that a trick question? Because I think the answer is “Yes”.
OCSteve: I think that for most officers and NCOs, the answer is no. On the other hand, the people at Abu Ghraib and Haditha and wherever it was that they raped the girl and killed her and her family and so on presumably had officers and NCOs who apparently let some lousy things happen. (Though in the case of Abu Ghraib I think there’s a real possibility that they were acting on orders in some ways, I would have thought that decent officers and NCOs would have kept people obeying orders to ‘soften up’ the detainees from doing a lot of the things they did.) So if the question means, ‘do you think there are some officers and NCOs, presumably a small minority, who would?, then I would think the answer is probably: yes.
Yes, Wikipedia Brown was funny, but enough already with sending cleek mashie notes.
“Saddam-era dumping ground” also reads like a guess to me. I think a lot of us believe that Saddam was capable of murdering enough children to fill a graveyard, and that belief, if anything, supports the decision to overthrow him. This makes it an odd thing for Thomas’s critics to attack, unless they’re grasping at anything that looks like inaccuracy.
Exit question – Do you (anybody) really think that officers and NCOs would allow this crap to go on?
Being absolutely honest? The answer is “I’m not (thank God) there, and I don’t know.” That’s really a question about the level of morale and discipline there, something of which there’s no objective measure.
Catsy: yes.
OCSteve: Exit question – Do you (anybody) really think that officers and NCOs would allow this crap to go on?
Yes. We know already that officers and NCOs have allowed much worse crap to go on. We know the military has not reformed in any way since Abu Ghraib: perhaps the torture and murder of prisoners has stopped there, but there must be a lot of career officers and NCOs who were aware that prisoners were being tortured, or who took part in torture, and who did nothing. And have not been punished for it. (As noted before, an NCO who tortured a prisoner of war to death in Abu Graib was regarded as having committed so trivial a crime that he didn’t even lose his pension over it.)
So, I ask you: what makes you think that the officers and NCOs wouldn’t let this kind of crap go on, when you know that they let the torture and murder of prisoners go on and that they’ve been informally told that this wasn’t a breach of discipline, or at least nothing deserving any great punishment?
Appears to be unanimous. OK, I give up.
OCS, I’ve no doubt that some NCOs and officers have let some things get out of hand. In any human system, you have to expect imperfection. That doesn’t excuse anything. But a presumption of perfect discipline isn’t usually warranted.
On a more general level, as recruiting standards have dropped, and the stress of a difficult and quite possibly pointless mission grows, you’re going to have to expect there to be more disciplinary problems in the Army as time goes on. There was an excellent presentation at a House Armed Services hearing on recruiting and readiness yesterday.
On Abu G: in June 2005, I spent several hours with some mid-level Navy enlisted guys who were serving as guards etc at a different military prison. To a man, they insisted that the Army guys at AG had been following orders. Their certainty impressed me. They obviously weren’t there, and may have an imperfect understanding about how the Army works (as opposed to the Navy). I did come away from this, though, concerned about the corrosive effect of what they saw as little guys taking the fall for the big guys’ mistakes.
This is what is was.
You might look for a transcript, or a copy of Korb’s opening statement. The statistics are mindblowing.
This is exactly how Abu Ghraib happens. This crap is the first step on the way to Abu Ghraib.
Yes, of course. And abu ghraib did happen. And many others. As morale goes down we can expect discipline to go bad too.
Why don’t we hear more stories about discipline breaking down and soldiers doing things their officers would prefer they didn’t? Clearly it’s a combination of the inherent decency of most of our troops, combined with the natural tendency of everybody involved to do cover-ups.
I’m continually amazed at this argument I keep hearing that goes:
It would be very very bad if X happened. Therefore X did not happen.
OC Steve — A bit more nuanced answer to your exit question: I think that the majority of officers and NCOs would challenge this sort of behavior, especially early in a (re)deployment or when they see it leading to a breakdown in discipline. I think that this same group might be more likely to let something like this go late in a deployment or after multiple tours have worn them down or if there were enough other big stresses on their troops that they thought being too heavy handed would damage discipline and morale worse than some abberant behavior.
I don’t know what the conditions are where Beauchamp is stationed. I would imagine that most there would want to project a “can do” attitude if asked about morale and conditions.
As for the deeper issues of accuracy in reporting, I’m way too steeped in literary crtiticism to expect that any written account would be entirely factual and I think that something like The Things They Carried can fictionalize many details and still be “a true war story.” But that’s just me.
Bad tag…no donut.
Don’t be so sure, nous. The donut can still be yours.
“So, I ask you: what makes you think that the officers and NCOs wouldn’t let this kind of crap go on, when you know that they let the torture and murder of prisoners go on and that they’ve been informally told that this wasn’t a breach of discipline, or at least nothing deserving any great punishment?”
That is easy, it could put them in personal danger.
Sebastian: That is easy, it could put them in personal danger.
Stopping it could, or letting it go on could?
Shorter warbloggers: We know that things like this happen in wartime, but we categorically refuse to believe that these things in particular happened, and we will go to any lengths to try to prove that they didn’t.
To me this is something that even if it is true shouldnt be put out for all to see without names other then just his own and soldiers. I am a soldier. If you havent been deployed, dont write about it or what you think you know about it, you have no idea and you cant even think about what its like. He is wrong.
Well, that may be, but I thought, like others, the interesting thing was the out of whack reaction of selected blogs. It reflected an ideological objection, not one based in reality, and a deep seated insecurity.
BTW, TNR fact checked the stories and the stories are true. There are witnesses for the skull incident, the rudeness, and the dog killing. Beachamp’s memory got one location wrong, but the incidents themselves have been verified.
It amazes me that some commenters are so hysterical as to act like the events Beauchamp describes are “out of the norm” of human behavior and experience. I’ve known lots of people who would run over a dog just for fun. I didn’t like them, but they went about in public just like you and me, and even had their admirers.
Ridiculing people with deformities is not uncommon, either.
Soldiers are human beings, and are quite capable of becoming desensitized to stress and cruelty and violence. It happens to good people all the time. It’s a fact of life in war throughout history, and has nothing to do with ones political tilt.
But he lied, y’all:
http://www.weeklystandard.com/weblogs/TWSFP/2007/08/beauchamp_recants.asp
I will comment first on the original article.
there’s a reason for the axiom “those who can’t do, teach” You, sir show an astonishing (well perhaps not so much) lack of knowledge concerning the military forces, their discipline, and what actual combat stress does to a person.
now to those of you who believed that story.
the guy is a liar. he even said so. whats more, he better get his crap together because he might be a democrat and a liberal..but he’s far short of being a soldier.
Get over it, we’re going to win, Iraq will have it’s own government and we’ll all be better off without a bunch of al-queda scumbags walking around.