Now
we have reached another 2000. Iraq 2K. Two thousand of our soldiers
killed in Iraq. Our administrative power has failed; bombs are being
unleashed, seemingly at random; chaos is reigning in the streets of
Iraq and our global relationships have been torn asunder. This is the
2000 we should be afraid of. This is the 2000 we must grieve, honor and
reflect upon.
This 2000 wouldn't have happened without the year 2001. Without 9/11.
Those numbers gave our president the false justification to begin this
war. Some 3000 Americans were killed on the attacks of September 11.
Now almost 2/3 that number have been killed in Iraq. And that's not
counting soldiers who have died after leaving Iraq, died from
horrendous wounds and tormented suicides. It doesn't count soldiers who
are left permanently disabled or those who survived in body but not in
spirit, the broken souls whose lives have been shattered by what they
did and saw.
And of course, that's not counting the uncounted, the Iraqis. We'll
never know how many Iraqis have been killed at checkpoints, how many
were caught in crossfires, how many were killed by roadside bombs.
We'll never know how many Iraqi babies have died because of unclean
drinking water from bombed out water systems, how many sick Iraqis died
because hospitals were looted of critical equipment, how many Iraqis
died because so many doctors have fled the country. Some say tens of
thousands; others, like the survey in the medical journal, Lancet, say
over 100,000. We don't know; we'll never know.
The Bush administration insists we must "stay the course" to help the
Iraqi people. But a national survey conducted in August by an Iraqi
university research team for the British Ministry of Defense found 82
percent of Iraqis "strongly opposed" to the presence of coalition
troops; less than one per cent of the population believes coalition
forces are responsible for any improvement in security, and 67 per cent
of Iraqis feel less secure because of the occupation.
But why should we expect the Bush administration to listen to the
Iraqis, when they don't even listen to their own constituents? Since
the summer of 2005, polls consistently show that a majority of
Americans oppose this war, think it's unwinnable, think it makes us
less safe at home and want a timetable for troop withdrawal. How many
of our soldiers need to die before our elected officials start
listening to us?
The grim milestone of the death of the 2000 th American soldier should
be a time for national reflection. As the families of our soldiers know
all too well, 2000 is not just a number. These are 2000 human beings
we've lost; 2000 people with names, with grieving families; 2000 people
with hopes and dreams that will never be realized.
Let's honor them by stopping more soldiers from dying. Let's honor them
by giving Iraqis a chance to run their own country. Let's honor them by
bringing their buddies home.
Medea Benjamin is the cofounder of CODEPINK: Women for Peace and Global
Exchange. Gayle Brandeis, also with CODEPINK, is the author of The Book
of Dead Birds, which won the Bellwether Prize for Fiction in Support of
a Literature of Social Change.