This is the saddest story I have ever heard. Mark Danner brings up Ford Maddox Ford's GOOD SOLDIER near the end of this tome and titles one of its sections "The Saddest Story," but this is no literary venture into the warzone. As its subtitle simply states: Politics, Violence, War is a collection of reportage from Haiti, Bosnia and Iraq, Abu Ghraib and "black sites," which brings home the purported statement by 1918 US Senator Hiram Warren Johnson that the first casualty when war comes is truth.
Its title STRIPPING BARE THE BODY is a taken from a quote by Leslie F. Manigat, president of Haiti, February-May 1987, defining political violence, and throughout the global conflicts Danner vividly reports from, in voluminous detail, empathy and beautiful prose, we repeatedly learn of the power of war and the weakness of politics, and the wake of unnecessary violence and death left behind the two. The brutality is hard to take. Worse is the United States ineffectualness in its diplomatic involvement that makes the sorrowful tragic.
We start with outside conflicts, but by the final and devastating section the United States is no longer bystander but perpetrator. Our nation's turn from ideals that we use to buttress the myth of exceptionalism to condoning and participating in torture from executive order is sobering. It's easy in the first two sections to judge the butchers of Haiti and Bosnia, but Danner shows the blood on our hands and it's hard not to weep. The reprehensible actions of war, the sliding ethics of our nation, the seeming impossibility of political will to resolve conflict, all this builds to a depressing but important read.
Danner is a great reporter and maybe even greater writer. He digs down into the grammatical grains of statements and extracts truths and omissions of truth latent in those quotes with the skills of a surgeon removing a malignant tumor. His afterward is a must read for anyone interested in the literary arts. But the entire book, and it is a long and dense collection of pieces mostly culled from the New York Review of Books and The New York Times, is critical for any citizen who claims the dubious mantle of patriotism.