This book is a good antidote to the mainstream media. This is the American assault on Iraq without the spin, as witnessed by an unembedded American who was there voluntarily, in solidarity with the local people. It is a cry of protest against what Americans are doing to the rest of the world, specifically to Iraq. The sanctions against Iraq were “child abuse” and “child sacrifice.” The United Nations is a “battered woman” bullied by the U.S. rogue superpower, the “world’s greatest killing machine,” which has an “unfortunate addiction” to war making. The suffering the author relates is horrendous, and it is real. Americans need to know about it. This book is important because it exposes ongoing crimes that depend upon secrecy.
Warfare is “cruel stupidity,” says the author. It is little children grinding their teeth in fear while surveying adult faces for reassurance. It is “gut-wrenching explosions,” mud, filth, exposure, sleep deprivation, uncertainty, despair and death. And the victims don’t even know why they are being attacked! This book is authentic, written from inside the belly of the beast, an active war zone.
From our “abysmally failed foreign policies” she proceeds to our “abysmally failed” prison system, as seen from the inside. She complains of “absurdly long sentences,” dehumanizing and cruel treatment, and disrespect for the family ties of inmates. Nonviolent lawbreakers are being scapegoated while lethal crimes in high places are ignored. She asks, are prisons necessary? And suggests alternatives, at least for nonviolent criminals.
Not a comfortable read, but important. Although the sanctions are now history and the focus of American imperialism has shifted from Iraq, this book is by no means out-of-date. Would that it were!