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Sean
Penn "Kilroy's Still Here"
Ad In The New York Times, May 30, 2003
KILROY'S
STILL HERE
By Sean Penn
In
early October of 2002 -- when the radio sputtered and whined with
accusations by the Bush Administration declaring a direct link between
the terrorist activity of Al Qaeda and the brutal dictator Saddam
Hussein; I was sitting beside my 11-year old daughter in a car.
It continued, with charges that Hussein's Iraq possessed weapons
of mass destruction in violation of U.N. resolutions.
"It's a sunny afternoon in Northern California," the weatherman
interrupted, "puffy white clouds resting upon a beautiful blue sky."
We sat in the car eating french fries in the parking lot of our
local burger joint. President George W. Bush had just rebuffed the
United Nations' push to re-introduce weapons inspection teams into
an Iraq where even a deservedly humiliated Saddam Hussein had expressed
willingness to accept them. Tightening in my gut, on this otherwise
fab day, were troubling questions about our nation's understanding
of this pending conflict. Its most accessible information sources
were the corporately sponsored and largely conservative media outlets.
Indeed, in my gut, were my own troubling questions, not only about
our Administration's unilateral military posturing, but also, what
effect U.S. decisions today might have on my children's tomorrow.
Since
September 11, 2001, when Kilroy left his mark, I had been, of course,
concerned for the physical safety of my children, and those of the
nation. More urgently though, for the food of their spirit, their
sense of right and wrong, and of their will to be individuals of
character and true patriotism in a media environment largely exemplified
by mistrust, dishonesty, censorship and national policies fostering
division, death, and arbitrary consumerism.
Saint
Augustine said that "Hope has two beautiful daughters: anger and
courage; anger at the way things are, and courage to change them."
Beside me, my little girl tugged at the blue ribbon in her blond
hair, her eyes forward, gentle but unblinking; her front teeth nipped
at a french fry, one slow bite at a time. As I started the car,
I wondered if her future and my son's would befriend or be vanquished
by Saint Augustine's daughters of hope. And I had to ask myself,
"What remaining hope did I have? What example was I to them?" I
carried my troubling questions to the President of the United States,
in a public letter printed October 18, 2002, in the Washington Post.
I'm
neither a peace activist nor a partisan politico and the letter
I printed did not represent the platform of any movement, or speak
with determination against any necessity. My letter spoke to questions
of an American man and father, protected and encouraged by our Constitution,
and obliged by my own individual sense of democracy and civic responsibility.
I had been inspired to speak up by my love of my children, which
recalled my admiration for our founding fathers, and the tradition
of thousands of engaged men and women before me. In my own way,
I sought to join all of them in waving the American flag.
Following the printing of that letter, my public flag, I was hit
by a tidal wave of media misrepresentation, and even accusations
of treason. I experienced firsthand the repressive condition of
public debate in our country, as it prepared for war. I was beginning
to feel the price to be paid by a citizen exercising a position
of dissent.
If
my hope as an American was not dwindling, it was certainly under
siege. Hope though, like truth, is a stubborn creature.
In
early December 2002, I was invited by Norman Solomon of the Institute
for Public Accuracy to join him on his journalistic tour of Baghdad.
I met with Norman and did some due diligence on the IPA. Norman
is a softspoken gentleman, and a relentless author of books, essays,
and articles exposing media truth and fiction. He is a scholar of
media truth bending and breaking, and his IPA is an American non-profit
mobilizer dedicated to that journalistic mission. There was no question
in my gut on this one. I accepted Norman's invitation and was going
to Iraq.
I acknowledged the concerns of my wife and children for my safety
and they acknowledged my need to replace television images with
a real sense of place and people (if only the kind one gets visiting
anywhere for the first time). You search for a taste, a smell, a
piece of truth, something to attach to the questions of conscience
that gnaw at many of us.
It
was very clear that my trip, like my letter, would be misrepresented
both in the United States and by the Iraqi press. But my view is
unchanged, that as a weapon of propaganda, it would only be the
most popular American media that could do myself and eventually
our increasingly deployed troops any real harm. The United States
had all the cards. We have the greatest military might on the planet.
The Iraq I visited was the most decimated, starved, diseased and
polluted place I had ever witnessed. Much of this, the result of
sanctions imposed upon its people by a United States-led coalition,
and exacerbated by the willful exploitation of them by their own
leadership. Saddam Hussein's three-page hokey mailer of a newspaper,
promoting my visit as support for his leadership, would be no match
for the positions taken by our own global networks in willful false
depiction of my intentions and statements. I made no comments in
Baghdad against our government. Not one. I did, however, declare
an acceptance of some personal accountability for my government's
actions, those then, and now, paid for in part by my tax dollars.
In
short, we deserve the government we allow, and none more than those
of us who have experienced economic and personal privilege. In Iraq,
I made no expert assertions and came to no absolute conclusions.
Prior to, during, and since visiting Iraq,I have consulted over
100 experts in our Middle Eastern affairs, military and civilian,
with a primary focus on U.N. weapons inspection capabilities. These
consultations measurably increased my doubt at the factuality or
the wisdom of the Administration's assertions and proposed remedies.
I spoke at length with wary war correspondents whose repeated attempts
to bring deeper understanding to the American public were consistently
thwarted by editorial staffs, networks, and superiors, both Iraqi
and American.
While
in Baghdad, I visited a Pediatric hospital, schools, people on the
streets, Iraqi officials, their Christian Deputy Prime Minister
Aziz, and Minister of Health Mubarek. I met with humanitarian aides,
U.N. officials, the local director of UNICEF (a Dutchman), and an
8-year-old Iraqi boy who had been maimed by a cruise missile in
Basra while his older brother perished in the Clinton administration
bombings of 1998.
I returned to the United States with a view to be digested, something
I would have to be very careful and thoughtful in sharing publicly,
and discerning in acceptance of a venue to do so. I waited out the
first series of rabid attacks on my character, profession, intelligence,
experience, agenda, ego, effectiveness, and patriotism. I chose
to appear on Larry King's show, followed by an interview on The
Active Opposition, a World Link TV political show hosted by my friend,
Peter Coyote. This had been the extent of my public commentary on
this issue in the United States, when on March 20, 2003, our President
ordered our military into war with Iraq.
If
military intervention in Iraq has been a grave misjudgment, it has
been one resulting in thousands upon thousands of deaths, and done
so without any credible evidence of imminent threat to the United
States. Our flag has been waving, it seems, in servicing a regime
change significantly benefiting U.S. corporations. What remains
to be seen is an effective plan for the rebuilding of the civilian
infrastructure, or any other benefit to the people of Iraq or the
United States. It is an achievement that includes the callous and
too easily accepted term, "collateral damage." This is a term where
proportionality of loss is taken from the people who have lost,
and given to marketing executives.
On
Larry King's show, I appealed to American mothers and fathers to
sit with a scrap of paper and a pencil and scribble the following
words, "Dear Mr. and Mrs. (your name here), We regret to inform
you that your son/daughter (child's name here) was killed in action
in Iraq..." I asked that those mothers and fathers finish that letter
in a way that would comfort them if they were to receive it. This
war, for all its military triumph, would provide no satisfactory
completion of that letter for this father. The human death toll
of this corporate march includes those courageous and heroic Americans
who lost their lives. As Americans considering loss of life, we
are at liberty to claim unbiased humanitarianism, but few among
us are ever so poignantly saddened as with the loss of a young American
soldier fighting for his country in a lonely, foreign land. And
I am no exception. And what of the wounds of body and spirit in
many of those who survived? I ask to join in celebrating those soldiers,
all of them. They are every bit the heroes of World War II, of Korea,
and every bit the heroes of Vietnam (where postwar suicides of veterans
totaled higher numbers than those killed in battle, and the term
"collateral damage" broadened its scope). Unimaginable is the loss
felt by the families of the dead. Are we willing to consider that
the righteous execution of a soldier's duty, training, unity, and
mission, has always stood or fallen, to the degree the citizens
they serve struggle at home for the rights our soldiers pledge to
fight for abroad? It should be noted that President Bush's 2004
budget proposed a 6.2 billion dollar cut in Veterans' health and
welfare benefits.
In
re-evaluating the responsibility of citizenship and U.S. foreign
policy in the post-9/11 age, there have been disparate opinions
among Americans about how supporting our troops would now be defined,
how supporting our principles would now be defined, and how the
"rule of law" would now be upheld. In what way would dissent be
most productive within a system of government that does not exist
without questioning by its people? We accepted that journalists
were "embedded" with reliance on their subject, the military, to
keep them from harm's way. We found that our Secretary of State
presented plagiarized and fictitious evidence of WMD's in Iraq to
the American people and the world. We would rely on this, our government,
acting alone, to uncover those weapons of mass destruction said
to be possessed by the Iraqis and originally said to have justified
our assault. A similar justification came out of military sources
in Baghdad, when an American tank fired on journalists on the sixth
floor of the Palestine Hotel in response to shots claimed to have
been fired on them from that building's lobby. In a hotel full of
international journalists, not one heard the shots that the military
reported to have preceded their "response". We would watch as the
United Nations was described "unnecessary," rather than useful,
if only as an oversight committee, inspiring some domestic and international
faith in a new found American weapons inspections process that is
covert at best. Any responsible person must ask, in whose hands
our flag now waves and what perception the world may have of it
in those hands.
Even
as the New York Times presents unchallenging articles (see Judith
Miller, April 21, 2003,"Prohibited Weapons") on a weapons inspections
process now in place, unnoticed are the legitimate concerns about
potential insertion of WMD evidence. Our television channels show
images of grateful and liberated Iraqis with no acknowledgement
that true poverty will bring the best of us to our knees, where
we would honor any individual or nation who held food. Our knowledge
and understanding of Arab culture and Islamic belief is sketchy
at best. While Saddam Hussein was certainly a beast among men, and
while his people, to any degree that we would presume comprehension,
were under the thumb of brutal oppression in his hands, we must
reflect as we triumph at the image of an American soldier cradling
an Iraqi infant, with no curiosity as to the fate of its parents.
And what of the shocking rise in leukemias and other cancers in
Iraq due to depleteduranium exposure and of the thousands of unexploded
ordinances, both, gifts of U.S. artillary. Will we remember the
hundreds of thousands of children who suffered slow and agonizing
deaths by diarrhea? These primarily attributed to the U.S.- led
sanctions in Iraq, where bombing of water treatment plants and an
embargo on chlorine continued to ravage predominantly young victims.
We must reflect on the certainty with which we were sold a war on
the basis of what we now so expertly call WMDs. We must reflect
on the resentment of the world, invited in our positioning ourselves
as their police. With Syria, Iran, and North Korea on media hit
lists, we must reflect on the availability of funds for violent
crusades in the absence of funding crusades for healing the very
real suffering of our own people and others.
This
is our money I speak of, not theirs. Ours. Our democracy. Our flag.
(Lest we forget Enron) but, we see Exxon. We see Bechtel. We see
Halliburton. We see Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Powell, Rice,
Perle, Ashcroft, Murdoch, many. We see no WMDs. We see dead young
Americans. We see no WMDs. We see dead Iraqi civilians. We see no
WMDs. We see chaos in the Baghdad streets. But no WMDs. We see the
disappearance of a murderous Iraqi dictator, who relented his struggle
and ran without the use of WMDs.
Now
I want to see one more thing. In Iraq, and in the United States,
I want to see who's the boss. I want to see who's the people. I
want to see who are the sheep. And I want to know the lions. I don't
know what the future of the Iraqi people will be. I don't know what
the future of our own people will be. I do know, that while we all
watched the headlines, the drama, the indelible, the horrifying
and forever unjustifiable violence that occurred in the United States
on September 11, 2001, that it has diverted our eyes from the beauty
of this country, and its foundation that act was intended to shake.
It seems Osama Bin Laden's agenda is being furthered by our fear,
promoted by the invective language of media and a Congress that
shamefully cowers from criticism, as we hack away at the arms, the
legs, and the soul of our own civil liberties, our constitution,
our principles, and our flag.
There
has never been a time when it has been more important for citizens
to stand up, to speak, to agree, to disagree, to resolve, to be
non-violent. To be nonviolent. When we allow prideful killers to
define our value as presumption, then only murder can live in our
dreams. We can't be shamed into hiding, frightened into line. We
can't be less than yesterday. And we can't sit still today. Not
if we love our children. This is a question of a peoples'internal
reflection precedingtheir government's external reaction. In 1939,
William Saroyan wrote:
"In
the time of your life, live -- so that in that good time there shall
be no ugliness or death for yourself or for any life your life touches.
Seek goodness everywhere, and when it is found, bring it out of
its hidingplace and let it be free and unashamed. Place in matter
and in flesh the least of the values, for these are the things that
hold death and must pass away. Discover in all things that which
shines and is beyond corruption. Encourage virtue in whatever heart
it may have been driven into secrecy and sorrow by the shame and
terror of the world. Ignore the obvious, for it is unworthy of the
clear eye and the kindly heart. Be the inferior of no man, nor of
any man be the superior. Remember that every man is a variation
of yourself. No man's guilt is not yours, nor is any man's innocence
a thing apart. Despise evil and ungodliness, but not men of ungodliness
or evil. These, understand. Have no shame in being kindly and gentle,
but if the time comes in the time of your life to kill, kill and
have no regret. In the time of your life, live -- so that in that
wondrous time you shall not add to the misery and sorrow of the
world, but shall smile to the infinite delight and mystery of it."
Philosphically,
Saroyan offers a noble aspiration. But we have to be very careful,
whether listening to the television after a hard day's work, or
while reading a poem at a luxury resort, to be men and women of
our own time. When he wrote about a time "to kill" he wrote in a
world without nuclear proliferation, massive globalization, television,
or the decimation of a nation's long held traditions. He was a man
of his time as we are of ours. We are struggling now with the question
of whether there is any longer a time to kill. We are grappling
perhaps with memetic evolution. God help us, at some point we may
need to exercise military action to counter real and specifically
targeted threats. But real threats require the existence of real
opposition in debating strategies where the lives of American soldiers
and innocent civilians are threatened. With few exceptions, notably
congresspeople Barbara Lee and Dennis Kucinich and Senators Robert
Byrd and Ted Kennedy, the Democratic leadership has been entirely
complicit. And it has been an obscene and cowardly betrayal of their
constituencies.
I'm
not a Democrat, not a Republican, not a Green, not aligned with
any party. Yet, as a citizen of the United States, I was raised
in the public school system of the 1960's and '70s. Each morning,
following the first bell, we were called upon as young boys and
girls to stand, put our right hand over our hearts, and pledge allegiance
to the flag of our country. As a schoolboy, I participated in this
tradition unquestioningly and by rote. When in fact, neither flag,
nor country, nor school for that matter, is of much interest to
most young boys dreaming of bicycle rides, surfing, or the girl
in the front of the class. (Was it the way the flag waved or the
wave of her hair I'd pledged to?... I don't remember.)
Of
course, with age, and maturity, come examination of, and rebellion
toward, the traditions and compulsory behaviors of our childhood.
With some time however, we gain at least an objective appreciation
and respect for the great symbol of sacrifice and heroism reflected
in such an icon as our flag (albeit historically and presently intermingled
with varying degrees of corruption and exploitation). Ultimately
though, as with many things in this life, these symbols are vulnerable
to underappreciation, until we have lost them. I am an American
and I fear that I, and our people are on the verge of losing our
flag. If it is lost, it will have been under our watch, under mine
and undermined.
Only
five short years ago, September 12th, 1998, I sat upon a wooden
church pew as a military honor guard reached across my lap to place
a precisely folded American flag into the stoic hands of my father's
widow. His beloved wife of forty-one years... my mother. My dad,
Leo Penn had died from lung cancer at the age of 77. (The last time
I saw my father was in a viewing casket on September 11th.) A decorated
soldier in World War II and a blacklisted artist in the '50s, it
was this cloth of Stars and Stripes and all it had meant to him,
and had come to mean to me, that brought unexpected and unrestrained
emotion. The soldier, in his fine dress uniform, began to speak
to my mother "In the name of the President of the United States
and in gratitude for your husband's heroic..." And that was it,
I was gone. I thought, where the hell did this flood of emotion
come from?
But,
the answer came quickly. My father loved this country so deeply,
and he had passed that love and patriotism on to his three sons.
At that moment, this son, this distracted boy from the public school
system, became all that patriotic could describe in a living civilian,
and that flag before my mother's now gently tear-streaked face,
came to embody every freedom, privilege, and pride I'd ever known.
It symbolized my father. His great heart, his kindness, his courage,
and yes, even his (I was lucky)occasional human lapses.
Yet,
now here we are, just those five short years have passed, and that
same flag that took me so long to love, respect, and protect, threatens
to become a haunting banner of murder, greed, and treason against
our principles, honored history, Constitution, and our own mothers
and fathers. To become a vulgar billboard, advertising our disloyalty
to ourselves and our allies. Our forefathers entrusted that flag
and what it should stand for, whether in times of bliss or terror,
to our fathers and mothers. And they have entrusted it to us. The
responsibility"for which it stands" is ours. That flag is my father
and I want him back.
It
is May 2, 2003 -- a grey day in Northern California. My now 12-year-old
daughter is on the phone in our kitchen organizing a movie-going
troupe of friends for a Friday evening show. "Is CHICAGO still playing?"
They want a second viewing. They want song. And they want dance.
My son is outside skateboarding (perhaps dreaming of the girl in
the front of the class). President George W. Bush was having his
back slapped on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln yesterday.
He seemed quite pleased with this, his military service. He likes
it better now than he did when he was a member of the Texas National
Guard, when in 1972, he simply failed to show up for duty for over
a year in wartime. I certainly wouldn't want to remind him that
were he AWOL in a time of war, it would amount to treasonous desertion.
Yet, beside him, in his self-satisfaction, much of our country,
losing jobs, and increasing debt, is portrayed as being quite pleased
with him,too. And why not? This is his debutante ball, isn't it?
This young man of privilege, who never had the curiosity to set
foot outside our country before becoming our President, was dressed
in his "top gun" jumper, flown in, onto the flight deck of the Lincoln.
I didn't need a second viewing of this one. Tom Cruise was fine
by me. Like my daughter and her friends, I'm in the mood for a little
song and dance, too. But while we sing and while we dance, can it
be a song of hope? Can we share a drink among friends and be responsible
enough not to drive home, killing the child of another with a recklessly
driven car? Can we consider United States' policy internationally?
Can we consider that the Afghans, Iraqis, Africans, so many, and
yes, even here in America need food, water, medicine, hope and sweet
dreams? That entire cultures are disintegrating and will be gone
in our childrens' lifetime. That the millions of people in need
who make up so much of the world, where we stand as the greatest
Democracy in its history, leave us to dance with them in our hearts
and minds, or, to dance upon them, their graves and those of their
children.
We are being told that the needs of these people and nations are
being met. We are being told that our principles and our nation's
rewards are being preserved and won for our people. We have been
told many things. But if we do not participate in an educated democracy,
we participate in its demise. We all have different means. Be it
a letter to a congressman, charity support, or a piece in the New
York Times. But whatever our means, and imagination, we must speak.
We must question. We must value ourselves, our integrity, our families,
our hearts, and the country my father and so many others served.
And soon, we must do one more thing... we must vote.
"Dad,
can you drive us to the movies?" Duty calls.
For
information or comments: clyde1234@a... http://www.seanpenn.com/kilroy.pdf
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