How to Forget on Memorial Day - Whistling Past the Graveyard of Empires
By Tom Engelhardt
Its the saddest reading around: the little announcements that dribble out of the Pentagon every day or two -- those terse, relatively uninformative death notices: rank; name; age; small town, suburb, or second-level city of origin; means of death (small arms fire, improvised explosive device, the result of gunshot wounds inflicted by an individual wearing an Afghan National Army uniform, or sometimes something vaguer like while conducting combat operations, supporting Operation Enduring Freedom, or simply no explanation at all); and the unit the dead soldier belonged to. They are seldom 100 words, even with the usual opening line: The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom. Sometimes they include more than one death.
They are essentially bureaucratic notices designed to draw little attention to themselves. Yet cumulatively, in their hundreds over the last decade, they represent a grim archive of Americas still ongoing, already largely forgotten second Afghan War, and Ive read them obsessively for years.
Into the Memory Hole
May is the official month of remembrance when it comes to our war dead, ending as it does on the long Memorial Day weekend when Americans typically take to the road and kill themselves and each other in far greater numbers than will die in Afghanistan. Its a weekend for which the police tend to predict rising fatalities and news reports tend to celebrate any declines in deaths on our roads and highways.
Quiz Americans and a surprising number undoubtedly wont have thought about the memorial in Memorial Day at all -- especially now that its largely a marker of the start of summer and an excuse for cookouts.
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Add to this all the forgotten Iraqi, Afghan, Pakistani, Yemeni and who knows how many other innocent people killed during this decade plus of US wars on their countries.