I could not avoid a strong sense of irony during the
week leading into Memorial Day 2016.
Last week saw President Obama’s appearance at Hiroshima,
a report on US-Russia-China nuclear talks, a trade opening to Vietnam, and my
personal viewing of two movies about bombing: “Children of Nagasaki” and “Eye
in the Sky.”
The observation of Memorial Day itself remains full of
irony, inasmuch as the original practice of the holiday promised a different
message. At first “Decoration Day” aimed
only to honor the fallen Union Soldiers of the Civil War, but the actual
observances soon included decorating graves of Confederate soldiers as well, even
though many southern states kept a separate holiday for this purpose. Then, after World
War I, the focus enlarged again to include all fallen America soldiers in any war.
The irony is that, while this history acknowledged the dead on both sides of the Civil War, no other war gets the same recognition.
The assumption is that the Civil War is unique because, even though they fought
for two separate countries under two different flags, the dead on both sides
were Americans. In short, only American lives matter on Memorial Day. “Enemy”
lives from other wars do not--nor do civilian lives (the so-called
“collateral damage") that typically outnumber military deaths in modern war.
"Collateral" remains |
Had Memorial Day’s focus enlarged further to remember all war
dead, it might have become our national day for reflecting on the tragic loss of tens
of millions of lives in wars world-wide since the Civil War. Instead, it has
become a patriotic celebration in which we remember only the service of
soldiers, and only US soldiers. The focus is less on the tragedy of war and
more on glorifying the sacrifice of our warriors. Instead of citizens wearing
poppy pins or black armbands to remember war’s fallen, we see ballplayers
wearing camouflage on their baseball caps.
But the chief irony came from President Obama himself,
when he spoke at Hiroshima and called the atom bombing symbolic of the risks contained
in humanity’s technological leap forward:
In the image
of a mushroom cloud that rose into these skies, we are most starkly reminded of
humanity’s core contradiction; how the very spark that marks us as a species --
our thoughts, our imagination, our language, our tool-making, our ability to
set ourselves apart from nature and bend it to our will -- those very things
also give us the capacity for unmatched destruction…
The wars of the modern age teach this truth. Hiroshima teaches this truth. Technological progress without an equivalent progress in human institutions can doom us. The scientific revolution that led to the splitting of an atom requires a moral revolution, as well.
The wars of the modern age teach this truth. Hiroshima teaches this truth. Technological progress without an equivalent progress in human institutions can doom us. The scientific revolution that led to the splitting of an atom requires a moral revolution, as well.
I find this statement true, and important, but also
ironic, for two reasons.
First, because its message is nearly identical to the message
delivered by Vatican Council II (1962-1965). Surveying the signs of the times
to reset a vision for the future of the Catholic Church in the world, the
Council called for wisdom sources to keep pace with modern technological power,
to harness that power for good:
The modern
world shows itself at once powerful and weak, capable of the noblest deeds or
the foulest; before it lies the path to freedom or to slavery, to progress or
retreat, to brotherhood or hatred…
Man judges
rightly that by his intellect he surpasses the material universe, for he shares
in the light of the divine mind. By relentlessly employing his talents through
the ages he has indeed made progress…especially in his probing of the material
world and in subjecting it to himself. Still he has always searched for more
penetrating truths, and finds them...
The intellectual
nature of the human person is perfected by wisdom and needs to be…
Our era needs
such wisdom more than bygone ages if the discoveries made by man are to be
further humanized. For the future of the world stands in peril unless wiser men
are forthcoming.
So Obama’s point is well made, but more than 50 years
later, and one can argue that those 50 years technological power has remained largely
unchecked by wisdom, without much concern about steering that power in the
right direction.
This problem is particularly acute if we talk about
the role of the United States: are we helping wisdom to keep pace by promoting
peace, or aiding runaway power in the form of perpetual war? Thus the second
irony: the president’s good message risks contradicting many of his own
administration’s policies
For example, the latest “START” deal to limit nuclear may
do quite the opposite, as the New York Times recently reported:
The United
States, Russia
and China are now aggressively
pursuing a new generation of smaller, less destructive nuclear weapons. The
buildups threaten to revive a Cold War-era arms race and unsettle the balance
of destructive force among nations that has kept the nuclear peace for more
than a half-century.
In fact, the US is expected to "revitalize"
its nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years at the cost of up to $1 trillion!
Moreover, the Times reported last week that a new Pentagon
census of the US nuclear arsenal reveals that “Mr. Obama has reduced the size of the nation’s nuclear stockpile at a
far slower rate than did any of his three immediate predecessors, including
George Bush and George W. Bush.”
Also last week, the process of normalizing relations with Vietnam took a similar turn. President Obama announced that the
US is lifting its decades-long embargo on military arms sales to Vietnam,
saying: “The decision to lift the ban…was
based on our desire to complete what has been a lengthy process of moving
toward normalization with Vietnam.”
This strikes me
as a devil’s bargain: achieving further reconciliation with our former enemy at
the cost of feeding the proliferation of arms in Southeast Asia. But this of course promotes and extends America’s
longtime role as the #1 arms dealer in the world.
None of these events mark America as a country
dedicated to promoting peace. Rather,
they seem to reflect a belief in either the necessity or even the virtue of
perpetual warfare. At best this means
that America is resigned to violent responses to violence around the world
rather than leading us in a different direction. At worst it means that we embrace the grip of
violence because it is profitable for us.
As Pope Francis explained to schoolchildren visiting the Vatican last
spring: "Many powerful people don't want peace because they live off war."
During Obama’s visit to Hiroshima, the media rehashed
the old debate about the wisdom of dropping atomic bombs on Japanese cities. Most
mainstream media admitted that the decision remains controversial, yet implied
a near-consensus that the bombings saved lives by avoiding an invasion.
There is of course no way to resolve the dispute because
there’s no way to prove an alternative history that never occurred. But these facts are true: (1) both General
MacArthur and General Eisenhower declared the bomb unnecessary; (2) the
Japanese with the high command was prepared to surrender if the emperor’s role
was preserved; (3) the US instead insisted on “unconditional surrender,” which
was a deal breaker; (4) after surrender, the emperor was protected anyhow. Arguably,
then, an invasion was not necessary, except for American stubbornness. (See: http://swaincrosscurrents.blogspot.com/2015/08/ivespent-last-week-reflecting-on-70-th.html
)
But the debate about Hiroshima and Nagasaki will
continue because of two distinct moral views about the use of violence. In one view (championed by the majority of characters
in the new movie “Eye in the Sky”), killing, even at the cost of innocent lives,
can be justified on the speculation that such killing will save more
lives. The other view (the minority view
in the movie) is that the ends do not justify the means, that one must not kill
innocents even in the hope of saving other lives.
In the first view, it is numbers that count: “The
greatest good for the greatest number.” In the second view, it is intention and
virtue that counts: “Do no harm,” even if one risks great sacrifice. In the movie, these two views clash over the
life of a single innocent girl. But in
real life, these two views may be the difference between policies of perpetual
warfare and policies that move, however achingly, toward peace.
One “survivor” of the Nagasaki bombings (who later
died of radiation sickness) wrote in 1946 about the experience of his family.
His story, in its
homespun, almost dull way, reflects the kind of fervent commitment to peace
that has kept Japan free of nuclear weapons and strictly limited its military
spending.
But his memoirs did not appear for 20 years after World War II because the American
“occupational censors” would not allow their publication. And the movie version
of his “Children of Nagasaki” could not
be made for 20 more years, finally appearing in 1983. The irony here: the movie’s delay enabled the director, like the
original writer a dedicated Catholic, to include footage of John-Paul II
visiting Hiroshima to proclaim Catholicism’s anti-nuclear principles.
The censorship of this story, like last week’s
opposition to any US apology for the bombings, reflects how the world’s most
powerful nation continues to avoid acknowledging its part in the global
devastation that marked most of the 20th century. And we continue to pretend that we are not
responsible for massive killings in the 21st century.
And so as Memorial Day arrives, we wave our flags and
salute our soldiers and remember their service and sacrifice and feel proud of
our nation. We see little mention of the
140,000 who died at Hiroshima, the 80,000 who died in Nagasaki, the uncounted
thousands who died of radiation sickness in the years that followed, the 3 million Vietnamese who died during the Vietnam War, or the 200,000
Iraqis who died following the American invasion.
We think of ourselves as the home of the free and the
brave--and no doubt that is true. But
neither freedom nor bravery guarantees virtue.
And if we seek a future of peace rather than perpetual warfare, we will
need a nation famous not just for its freedom, not just for its bravery, but
for its goodness and moral courage.
© Bernard F. Swain PhD 2016
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