essaysbysean.blogspot.com
Poetry, like a
certain Epitaph For Mercenaries, is nice escapism. Meanwhile, in our 6 o’clock real
world, here is an essay:
My dad’s war resulted in
the practical creation of the United Nations, an organization doing as well, I
think, as might be expected. Today my father, spending his twilight years in a
pavilion at the hospital, depends on the newer generations to manage the world.
(Who, me?) Nobody said citizenship was easy. At least we don’t have to go fight
like he did. (Thank God) Scared? We can be overwhelmed, scared, from learning about the world and the armed forces, but I think we can relax
a little by remembering that the original meaning of “manage” was “cope.” The
world is too big to manage, but I guess as long as we are coping enough to
avoid a major war, we must be doing something right. (OK, carry on)
Maybe, in this
brave new century, a part of being an “informed citizen” could mean knowing
about mercenaries. The historical definition
of “mercenary,” of course, is someone who fights for pay, not patriotism: It implies
someone brought in from outside the country.
The various high school
history textbooks I grew up with always included the war between the two city-states
of Carthage and Rome: The city fathers of Carthage were businessmen, merchants,
part of an elegant civilized city, set in North Africa on the sparkling Mediterranean
Sea. The senators of Rome were from a practical city of simple farmers on the
river Tiber, a city with a habit of imperializing other city-states. One day Carthage, suffering under Rome's imperialism, decided to put a stop to it. And so a decadent city tried to fight a virtuous city. How decadent? When the army overseas in Italy asked for reinforcements, the city fathers, in order to save money, said no.
Carthage used a
mercenary army, enlisting only a few Carthaginians. Rome used unpaid volunteers.
(Rome supplied the army rations, catapults and so forth).
In school
textbooks, the children’s sympathies are with civilized Carthage, not rustic
Rome. The Carthaginian army went to Italy. At first things did not go well for
Rome. In fact, their army got wiped out. Like the battle of First Bull Run,
just outside Washington in the U.S. civil war, the people back in Rome were terrified—and with good reason: Rome’s casualties, unlike Union forces, were nearly 100
per cent. So they raised a new army, and tried again. The result was like the Second
Bull Run, except for, again, nearly 100 per cent casualties.
Hannibal led the
Carthaginians; the Romans had no one comparable. But unlike, say, Iraq or South
Vietnam, the Romans didn’t lose heart. They kept at it, and at last Rome was
like a sports team that comes from behind to win the series. The high school
texts would always end the story by saying that, despite having our sympathy, in
the end Carthage probably deserved to
lose… Because they used mercenaries, while the Romans fought for their country.
Modern U.S.
servicemen, while not fighting for free as the Romans did, are certainly not
regarded as mercenaries. I remember back when President John F. Kennedy was
commander-in-chief: Of course his servicemen were lowly paid—How low? Unlike
Canadian forces, they critically depended on having a base PX, with
very low prices, to get by. When Kennedy sent military advisors to hot steamy
Vietnam they went off with low pay but high standards.
Similarly, Kennedy’s
civilian Peace Corps, where people went off to help the Third World farmers dig
irrigation ditches, saw themselves as serving. Of course they could make more
money stateside, and of course they were putting their civilian careers on
hold, but— “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for
your country.”
Needless to say, this
was before things like “market fundamentalism” (meaning: no oversight by
government and citizens) and before “Let’s shrink the government to bathtub
size, and then strangle it in the bathtub.” What happens when the context
changes? If no one “gives a care” about civil servants serving the public, then why would other folks,
nongovernment, “give a care” about serving either? Why go off and suffer
in the Peace Corps? Easier to “give up” and trust that an elegant Wall Street,
without oversight by any volunteers, will run a good marketplace without any
meltdown, without leading the rest of the globe into a recession.
Modern low paid
servicemen, unlike highly-paid hypothetical mercenaries, are no warmongers. Kennedy
himself was a peace-lover. He was criticized by some folks for not supporting
the invasion of the Bay of Pigs, but to me his
holding back the U.S. forces was common sense: He knew the horror of war. His
brother Joe had been killed in the war, and John had his patrol torpedo boat destroyed by the Japanese at night, with no one around to help him and his crew,
as he towed a burned sailor by holding his life preserver strap in his teeth. It was a
very long, very lonely swim.
I remember when
Kennedy was shot—I was watching TV when it happened. I grieved. Had he lived, I
am sure he would have been disappointed at how there has been a steady movement
to disparage government, and citizen service, to the point where the public was not asked to get off their couches for Iraq. I think this doomed Iraq in
advance to be, as an early book on Iraq was titled, a Fiasco. (Good book, by the way) Not like how Americans got involved
in the cold war.
Kennedy, I think,
would have been dumbfounded at the very idea of the U.S. using mercenaries; I
think he would have been scandalized at the use of highly-paid armed “contractors” in Iraq.
It was well established, even before the Americans had the guts to begin
honestly using the term “occupation,” that contractors such as Blackwater were
doing very great harm to the U.S. goal of winning the hearts and minds for teaching democracy. But without effective oversight nothing at Blackwater changed. (At
least, not until the occupation was nearly over)
Thinking of marketplace fundamentalism, I might say the American people, for that war, had “Whitehouse
fundamentalism”—oh, if only Arabic-speaking housewives and students had been
encouraged to volunteer to go to Iraq to be gentle translators on those terrifying (to Iraqi households) night raids.
My concern with knowing
about passive civilians, citizen-soldiers and mercenaries, is: “Drift happens.”
If the impoverished
First World republic of Rome drifted into an elegant-for-the-rich Third World
empire, and declined into using only non-Romans as their soldiers, it was because
the Roman sense of noble citizenship declined. At the end, just before the fall, no one in Rome was saying that a citizen’s
duty is “to be informed” …let alone “to serve his country
by fighting for it.”
Here’s this week’s
poem:
Epitaph On an Army of Mercenaries
by A. E. Housman
These, in the days
when heaven was falling,
The hour when earth’s foundations
fled,
Followed their
mercenary calling
And took their wages and are dead.
Their shoulders
held the sky suspended;
They stood, and earth’s foundations
stay;
What God
abandoned, these defended,
And saved the sum of things for pay.
Sean Crawford
Calgary
February 2015
Footnotes:
~I documented, by using old copies of Readers Digest, how U.S. citizens
were involved in the cold war—such a
contrast—in my essay No War archived April,
2014.
~An angry former
Vietnam Reporter observes U.S. economic and cultural decline in David Halberstam was a Harbinger archived June 2015. It's one of my denser, gloomier essays.
~Again, through
the lens of The Assassin’s Gate
(Another good book) I validated some sorrowful theories of U.S. decline,
archived September 2012.
~Reminder: As I
say in my blog’s “about me” it’s OK to comment on these older essays.
~To me, the thought of Carthage trying to save money in war time, when you should be fighting with all your might, is as crazy as declaring War on Terror and then giving the biggest tax cut in modern times, and trying to send in the absolutely smallest army possible to Iraq... and silencing any army experts who disagreed.
~To me, the thought of Carthage trying to save money in war time, when you should be fighting with all your might, is as crazy as declaring War on Terror and then giving the biggest tax cut in modern times, and trying to send in the absolutely smallest army possible to Iraq... and silencing any army experts who disagreed.
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