A young relative was recently expounding his reasons for
wanting to do well in upcoming examinations. A place at a good
university with the aim of high-level entry to the armed forces and
training as a helicopter pilot. He wanted to “make a
difference” in Afghanistan or Iraq, to “do his bit
for his country.” One would hope by the time he was old
enough and suitably trained that both of these conflicts would be
resolved and invading forces removed from those territories. But if not
Iraq or Afghanistan there will be other opportunities waiting, no doubt.
Thirty or so years ago an aged neighbour recounted stories of
his involvement in the first world war in France as an underage
volunteer. Stories of life, death and the mass maiming of the youth of
both sides. He, too, wanted to make a difference when he answered the
call and he considered himself one of the lucky ones to return home
alive and in one piece. During WW2 his service was in the home guard
where they paraded wielding sticks and broom handles with which they
vowed to defend the Homeland. In his eighties he was under no illusions
as to the lies, half-truths and overstated reasons of the propaganda
fed to the nation with the aim of garnering overwhelming support for
the plans for wars which would result in the death of millions of
soldiers and civilians alike over a huge part of the world. Plans for
war which would further the interests of the privileged, which aimed to
hang on to and strengthen the Empire's stranglehold on trade routes,
colonies and easy access to cheap resources. Plans which would forfeit
the lives of 'ordinary' men to achieve the material goals of a few.
Injuries in war are multifarious; missing limbs, damaged
organs, psychological malfunction. Sophisticated weaponry has added
other outcomes to combatants' injuries in contemporary conflict zones;
post-traumatic stress disorder which brings a hugely increased chance
of suicide, Gulf-War syndrome, exposure to dangerous levels of
radiation causing birth defects in offspring sired post-conflict.
Prosthetics may fit better now and be more comfortable and cosmetically
acceptable than they were almost a century ago but an artificial
arm/hand/leg is no substitute for your own. A husband/father/son
incapacitated or wheelchair-bound for the rest of his life was not part
of the family planning and death is death; there's no way to put a
positive spin on that.
‘Ordinary’ citizens in ordinary
situations don't have enemies. We may know people who hold opinions we
don't share, we may meet people whom we don't want as friends but
personal enemies are rare. Most people have no desire to deliberately
kill another human being. Personal disagreements rarely conclude so
drastically. Our most dangerous enemies the world over are the
insidious, manufactured histories refashioned and spun in favour of the
storyteller to keep us onside and supportive of damaging, acquisitive
foreign policies and unpopular domestic ones. Part-truths, withheld
information and downright lies as opposed to the truth, the whole truth
and nothing but the truth is the norm and has caused many to become
cynical of governments and opinion-makers whilst also becoming
distanced from the realities of their own world, side-lined by fake
democracies which offer participation in elections two or three times
in a decade followed by immediate withdrawal of any chance of actual
involvement in real decision making. They are left clinging to the hope
of something better coming along with no real conviction that it will.
The
old soldier hopes for the end of all wars as promised in “the
war to end all wars” and the would-be recruit hopes he can be
one of the ones to finally put the world to rights. The one's hopes
dashed to his certain knowledge in his lifetime; the other's also
doomed, as actual history shows again and again. The experiences of an
old man in a long ago war are not that different from those the young
are experiencing right now. The technology moves on but the physical
and emotional effects on the human beings remain terrifyingly similar.
Hindsight is a wonderful thing but, like experience, it seems that
humankind is reluctant to utilise, move forward and build on a previous
generation's hindsight and experience. Somehow the dialogue has to be
widened, to be more inclusive, immediate and truthful, to go beyond
hope to a vision of a future reality for young and old alike. A vision
of a world without conflict that can be achieved by the world's
citizens in general agreement that they are no longer prepared to pay
the price that has been demanded of them for so long.
JANET
SURMAN |