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	<title>Comments on: Marine Capt. Tyler E. Boudreau Puts a Human Face on War</title>
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	<link>http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/03/marine-capt-tyler-e-boudreau-puts-a-human-face-on-war/</link>
	<description>a radical newsletter in the struggle for peace and social justice</description>
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		<title>By: mary</title>
		<link>http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/03/marine-capt-tyler-e-boudreau-puts-a-human-face-on-war/#comment-41883</link>
		<dc:creator>mary</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2009 13:00:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dissidentvoice.org/?p=7317#comment-41883</guid>
		<description>This from Dr Souad Al-Azzawi on the aftermath of the Iraq wars and a note from a friend  of mine to whom I sent the link and who knows Dr Al-Azzawi&#039;s and her family well.

Let the Numbers Speak 
Dr. Souad N. Al-Azzawi, Associate Professor, Baghdad, Iraq, member of the BRussells Tribunal Advisory Committee 

Dear Friends, 

I pride myself in being a scientist and a researcher. I built my academic career on theories and numbers. As a teacher, I teach my students that everything is based in science - everything has reason. For this reason, I am always frustrated with myself when I find I am overwhelmed with feelings on specific topics. 

One such topic is the occupation of my country, Iraq. On this subject I find that I cannot always be dispassionate. I cannot be the researcher and observer and discuss it without feeling or emotion as I am sometimes expected to do. I find myself doing research on the damages caused by the war and occupation, and my head buzzes with anger, my eyes burn with tears of desperation at the state of my country. 

Six years after the attack and the pain is as fresh and cutting as it was in March 2003. This year, I decided, I would view it as a scientist. I would not attack the subject with emotion. I would let the numbers speak for themselves. This year I will sit back and play the part of the analyst- the researcher- on this topic that is closest to my heart. 

Six years into the occupation… 

- 72 months of destruction 

- $607 Billions spent on the war 

- 2 Million Barrels of oil being sold per day 

- 2 Million Displaced Iraqis inside of Iraq 

- 3 Million Iraqis forced to leave the country 

- 2615 professors, scientists, and doctors killed in cold blood 

- 338 dead journalists 

- $13 Billion misplaced by the current Iraqi government 

- $400 Billion required to rebuild the Iraqi infrastructure 

- 3 hours average of electricity daily 

- 24 car bombs per month 

- 7 major mafias running the country 

- 4260 Americans dead 

- 10,000 cases of cholera per year 

- 50 of my friends dead 

- 22 of my relatives dead 

- 15 abductions of close relatives and people I know and love 

- At least 1.3 million Iraqis dead since 2003. 

Six years into the occupation and somehow, the numbers are not looking better. Year after dismal year, the numbers of dead and displaced grow as we continue to reap the rewards of an American occupation on our country. 

So the numbers speak for themselves. Six. Six months is what it took for most Iraqis to realize no good could come of this war and occupation. Six years is what it has taken the rest of the world. Six years, six million Iraqis displaced inside and outside of Iraq- well over a million Iraqis dead or dying inside of the country. 

As a scientist, as a researcher- it is a disaster that will never be sufficiently documented with numbers or words. As a researcher, the numbers are so astounding that we go back and recalculate to make sure they are real. As an Iraqi, it is enraging. The numbers and statistics fill me with a rage and shame that make my heart throb and my blood boil. It’s a rage towards all who are silent and uncaring, and a shame at the little we all are doing. 

Souad N. Al-Azzawi 
Associate Professor, 
Baghdad, Iraq 
March26/2009 

Dr. Souad Naji Al-Azzawi is a former Vice-President of Mamoun University of Scientific Affaires; former professor of environmental engineering at Baghdad Univ., recipient of the 2003 Nuclear-Free Future Award for her work on environmental contamination after the Gulf War in Iraq. She published 50 Papers in hazardous Waste management and Radiological Pollution from the use of Depleted Uranium Weapons in Iraq. 
Link: http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m52909&amp;hd=&amp;size=1&amp;l=e
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thank you Mary. Indeed I do know Souad well. She is one of the bravest people on earth and has risked her life since the invasion with her meticulous research. Her husband, a man who I met before her, in 1992, was equally remarkable. He died of cancer last year, linked to DU.  He was one of those people who make an immediate impression and had a gentleness and love of music, art, history that was the core of his being.
 
They were both Professors at Universities in the US and expelled back to Iraq in the run up to the 1991 war. Their eldest daughter was ten, beautiful and spoke with an American accent. The  return to Iraq was a wonderful adventure for her. She did not believe the Americans would ever bomb: &#039; I lived there, they are my friends, I went to school there ...&#039;   When the bombing started she became paralysed with the shock and remained totally unable to move for three weeks. She, her brother, mother, father and the baby born a week before the bombing started, stayed in the inner bathroom - no windows - huddled under duvets for the entire 42 days.
 
Duvets against cruise missiles. When the bombing began the bedroom windows came in and the baby&#039;s cot was showered with glass.  He had been lifted out moments before. 
 
Brown said of Cameron&#039;s son that the loss of a child was something no parent should ever have to endure. Indeed, but apparently if they are olive skinned, somewhere else and speak another language, they don&#039;t count.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It makes me weep. Shame on Bush, Blair and the other criminal warmongers.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This from Dr Souad Al-Azzawi on the aftermath of the Iraq wars and a note from a friend  of mine to whom I sent the link and who knows Dr Al-Azzawi&#8217;s and her family well.</p>
<p>Let the Numbers Speak<br />
Dr. Souad N. Al-Azzawi, Associate Professor, Baghdad, Iraq, member of the BRussells Tribunal Advisory Committee </p>
<p>Dear Friends, </p>
<p>I pride myself in being a scientist and a researcher. I built my academic career on theories and numbers. As a teacher, I teach my students that everything is based in science &#8211; everything has reason. For this reason, I am always frustrated with myself when I find I am overwhelmed with feelings on specific topics. </p>
<p>One such topic is the occupation of my country, Iraq. On this subject I find that I cannot always be dispassionate. I cannot be the researcher and observer and discuss it without feeling or emotion as I am sometimes expected to do. I find myself doing research on the damages caused by the war and occupation, and my head buzzes with anger, my eyes burn with tears of desperation at the state of my country. </p>
<p>Six years after the attack and the pain is as fresh and cutting as it was in March 2003. This year, I decided, I would view it as a scientist. I would not attack the subject with emotion. I would let the numbers speak for themselves. This year I will sit back and play the part of the analyst- the researcher- on this topic that is closest to my heart. </p>
<p>Six years into the occupation… </p>
<p>- 72 months of destruction </p>
<p>- $607 Billions spent on the war </p>
<p>- 2 Million Barrels of oil being sold per day </p>
<p>- 2 Million Displaced Iraqis inside of Iraq </p>
<p>- 3 Million Iraqis forced to leave the country </p>
<p>- 2615 professors, scientists, and doctors killed in cold blood </p>
<p>- 338 dead journalists </p>
<p>- $13 Billion misplaced by the current Iraqi government </p>
<p>- $400 Billion required to rebuild the Iraqi infrastructure </p>
<p>- 3 hours average of electricity daily </p>
<p>- 24 car bombs per month </p>
<p>- 7 major mafias running the country </p>
<p>- 4260 Americans dead </p>
<p>- 10,000 cases of cholera per year </p>
<p>- 50 of my friends dead </p>
<p>- 22 of my relatives dead </p>
<p>- 15 abductions of close relatives and people I know and love </p>
<p>- At least 1.3 million Iraqis dead since 2003. </p>
<p>Six years into the occupation and somehow, the numbers are not looking better. Year after dismal year, the numbers of dead and displaced grow as we continue to reap the rewards of an American occupation on our country. </p>
<p>So the numbers speak for themselves. Six. Six months is what it took for most Iraqis to realize no good could come of this war and occupation. Six years is what it has taken the rest of the world. Six years, six million Iraqis displaced inside and outside of Iraq- well over a million Iraqis dead or dying inside of the country. </p>
<p>As a scientist, as a researcher- it is a disaster that will never be sufficiently documented with numbers or words. As a researcher, the numbers are so astounding that we go back and recalculate to make sure they are real. As an Iraqi, it is enraging. The numbers and statistics fill me with a rage and shame that make my heart throb and my blood boil. It’s a rage towards all who are silent and uncaring, and a shame at the little we all are doing. </p>
<p>Souad N. Al-Azzawi<br />
Associate Professor,<br />
Baghdad, Iraq<br />
March26/2009 </p>
<p>Dr. Souad Naji Al-Azzawi is a former Vice-President of Mamoun University of Scientific Affaires; former professor of environmental engineering at Baghdad Univ., recipient of the 2003 Nuclear-Free Future Award for her work on environmental contamination after the Gulf War in Iraq. She published 50 Papers in hazardous Waste management and Radiological Pollution from the use of Depleted Uranium Weapons in Iraq.<br />
Link: <a href="http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m52909&#038;hd=&#038;size=1&#038;l=e" rel="nofollow">http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m52909&#038;hd=&#038;size=1&#038;l=e</a><br />
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />
Thank you Mary. Indeed I do know Souad well. She is one of the bravest people on earth and has risked her life since the invasion with her meticulous research. Her husband, a man who I met before her, in 1992, was equally remarkable. He died of cancer last year, linked to DU.  He was one of those people who make an immediate impression and had a gentleness and love of music, art, history that was the core of his being.</p>
<p>They were both Professors at Universities in the US and expelled back to Iraq in the run up to the 1991 war. Their eldest daughter was ten, beautiful and spoke with an American accent. The  return to Iraq was a wonderful adventure for her. She did not believe the Americans would ever bomb: &#8216; I lived there, they are my friends, I went to school there &#8230;&#8217;   When the bombing started she became paralysed with the shock and remained totally unable to move for three weeks. She, her brother, mother, father and the baby born a week before the bombing started, stayed in the inner bathroom &#8211; no windows &#8211; huddled under duvets for the entire 42 days.</p>
<p>Duvets against cruise missiles. When the bombing began the bedroom windows came in and the baby&#8217;s cot was showered with glass.  He had been lifted out moments before. </p>
<p>Brown said of Cameron&#8217;s son that the loss of a child was something no parent should ever have to endure. Indeed, but apparently if they are olive skinned, somewhere else and speak another language, they don&#8217;t count.<br />
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
<p>It makes me weep. Shame on Bush, Blair and the other criminal warmongers.</p>
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		<title>By: Johnny Cure-dents</title>
		<link>http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/03/marine-capt-tyler-e-boudreau-puts-a-human-face-on-war/#comment-41576</link>
		<dc:creator>Johnny Cure-dents</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Mar 2009 02:04:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dissidentvoice.org/?p=7317#comment-41576</guid>
		<description>I agree with Magarulian.  It&#039;s long past time to see our military for what it really is, a giant sink-hole into which we have poured our national treasure, trillions of dollars spent on military junk.  Now everyone more or less realizes we are a bankrupt nation, but many still deny the large part our military played in this economic fiasco.  It is also a sink-hole into which we have dumped our kids for decades, telling them they are  heroes because they put up with the dreary BS that is military life, making them think they are doing something truly important when what they really are up to  is wasting their lives.

It&#039;s time to stop lying.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I agree with Magarulian.  It&#8217;s long past time to see our military for what it really is, a giant sink-hole into which we have poured our national treasure, trillions of dollars spent on military junk.  Now everyone more or less realizes we are a bankrupt nation, but many still deny the large part our military played in this economic fiasco.  It is also a sink-hole into which we have dumped our kids for decades, telling them they are  heroes because they put up with the dreary BS that is military life, making them think they are doing something truly important when what they really are up to  is wasting their lives.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s time to stop lying.</p>
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		<title>By: Magarulian</title>
		<link>http://dissidentvoice.org/2009/03/marine-capt-tyler-e-boudreau-puts-a-human-face-on-war/#comment-41450</link>
		<dc:creator>Magarulian</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2009 19:20:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.dissidentvoice.org/?p=7317#comment-41450</guid>
		<description>Marine Capt. Tyler E. Boudreau’s first-person exposé doesn&#039;t need to be read by lawmakers. It needs to be freely distributed to high school students and young unemployed persons. 

Lawmakers understand what&#039;s going on. Why do we treat them like idiots who know nothing about us? Listen up, Jason Leopold: we are living in the American Empire, not in the United States of America. If you hate these wars and occupations so much, stop supporting them, and stop making excuses for the media and the American Empire&#039;s troops. The naive statement &quot;soldiers and veterans who have bravely served our country&quot; shows that you are living in a state of denial - just like the rest of our society - &quot;far removed from reality&quot;.

Do you want to stop this insanity? The only way to do it is to stop ALL support for it - and that includes supporting the volunteer, trained killers for the Empire. 

And to stop more cases of &#039;post-traumatic stress disorder&#039; from happening, REFUSE to &quot;serve&quot; in the aggressions and occupations of the American Empire ...and that includes all of us stopping our support (i.e., paying taxes).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Marine Capt. Tyler E. Boudreau’s first-person exposé doesn&#8217;t need to be read by lawmakers. It needs to be freely distributed to high school students and young unemployed persons. </p>
<p>Lawmakers understand what&#8217;s going on. Why do we treat them like idiots who know nothing about us? Listen up, Jason Leopold: we are living in the American Empire, not in the United States of America. If you hate these wars and occupations so much, stop supporting them, and stop making excuses for the media and the American Empire&#8217;s troops. The naive statement &#8220;soldiers and veterans who have bravely served our country&#8221; shows that you are living in a state of denial &#8211; just like the rest of our society &#8211; &#8220;far removed from reality&#8221;.</p>
<p>Do you want to stop this insanity? The only way to do it is to stop ALL support for it &#8211; and that includes supporting the volunteer, trained killers for the Empire. </p>
<p>And to stop more cases of &#8216;post-traumatic stress disorder&#8217; from happening, REFUSE to &#8220;serve&#8221; in the aggressions and occupations of the American Empire &#8230;and that includes all of us stopping our support (i.e., paying taxes).</p>
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