The Bombings We Are Not Paying Attention To

In the last few days the country, if not the world, has had a crash course in bunker buster bombs, ever since three of them literally crashed down on a nuclear weapons development facility in Fordow, Iran.  Delivered by a stealth B2 bomber, the pretext, subtext and context of the attack is now very much out in the open.  And the questions abound:  was the attack legitimate, was it effective, will it bring peace or be a catalyst for more war, how does the bombing affect the ever changing complexity of international relations?

Those are important questions, and they need to be grappled with. But they are policy questions, and as such they provide us with some emotional distance from the human impact of the bombings, which opens up all sorts of other questions.

When I was a sophomore in college, my political science professor, George Kateb, barged into his class one morning in a controlled rage. Arguably the most respected teacher on campus, he threw down that day’s edition of the New York Times, pointed to the lead article’s headline:  “Cost of Living increases by .3% in the last Month” and with great disdain shouted out, “they need to be writing about the politics of life and death. Economic data is a distraction from what is really going on in the world. People are dying. That is the story that needs to be told.” I still remember his words, and his prophetic passion – some fifty years later.

We don’t yet know the full extent of the damage wrought by bunker buster bombs, in terms of infrastructure or loss of human life.  That will be reported out in the coming days, and undoubtedly there will be different sources and spins on the data. And our attention will inevitably be drawn to the debate about facts and figures, success and failure of the operation and its aftermath — at the expense of the attention that needs to be directed on the other assaults which the United States has inflicted in various parts of the world. They are different bombs — not of ordnance, but the withholding of aid, through the dismantling of US AID. The cutbacks are tantamount to an anti-personnel weapon, the impact of which is an escalating loss of life because medicines which have been purchased and stored are not being delivered, centers of medical care have been shuttered, and ongoing funding has been cut off. The data on all the programs that have been thrown into the DOGE  “woodchipper” is hard to come by, partly because they had largely been operating in remote areas, often among people who live in so-called “shithole countries”, and who therefore do not merit much concern. Whose lives have been deemed to have little or no value.

The rationale for the closing of US AID is largely based on bogus claims of corruption, and a wildly inflated claim of cost to the US taxpayer.  My guess is that when the accounting is complete — and certified for accuracy, the attendant costs of closing US AID will far exceed the annual budget of the programs it fosters.  As Professor Kateb said, economic data is a distraction from what is really going on in the world. People are dying.

Since the end of World War II America has served as the world’s police department. There have been many moments of brutality and abuse, to be sure, but the intent has been to keep people, countries and the world safe. There are many who are arguing today that we need to let go of that role, and put America first.  There will be endless debate on whether or not we should abandon our policing position, and how best to do that should that be the decision. 

For far longer America has served as the world’s lead chaplain, offering succor, support and resources to millions of people whose lives have been framed by poverty, disease and violence.  By all accounts there has been  a long standing need for US AID to engage in operational reforms. That hasn’t happened. Instead, the whole operation has been blown up — without any preparation or warning — all of which demonstrates a cruelty that makes me embarrassed to be an American.

How to respond to this ongoing anti-personnel crisis? Step into the role of chaplain. Learn the stories of life and death — and tell them. Give your heart to the misery that has been generated through moral blindness. Offer your witness, prayer and monetary donations. Find a relief agency that is doing life nurturing and life saving work and support them. Pay attention to the policy issues that the bombing of Fordo has raised, yes, but don’t get distracted by them. We need to pay attention to the issues of life and death.

People are dying.

 

American Religious Pluralism Has Deep Roots

“Pains were taken to connect Ministers of the most dissimilar religious principles together”. So wrote founding father Benjamin Rush in his account of the July 4th, 1788 Grand Procession in Philadelphia. The Constitution had just been ratified by nine of the 13...

Deep Canvassing

It’s called deep canvassing, a community exercise that is different from standard canvassing. Standard canvassing involves knocking on doors for the purpose of persuading the household residents to support a cause or a candidate. Deep canvassing also involves knocking...

Correctives to Blasphemy

At a gathering in the White House just before Easter, President Trump was lauded, if not anointed, with the words, “you are the greatest champion of the faith that we have ever seen in a President.”  So spoke Paula White-Cain, the President’s chief spiritual advisor,...

The Limits of Deal Making

“Let’s Make a Deal” is a day-time game show that has been running on TV off and on since 1963. “The Art of the Deal”, a book ghost written by Tony Schwartz for Donald Trump in 1987, immediately landed on the best seller list, where it remained for nearly a year, and...

Easter and Love: A Response to Epic Fury

“We’re going to bring them back to the Stone Age where they belong”. “All Hell will reign down”. So President Trump has said and written in the last few days as the bombardment of Iran continues.  Many of us viscerally recoil at the wanton illegality, the unbridled...

Does Love Die on the Cross?

Fifteen years ago, I was on a tour of Robben Island in South Africa, the prison where Nelson Mandela was jailed for most of his 27 years in captivity. The tour guide was a former prisoner who had been locked up for writing a letter to his local newspaper questioning...

The Barbarity of Deus Vult

Deus Vult. God wills it, in Latin. That was a rallying cry in 1095 when Pope Urban made plans to dispatch a Christian army to expel Muslims from Jerusalem. It was the first Crusade.There were seven Crusades in all over the next 200 years, most of them failures.  But...

The Dangers of Epic Fury

  It was a moment of epic furry. I was with a group of my college freshmen classmates at the fraternity where we had just been accepted as pledges. I was invited upstairs into a member’s room, and as soon as I entered, I was set upon by three fraternity...

Responsibility to Protect. R2P. Responsibility to Protect a doctrine that was endorsed by all UN member states at the 2005 World Summit. After the genocide in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, there was a developing global commitment to require nations to...

Bombing of Iran: Prayerful and Action Responses

Bombs fell across Iran over the weekend. The assault continues. The impact of these attacks have been felt across the globe. Loss of life, and military machinery in Iran itself, and an array of anxiety, grief, anger, fear, and in some cases celebration, in Iran and...
Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Join my mailing list to receive the latest blog updates.

You have Successfully Subscribed!