But what's the REAL story? That this U.S. regime is a state sponsor of terror in Iraq. "Shock and awe" is terror. That this regime's armed destruction of human life has invited a pathologized resistance that had never been there before. Dr. Coppola should not even have to go to Iraq. The problem is that the Bush-Cheney regime
s invasion and occupation of the sovereign nation-state of Iraq and dangerous threats to the sovereign nation-state of Iran makes false heroes (like Dr. Coppola) of the ones that "serve" -- serving up death and destruction and then winning medals and accolades and book contracts for their "service."
The occupation is inhuman, it's unethical and it must stop.
Who are the unsung heroes? The Iraqi people.
http://www.EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
see below for story that prompted my response:
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A Military Doctor in Iraq, and Baby Blue
When American military surgeon Dr. Chris Coppola shipped off to Iraq in September, his wife Meredith knitted two baby blankets, one pink and one blue, just in case he might need them. Last week, the blue blanket was put to use, an event chronicled in moving detail on Dr. Coppola’s compelling medical blog, “Made a Difference For That One.”
Dr. Coppola’s blog is essentially a regular letter home to his family, but it offers a glimpse into the deadly human toll going on a world away in Iraq. One of his most recent posts, called Blue Blanket, is a dramatic account of an Iraqi woman who was injured after gunmen apparently fired on a bus filled with women and young girls. She was eight months pregnant — her husband had been killed seven months earlier — and bullets and metal fragments pierced her hip and uterus. Dr. Coppola recounts how he and his colleagues scrambled for information on how to treat the war wounds, consulting with trauma experts in Baghdad and the United States for advice.
He describes in graphic detail the ensuing operation and delivery of a baby boy, who was purple and not breathing until a few puffs of oxygen brought forth a cry. The war-zone hospital wasn’t equipped with an incubator, but the team found a crib and wrapped it in cellophane from the food service department. They added a hose that blew warm air into the makeshift incubator. The boy’s mother was still in intensive care, but the staff was excited by the new arrival.
It seemed like nearly everyone drifted by to sneak a peek-a-loo. The lucky bedside nurses got to feed him his first meal, which he took well. We fussed over his numbers and vital signs. We scowled over complications that might occur and brainstormed for stratagems to ward them off. He seemed to pay our worries no mind. I rushed back to my hooch to bring him a blue receiving blanket that M. had knit and sent with me to Iraq in case a baby might need to be warmed. His freshly cleaned tiny features are a calming precious beauty in our utilitarian combat support hospital. If he can emerge safe from such a horrible event, perhaps there is hope for even better days to come.
This is Dr. Coppola’s second stint in Iraq — he was there for five months in 2005 and just returned last month. During his first stay, he didn’t blog but instead sent regular e-mails home to his family, which his wife has since compiled into a book called “Made a Difference For That One: A Surgeon’s Letters Home From Iraq.” A portion of the book’s proceeds are donated to Fisher House Foundation, a group that provides housing for the family of military members who are hospitalized for treatment. The military newspaper Stars and Stripes recently wrote a feature about the hospital where Dr. Coppola works.
It is noteworthy that my post drew more ire than the good doctor drew kudos for his humanitarian work on his second tour in Iraq. That’s regrettable because as I have already stated in my first post, the doctor cares about people and he is a sensitive caring individual.
Here’s the point of my critique which I rather suspect will again be lost in crudely self-serving,
highly profitable patriotism.
Dr. C’s heroic exploits, and heroic they are, there’s irony in that, represent the “human face” of U.S. predatory capitalism and neo-imperial triumphalism. Except there’s absolutely nothing to be triumphant about. Instead, there’s reason to grieve. The mass killings of tens of thousands (or hundreds of thousands, I am being really conservative in my estimates here)of Iraqi women, children and men that this US regime does not even care to count.
I am also aware that I am speaking across a vast racial divide, being a Third World woman of color who has relatives in Iraq. Are all the posters and the doctor and his wife white? Hmmmmm.
Systemic Whiteness and white supremacism is what U.S. white racism is all about. Genocide and racism are inherent aspects of U.S. history and continue to impact contemporary relations with the rest of the world.
Who are the unsung heroes of this tragic war?
The Iraqi people. No one else.
http://www.EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
— Posted by Chithra KarunaKaran
Chithra KarunaKaran
Ethical Democracy As Lived Practice
http://EthicalDemocracy.blogspot.com
Dear Ms. Parker-Pope,
Thank you very much for featuring my letters home. As you so kindly mentioned, the purpose of this blog and the book my wife and I published is to call attention to Fisher House (www.fisherhouse.org) an organization which helps families of injured troops. From our combat support hospital, I have a limited, yet intense perspective on the war. I’d like to send out my good wishes to you and also to the many families who are missing their loved ones over here.
Warm regards,
Chris
— Posted by Chris Coppola