Pentagon sloganeering — on gravestones

I realize that the Bush gang has a stronger affinity for message development than, well, anyone. These guys live and breathe political propaganda. I only wish they’d leave gravestones alone.

For Bush’s message machine, there is no “Afghanistan war”; there’s “Operation Enduring Freedom.” It’s not the “Iraq war”; it’s “Operation Iraqi Freedom.” If you develop graphics for the Fox News Channel, these carefully-spun titles might make it easier to sell the wars to a sympathetic audience. If you’re a parent who’s lost a son or daughter, though, it’s a problem when these slogans show up on your loved one’s tombstone.

Unlike earlier wars, nearly all Arlington National Cemetery gravestones for troops killed in Iraq or Afghanistan are inscribed with the slogan-like operation names the Pentagon selected to promote public support for the conflicts.

Families of fallen soldiers and Marines are being told they have the option to have the government-furnished headstones engraved with “Operation Enduring Freedom” or “Operation Iraqi Freedom” at no extra charge, whether they are buried in Arlington or elsewhere. A mock-up shown to many families includes the operation names.

I’ve been to Arlington National Cemetery many times. In some instances, gravestones will note the war and foreign country in which the person served. They have not, however, included political catch-phrases thought up by message consultants.

If this were simply a matter of making the political names of the war available as an “option,” it would only be mildly problematic. Unfortunately, though, some have found that the choice belongs to the Pentagon, not the soldier’s family.

Nadia and Robert McCaffrey, whose son Patrick was killed in Iraq in June 2004, said “Operation Iraqi Freedom” ended up on his government-supplied headstone in Oceanside, Calif., without family approval.

“I was a little taken aback,” Robert McCaffrey said, describing his reaction when he first saw the operation name on Patrick’s tombstone. “They certainly didn’t ask my wife; they didn’t ask me.” He said Patrick’s widow told him she had not been asked either. “In one way, I feel it’s taking advantage to a small degree,” McCaffrey said. “Patrick did not want to be there, that is a definite fact.”

The owner of the company that has been making gravestones for Arlington and other national cemeteries for nearly two decades is uncomfortable, too.

“It just seems a little brazen that that’s put on stones,” said Jeff Martell, owner of Granite Industries of Vermont. “It seems like it might be connected to politics.”

You think?

This adds insult to injury. This was a man who didn’t really want to go to Iraq, but did his duty and died in action. When he’s laid to rest, the Pentagon took the liberty of adding a little propaganda to his tombstone, without his family’s permission.

If a family wants the slogan on the tombstone, that’s up to them. But how many examples are there like the McCaffreys?

Former Sen. Max Cleland, D-Ga., who lost both legs and an arm in Vietnam and headed the Veterans Administration under President Carter, called the practice “a little bit of glorified advertising.”

“I think it’s a little bit of gilding the lily,” Cleland said, while insisting that he’s not criticizing families who want that information included.

“Most of the headstones out there at Arlington and around the nation just say World War II or Korea or Vietnam, one simple statement,” he said. “It’s not, shall we say, a designated theme or a designated operation by somebody in the Pentagon. It is what it is. And I think there’s power in simplicity.”

Everything with the Bush gang is about shaping public perceptions and looking for a political edge. Everything.

Can they enscribe the tombstone “Bush’s War”?

  • There’s something deeply wrong with these people. What’s next, little GOP billboards in military cemeteries?

  • If any parent would agree to an inscription like “our beloved son lies here as a testament to George Bush’s lies and Donald Rumsfield’s incompetence” I am sure donations would quickly cover the cost, several times over.

  • I think they are finding the message a little tired and played out these days. I know Bush doesn’t pay attention to polls, but they do mean something, and his number have been, ahem, grave.

    He just can’t go out and spout 9/11 anymore and have people rally behind him.

  • Why can’t they just put Afghanistan or Iraq on the grave? They don’t even need to place the word ‘war’ on it. I think it speaks for itself…besides everyone knows it was a war. But to actually put Operation Bush’s Folly on it is just plain stupid. You don’t see Vietnam Police Action on gravestones, you simply see Vietnam.

    I’m curious…did any of the American soldiers that died in Bosnia get Operation Joint Endeavor or Operation Joint Guard placed on their graves? Or did they simply get Bosnia-Herzegovnia (or one or the other)? Anyone know?

  • There is NOTHING so sacred that it won’t be sacrificed on the altar of politics by BushCo. What a playbook. EVERYTHING is just a prop for the chickenhawks’ little global game of Risk, where everyone else dies and is maimed, while Bush says it’s important to him to “live my life.” Too bad there are so many that cannot do the same with their own lives that Bush has tossed away like an unfinished sandwich. These dead warriors no longer have a voice to object to what was done to them, and the RightWingNoiseMachine wants to now deny a voice to their families who have to speak for them.

    But why should we be surprised when Bush behaves like a sociopath? In Latin, the term is “res ipsa locquitor” — “the thing speaks for itself.” Bush IS a sociopath, and nothing requiring a conscience or sincere empathy can or will be considered EXCEPT as to how he can fake it for his personal political or remunerative advantage.

    Is there anything that connotes a sense of “permanency” and “commemoration” as a grave marker? The headstone/marker is the last earthly, tangible recognition that someone once trod upon the earth, once breathed and had life, once loved and was loved, and was a unique and irreplaceable sentient human being that can never have life on this earth again. That they existed, that they mattered, and that they will always be remembered. Now, thanks to BushCo, these soldiers, sailors and Marines have to lie for all eternity beneath Bush’s last, final and unchangable spit in their eyes. Even in death, their last vestige of dignity is plundered for petty political gain. THAT will be, for these dead warriors and their families and friends, will be Bush’s legacy.

    Hell is too good for these craven and Lying.Fucking.Bastards.

  • Now, CB, you know that everything Bush does isn’t just for political advantage. There’s also doing things for the money. Why stop at the war’s propaganda slogan on gravestones when you could sell that space to the private sector? You know, here lies G.I. Joe ™ Jones. Or Sgt. Joseph Jones “Just do it!” ™. Or get more bang for the recruitment buck with Sgt. Joseph Jones “Be all that you can be!”(tm)

  • Comments are closed.