Friendly-fire deaths represent just one percent of US military casualties in Iraq, according to figures provided by our government. The figure pales in comparison with those for World War II (12-14 percent), Vietnam (10-14 percent), and Grenada (13 percent), making us question — particularly after the Pat Tillman cover-up — how the frequency could be so different from previous conflicts. Given the frequent chaos of combat in Iraq, this seems unlikely.
In the case of Tillman, an NFL player who rejected the big bucks that come with being a pro athlete to serve in Iraq, the Army went to considerable lengths to create a deception about his death. Initially, Tillman was said to have died as the result of enemy fire. Now, a score of Army personnel stand to be punished for hiding the truth — that he was killed by friendly fire.
Tillman was one of 17 “friendly fire” casualties accounted for at the time of his death in 2006. Few of the other soldiers mistakenly killed by their comrades received a great deal of press coverage. Certainly, none received the kind of global media mourning generated by Tillman’s celebrity status.
Yet every dead soldier’s family sheds the same tears, faces the same sleepless nights, and seeks endless possible answers to the same looming questions: “Why my son?,” “Why my husband?,” and, “Why my daughter?”
We have a societal habit of investing more value in some lives than others. Firefighters and police officers who died in New York City around 9/11 are glorified more than the thousands of others they could not save. World Trade Center victims are spoken of more often than those who died in Pennsylvania or at the Pentagon during that same attack.
When a police officer dies in the line of duty, we bring out the flags, the bagpipes and all his or her brethren from other states. Perhaps the heightened recognition is due for those who risk their lives, yet wives and mothers die daily “in the line of duty” and few notice outside their immediate circle.
When baseball great Mickey Mantle needed an organ donation, he moved to the head of the waiting list, even though he had destroyed his own health through years of heavy drinking and other self-inflicted problems.
People worry more about Anna Nicole Smith’s million-dollar baby daughter than they will ever care about the thousands of infants left orphaned each year by American mothers and fathers who overdose, abandon their children, or are removed from the child’s life because they are seriously abusive or unfit. Most of those babies have no trust funds and nothing to look forward to but endless foster care placements or cold, institutional lives. Who seeks truth and justice for them?
So if all human life has value, does it follow that all human lives have equal value? The answer: apparently not.
Related:
Vicenza to Washngton: No thanks, It came from the sink, Enjoy the air show — you paid for it, More
- Vicenza to Washngton: No thanks
By next Christmas, 40 percent of the British presence in Iraq is expected home.
- It came from the sink
Drainage spawns a genetic mutation — part salamander, part fish, part . . . vagina dentata? — that emerges from the Han’s banks.
- Enjoy the air show — you paid for it
Let’s move beyond the $320 million in aircraft you have bought that will be performing at this weekend’s Great State of Maine Air Show at Brunswick Naval Air Station.
- Twenty years pass, RI stays the same
Phillipe + Jorge were graciously asked to recall Rhode Island’s Monthly’s first dubious achievement-style Rhode Island Red Awards, as chosen in 1988 by your superior correspondents, during the mag’s 20th anniversary gala last week.
- Yes sir!
David Zeiger’s Sir! No Sir! is yet another absorbing documentary that George W. won’t see, or want you to see, because, as the prez often cautions, “It sends the wrong message to our troops.”
- Reality bites
The war in Iraq has been on the back burner of the American political scene for some time.
- Silence kills
The effort to overturn the Don’t Ask-Don’t Tell policy needs more than just the support of the 120 House members who have signed on to the bill to replace it with a non-discrimination law.
- Bacevich’s war
Eight days after 9/11, NPR broadcast a commentary by Andrew J. Bacevich, a Vietnam War veteran, former Army colonel, and professor of international relations at BU.
- A night in Guantánamo
I’d volunteered to spend the night in the replica cell (which is modeled on the ones at Gitmo) because we’ve all heard stories about unlivable conditions at Gitmo but can’t come close to imagining what it must be like.
- Rent a war
Wonder why the Iraq government changed its mind about expelling Blackwater, the rent-a-soldier company whose employees killed 17 civilians this past month?
- Bush's secret army
The 9/11 attacks provided a catalyst: an unprecedented justification to forge ahead with a radical agenda molded by a small cadre of neoconservative operatives.
- Less

Topics:
This Just In
, Armed Forces, National Football League, War and Conflict, More
, Armed Forces, National Football League, War and Conflict, Pat Tillman, U.S. Armed Forces, Police, U.S. Armed Forces Activities, U.S. Army Activities, Mickey Mantle, Anna Nicole Smith, Less