Untitled Document
"Our sons made the ultimate sacrifice, and we want answers."
-- Cindy Sheehan, Camp Casey, Crawford, Texas
"If you want to see the true face of war, go to the amateur porn Web
site NowThatsFuckedUp.com. For
almost a year, American soldiers stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan have
been taking photographs of dead bodies, many of them horribly mutilated
or blown to pieces, and sending them to Web site administrator Chris Wilson.
In return for permission to post these images, Wilson gives the soldiers
free access to his site. American soldiers have been using the pictures
of disfigured Iraqi corpses as currency to buy pornography. . . . One of
the pictures on Wilson's site depicts a woman whose right leg has been torn
off by a land mine, and a medical worker is holding the mangled stump up
to the camera. The woman's vagina is visible under the hem of her skirt.
The caption for this picture reads: 'Nice puss -- bad foot.'"
-- Chris Thompson, "War Pornography" (East
Bay Express, 21 September 2005)
"'There are plenty of women in Fallujah who have testified they were
raped by American soldiers,' said [Mohammed] Abdulla [the executive director
of the Study Center for Human Rights and Democracy in Fallujah]. 'They are
nearby the secondary school for girls inside Fallujah. When people came
back to Fallujah the first time they found so many girls who were totally
naked and they had been killed.'" -- Dahr Jamail, "The
Failed Siege of Fallujah" (Asia Times, 3 June 2005)
Refusing to be silenced as a military parent, Cindy Sheehan's courageous voice
has lent new urgency to stopping the war in Iraq. "Mother Cindy" has
been likened to a Rosa Parks of the anti-war movement. Both women served as
symbolic figures to help bring the weight of a larger base of organizing to
bear on the public.
Yet today we have an anti-war movement which largely fails to point out connections
between war and gender inequality in the United States. In fact, Sheehan came
as a surprise to segments of the movement which prioritized looking to the troops
and potential recruits as the centers of resistance. Sheehan and Hurricane
Katrina remind us that as the war's effects are much broader, we should anticipate
and support rebellion on a variety of mutually reinforcing fronts.
To galvanize organizing against militarism and imperialism to its full potential,
we must question its gender-blind approach. What would it mean to put not just
Cindy's son at the center of outrage, but women like Sheehan herself, as military
mothers, wives, and partners? How have these women themselves, not just the
troops, been militarized, manipulated, and exploited? What would it mean for
the anti-war movement to interpret women like Sheehan as activists and agents
fighting against exploitation which directly affects them in their own right
-- not just as stand-ins for others' struggles, defined by a male-dominated
left?
Below is a numbered list of suggestions for how to apply a gender analysis
to the war, by no means meant to be exhaustive. Like lists enumerating "Why
the War Is Racist" which have circulated in the U.S., the reasons below
get at why the war must be understood as sexist.
1. Soldiers are not the only -- or main -- casualties of war.
The ideology of militarism glorifies soldiers, focusing our attention on their
heroism and sacrifice. The U.S. anti-war movement has not escaped this soldier-centered
paradigm -- causing a gender bias in whom it recognizes as ultimately suffering
from war.
In the 20th century, 90 percent of all war deaths have been of unarmed women,
children, and men. As the occupation wears on, more and more Iraqi women and
girls are killed -- reported as "collateral damage." Bombs and modern
war weapons murder and maim noncombatant women in approximately equal numbers
to noncombatant men. Moreover, U.S. imperialism benefits from certain strategies
that maximize "collateral damage" (such as using long-distance, high-tech
weapons rather than infantry), because these also minimize U.S. soldiers' deaths
and the potential public relations blowup. The tendency to devalue the enemies'
lives is reinforced by not only racist but also sexist ideologies -- history
is made by "our boys," and "enemy women's" deaths are not
even acknowledged.
Putting U.S. soldiers' deaths abroad in the context of other wartime deaths
occurring at home causes another shift in perspective. For example, during World
War II, U.S. industrial workers were more likely than U.S. soldiers to die or
be injured. Historian Catherine
Lutz observes, "The female civilians who worked on bases or in war
industries can be seen as no less guardians or risk-takers than people in uniform."
1 This is not to downplay the suffering and exploitation that
soldiers are forced to endure, but to widen our scope of those whom we recognize
as affected in war.
2. The economic harms of war for women are exacerbated by patriarchy
-- both within the U.S. and in Iraq.
With the destruction of Iraq's economy, women and girls have suffered especially
from deprivations. In the article, "Occupation
Is Not (Women's) Liberation: Confronting 'Imperial Feminism" and Building
a Feminist Anti-War Movement," I discuss in detail some gendered ways
Iraqi women and girls disproportionately bear certain effects of the country's
economic collapse -- from unemployment to the dramatic drop in female literacy.
In the U.S., poor women bear the brunt of public service cuts. In Massachusetts,
for example, most Medicaid recipients, graduates of state and community colleges,
and welfare and subsidized childcare recipients are women -- and all these programs
have faced budget slashes. Most families living in poverty are headed by single
mothers.
Furthermore, imperialism helps to intensify and increase unpaid labor that
is performed by women in their traditional gender roles. Childcare, healthcare,
and homemaking all become heavier without public-sector aid -- whether due to
economic collapse in occupied lands, or imperialist austerity in the aggressor
nation. For instance, as hospitals are destroyed or become unavailable, women
in both Iraq and the U.S. disproportionately shoulder responsibility for their
families' healthcare. As schools close or childcare becomes unaffordable, women
are strained with extra work watching children. Alarmingly, industrialized nations
plan to impose IMF Structural Adjustment Programs on Iraq because of its sovereign
debt. Feminist scholars have documented how SAPs have disproportionately harmed
Third World women across the globe in terms of health, education, and overwork.
U.S. women from military families, and wives of government contractors, are
saddled with the unpaid task of holding the family together until their spouses
return. As the heads of single-parent households, these women take increased
responsibility for homemaking and childcare, on top of their jobs. One brother
of a serviceman put it: "Soldiers may enlist, but their families are drafted."
That the military depends on such women to figuratively oil its machinery
by maintaining troop morale is evidenced by its creation of "support groups"
for military wives, even while it simultaneously lengthens troop deployments
to cope with overstretch. Rather than being dismissed as a mere service for
needy women, these support groups should be seen as an attempt to strategically
harness women's labor -- including their correct performance of sexually loyal
roles -- on which the troops' emotional functioning partly depends and which
minimizes the chances of rebellion. 2 The Pentagon is responding to its post-invasion
recruitment shortage by drawing on reserves, increasing deployments, and laying
the economic and emotional strains on women of military families. These "support
groups" are a cheap band-aid for structural oppression and exploitation
in the larger context of imperialism's priorities.
At the same time, our government's distorted agenda, sharpened in this period
of outright military aggression, compounds economic sexism that pre-dates the
Iraq war. Given U.S. history, patriarchy's operation cannot be disentangled
from pre-existing structural racism either. Racist incarceration which disproportionately
targets black communities intensifies black women's unpaid labor heading single
households -- even as women on workfare-welfare are kept out of decent jobs.
Arab, South Asian, Muslim, and immigrant women are similarly strained by the
detention of their partners and family members under the War on Terror.
3. Militarization intensifies the sexual commodification of women.
Feminist anthropologists such as Cynthia
Enloe have documented how the U.S. military perpetuates the sexual commodification
of women around military bases both in the U.S. and abroad, to manage and motivate
its largely male workforce. 3 Additionally, we must analyze
collusion between foreign and indigenous patriarchies under imperialism in exacerbating
women's oppression.
Following a pattern observed across different conflict regions by feminist
scholars, Iraqi women face increasing pressures to earn their subsistence from
men by bartering their sexuality. This is due to a lack of other economic options
under both military attack and oppressive gender relations. In Baghdad, prostitution
reportedly became widespread between the fall of the Hussein administration
in April 2003 and November 2003, as women disproportionately suffered growing
poverty. 4 Today, reports have surfaced of young Iraqi teens
working in Syrian brothels, after being displaced from Fallujah where U.S. forces
launched brutal offensives and chemical weapons attacks on civilians. Sexual
violence, as well as the trafficking of Iraqi women and girls, showed horrific
rises almost immediately after the invasion and continue. While initially perpetrated
largely by Iraqi men, 5 these rapes and abductions were exacerbated
by the occupation force's negligence and inability to establish security --
its priorities, afterall, have been to secure the oil.
The U.S. anti-war left was in general embarrassingly unsure how to address
such violence, inconveniently at the hands of Iraqis rather than U.S. forces
-- let alone suggest an adequate remedy which might have direct effects on the
problem, besides calls for a (male-led) resistance to replace the occupiers.
But an understanding of the gender dynamics typical of wartime economies would
press the need to provide solidarity for Iraqi anti-occupation movements for
women's rights. The U.S. anti-war movement largely has not treated freedom from
sexual violence as a human right equal to Iraqi struggles for food, water, shelter,
or healthcare. Meanwhile, as the occupation persists, with growing contact between
military forces and Iraqi civilians, sexual brutality by both U.S. troops and
Iraqi police under occupation authority has increased.
Jennifer Fasulo is co-founder of Solidarity with Organization
of Women's Freedom in Iraq (SOWFI), a U.S.-based group providing political
support to an anti-occupation, feminist women's group in Iraq. She reminds us
of the specific historical and geopolitical context of the occupation, pointing
out that the conflict has intensified the growing religious fundamentalist movement
in Iraq -- opposed by Iraqi feminists and socialists -- including segments that
systematically perpetrate violence against and harassment of women. The rise
of Islamist fundamentalism throughout the Middle East is not merely indigenous,
but has its roots in U.S. support, which recruited Islamist militias as opposition
to secular, democratic, and socialist movements throughout earlier decades.
Militarization helps perpetuate sexual violence, domestic violence,
and violence against women -- both in the U.S. and Iraq.
Even though women serve as soldiers, the U.S. military is a misogynist, homophobic
institution that relies on patriarchal ideologies and relations to function
-- with effects on larger society, as well as the countries we occupy or station
bases. While the racist ideologies behind the war are regularly paid lip service
by activists, we less frequently raise how this war depends on sexism. But the
military and its public support are based on deeply embedded patriarchal values
and practices.
The U.S. military trains men to devalue, objectify, and demean traits traditionally
associated with women. It molds men into a gender role of violent masculinity
defined in opposition to femininity. By "violent masculinity" I mean
a mode of operating that glorifies violence as a solution to tension and that
casts civilians in general and women in particular as objects of soldiers' "protection"
who are not equal to the masculine "protectors." As Lutz observes,
militarism teaches us to "prove and regenerate ourselves through violence."
6
One soldier reported his training in boot camp:
"Who are you?" "Killers!"
"What do you do?" "We kill! We kill! We kill!"
Furthermore, soldiers are purposefully trained to eroticize violence -- from
a heterosexual, male-aggressor perspective, even if some soldiers are gay and
some are women. For example, during the first Gulf War, Air Force pilots watched
pornographic movies before bombing missions to psyche themselves up.
7 Until 1999, hardcore pornography was available at military base commissaries,
which were one of its largest purchasers. 8
The military teaches soldiers to internalize the misogynistic role of violent
masculinity, so they can function psychologically. At the 2003 Air Force Academy
Prom, men were given fliers -- using taxpayer dollars -- which read, "You
Shut the Fuck Up! We'll Protect America. Get out of our way, you liberal pussies!"
They were then treated to a play which provided instructions on how to stimulate
a female's clitoris and nipples to get her vaginal juice flowing (in case she
was otherwise unwilling?). 9
Alarmingly but not so surprisingly, according to the Veterans Association itself,
over 80 percent of recent women veterans report experiencing sexual harassment,
and 30 percent rape or attempted rape, by other military personnel. 10
Crimes of sexual violence by military personnel are shocking -- and institutionally
ignored. Lawyer Dorothy Mackey of Survivors Take Action Against Abuse by Military
Personnel (STAMP) reports that of the 4,300 sexual assault and abuse cases she
is handling which were brought up to military and government officials, only
3 were actually prosecuted. In Mackey's own experience as a survivor of repeated
sexual assault by military personnel, her attempt to press charges was opposed
by the Department of Justice as a threat to national security. 11
Military service may be more conducive to domestic violence than most civilian
occupations, owing to the military's authoritarianism, use of physical force
in training, and the stress of frequent moves and separations as factors. The
incidence of domestic violence in the military is far higher than in the civilian
world:
CBS News' 60 Minutes report estimated that the rate of domestic violence in
the military is five times that in the civilian population. The recent report
says only that among 700,000 military families, incidents reported to military
agencies are down from 22 per 1,000 couples in 1997 to 17 per 1,000 in 1999.
The military figures do not count unmarried "intimate partners," which
are included in most civilian studies.
Current studies by Richard Gelles of the University of Pennsylvania, among
others, estimate domestic violence in the military is at least two to three
times higher than among civilians. 12
Might the military's institutional sexism and indifference to violence against
women be a factor? A checklist used by the military to determine if rape reports
are valid lists a women's financial problems with her partner and "demanding"
medical treatment, as factors indicating she's lying. 13 The
Army recently offered the perk of free breast implants for servicewomen, so
its surgeons could "get practice." Meanwhile, it has a drastic shortage
of rape kits in combat regions and refuses to pay for servicewomen's abortions
even in the case of rape.
A therapist who practices near a large Army Base and treats soldiers returning
from Iraq reports that domestic violence has escalated ever since troops began
coming back. Even more disturbing, she says, "The soldiers tell me that
the killing of spouses at military bases is at an all time high, but I have
no concrete evidence to this effect, and the Army is pretty quiet about it."
14 She also mentions "a dramatic increase in sexual addiction"
among soldiers, as they are compelled to substitute solitary enjoyment of pornography
for sexual relationships in war zones, "to the detriment of interaction
with another."
Militarism's patriarchal roles extend into larger culture, not just ideologically
in terms of how little boys broadly are taught to be soldiers -- but institutionally
as well. Phoebe Jones of Global Women's Strike and Survivors Take Action Against
Abuse by Military Personnel (STAAAMP) places the Abu Ghraib scandal in the context
of a prison-military complex of abuse:
It's all connected. . . . You have prison guards here, like Charles Grainer
[implicated in the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal], who go to Iraq and abuse people
there. Then you have soldiers come back from Iraq or Afghanistan getting jobs
as prison guards, and they rape and abuse people. The military could stop it
if they want to, but they don't want to. They're socializing men into doing
this. 15
Prison torture was outsourced to U.S. companies using personnel from domestic
prisons. Beyond the prison-military complex, the impact of rape culture nurtured
by the military can be traced through U.S. society further. In 1997, "about
35% of veterans in State prison, compared to 20% of nonveterans, were convicted
of homicide or sexual assault" -- in fact, the number one reason for veterans
to be in prison at the state level was for sexual assault. 16
An exploration of the effects of militarism on socialization, and institutions
from school to family, are outside the scope of this brief essay -- but must
be considered.
The impact of violence against women cannot be separated from racial and economic
hierarchy, even though these pieces are often analyzed without reference to
each other. One result of Hurricane Katrina -- little responded to by the left
-- was the devastation of domestic violence shelters and sexual assault services.
The Louisiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence
describes poor women forced to live in homeless shelters, experiencing rape
and physical abuse from partners they have been unable to escape, on top of
the storm's destruction. 17 Of course FEMA did not provide
alleviation. Yet rather than critiquing the government's patriarchal failings,
the left allowed right-wing reports of abounding chaos (laced with racist undertones)
to fill the gap of explaining sexual abuse. Needless to say, poor and non-white
women confronting gendered violence disproportionately face a lack of recourses.
For instance, although violence against women cuts across class, women on welfare
suffer especially high rates of domestic and sexual violence -- a direct result
of having less freedom to leave their abusers. 18 And again,
government policy is involved; welfare law, purportedly to encourage "strong"
families, denies funds to poor women who leave their partners, requiring their
economic dependency and endurance of abuse.
Militarization and war decrease women's control over their reproduction.
Just months after the invasion, increased back-alley abortions were reported
in Baghdad as women lost access to healthcare and contraception. In the U.S.,
budget stringency means that policies like universal healthcare and free contraception
on demand will remain distant. Since women, not men, get pregnant, the lack
of reproductive healthcare is an issue of women's equality -- affecting women's
control of their labor, bodies, and futures.
Furthermore, a Christian right-wing takeover of the U.S. political scene has
reframed debates over "morality" in terms of issues like abortion
and gay rights -- diverting outrage away from, say, the economic exploitation
of this administration and its war policy, to the treatment of a clump of cells
and whom one loves. The Christian conservative movement focuses its political
intervention more on directly controlling individuals' personal behavior than
on altering the structures of society to alleviate inequality and meet human
needs. In our historical context, the ideology and agenda of limiting women's
control over their reproduction is connected to U.S. imperialism -- and thus
has much broader implications than strictly women's reproductive health. For
one, imperialism relies on a gendered reproductive division of labor, which
trains poor men to be soldiers while extolling motherhood for women, the better
to exploit their women's paid and unpaid labor. I am unable to do a full exploration
of these connections in this essay -- but they demand thought and examination!
Militarization and conflict situations result in a restriction of public
space for women -- impacting their political expression.
Feminist scholars have observed the physical barriers to women's public access
in conflict situations time and again. In Iraq, due to insecurity, women are
restricted from seeking healthcare, attending school, and working. Such limitations
have shaped the trajectory and form of women's organizing, as well. When the
political actors are men, women's bodies and behavior risk becoming a battleground
to be fought over by others -- they risk marginalization in the political sphere
unless they are able to actively organize around an agenda that takes into account
their gendered position.
Within the U.S., the anti-war movement's troop-centered analysis has also shaped
women's space politically, if not necessarily physically. Military mothers like
Cindy Sheehan are publicly recognized for their connection to the troops --
and specifically, their stance of support for rather than conflict with individual
troops. An analysis of gender which critically examines the effects of violent
masculinity is less welcome.
Occupation will not bring women's liberation.
As an occupier with little accountability to the Iraqi people (or the U.S.
public), the U.S. government is not capable of -- or interested in -- bringing
democracy and liberation to Iraqis. At the very best, U.S. officials have merely
"played two sides of the fence" with regard to women's rights -- bartering
them away when convenient in order to maintain power. But at worst, three long
years later, events have made it tragically clear in all its horrific consequences
that the continued occupation's primary goals have been the economic, political,
and military interests of a U.S. elite -- with as much non-transparency as possible
for the sake of public relations. A lengthier discussion of the specific historical
and geopolitical forces at work in the U.S. occupation of Iraq, bearing on Iraqi
women]s positions, was the subject of a previous essay, "Occupation
Is Not (Women's) Liberation: Confronting Imperial Feminism and Building a Feminist
Anti-War Movement."
Conclusion
Imperialism requires particular gender relations to function. Little boys are
taught that soldiering is a rite of passage -- a vehicle to manly respect. The
public learns that soldiering -- and now serving as security or emergency personnel
-- entitles a special claim to citizenship, to this country and its offerings,
even if in actuality such promises do not really materialize. But that is P.R.
to boost recruitment. And by exalting the violent, masculine protector at the
expense of the feminine, at the expense of women, the state and society extract
women's labor at undervalued rates, preserving a gendered division of labor
at women's expense, and reinforce male sexual entitlement. Part of the military's
appeal to (heterosexual) men, the boost to troop morale it relies on, is the
male privilege over economically dependent, sexually available women that it
promises to offer.
The military uses the work of women, sectored into patriarchal and exploitative
economic relations, to function -- whether as marginalized soldiers, military
wives, sex workers, or civilians.
A gender analysis -- a recognition of the connections between imperialism and
U.S. patriarchy -- drastically widens the spectrum of people we must consider
the "casualties" of war and deepens our understanding of imperialism.
Not only does the war perpetuate sexist inequality and patriarchy, but also
it enlists patriarchal relations -- economic, sexual, and ideological -- to
carry out its operations. I have outlined ways women are affected by the war
-- both as distinct from men, and disproportionately compared to men, due to
gender inequality. Righting these injustices requires special attention to gender
-- merely opposing the war is not enough.
We must recognize the connections between the war in Iraq and patriarchy at
home -- and resist.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN ORGANIZING WITH ATTENTION TO THE CONNECTIONS BETWEEN
IMPERIALISM, PATRIARCHY, AND RACISM, CONTACT ME! I am having trouble finding
political comrades. LET'S MEET!
Huibin Amee Chew is active in anti-imperialist, feminist,
and immigrant rights activism in Boston. She can be reached at hachew@gmail.com
1 Catherine Lutz, Homefront:
A Military City and the American 20th Century (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001),
p.46.
2 This analysis was presented by Cynthia Enloe during a talk
in MIT in 2003. Enloe would count sex workers around military bases, as well
as female military personnel, as other women enlisted by the military, both
formally and informally, to facilitate its operation.
3 In the current Iraq war, girls and teens displaced from
U.S.-destroyed cities like Fallujah have been traced to the sex trade in Syria.
4 "UNIFEM
Gender Profile -- Iraq," WomenWarPeace.org.
5 More recently, with greater contact between U.S. troops
and Iraqi civilians compared to early on in the occupation, sexual violence
against Iraqis perpetuated by occupying forces has increased.
6 Lutz, Homefront.
7 Michael Rogin, "'Make My Day!' Spectacle as Amnesia
in Imperial Politics," Cultures
of United States Imperialism. Durham: Duke University Press, 1993. See also
Robert Jenson, "Blow Bangs and Cluster Bombs: The Cruelty of Men and Americans,"
Not For Sale: Feminists Resisting
Prostitution and Pornography, eds. Christine Stark and Rebecca Whisnant,
(North Melbourne: Spinifex Press, 2005).
8 Rus Ervin Funk and Lucinda Marshall, "Militarism
and Violence Against Women: Examining the Connections, Exploring Solutions"
(2004).
9 Dorothy Mackey of Survivors Take Action Against Abuse by
Military Personnel, 2004 Boston Social Forum.
10 Dorothy Mackey, "US
Government and Pentagon Sanctioning of Abuses," Black Women's Rape
Action Project & Women Against Rape.
11 Kari Lydersen, "Rape
Nation," AlterNet (2 July 2004).
12 Chris Lombardi, "General:
The Good Soldier Doesn't Beat His Wife," Women's eNews
(15 March 2001).
13 Lydersen, op. cit.
14 "Coping
with the Personal & Family Costs of War," Quaker House
Newsletter (February 2005).
15 Lydersen, op. cit.
16 Christopher J. Mumola, "Veterans
in Prison or Jail," (Bureau of Justice Statistics, January 2000).
17 Louisiana Coalition Against
Domestic Violence.
18 Eleanor Lyon, "Poverty,
Welfare, and Battered Women: What Does the Research Tell Us?" (1997).