Colour
Supplement
Articles by contemporary writers
Sunday August
20 2006
Soldiers
on tape
By
John Petrakis
In 2004, about a year
into Operation Iraqi Freedom, as the insurgency
was gathering steam, journalist Deborah Scranton
was offered a chance to embed herself with a
military company that included members of the
New Hampshire National Guard. She declined but
made an intriguing counterproposal. She offered
to give the soldiers light, mobile video cameras
so they could record their experiences.
Scranton and her team received the soldiers'
videos online, edited them, added footage about
families and put together a complex
sociopolitical mosaic. The War Tapes is
an illuminating, disturbing 97-minute
documentary that goes beyond its original intent
(as most successful documentaries do) by not
only showing the precarious existence of
soldiers and civilians in Iraq but also
burrowing into why soldiers do what they do and
how they feel about it.
Approximately ten soldiers shot the footage,
using hand-held cameras that could be mounted on
helmets, dashboards or gun turrets. Only three
of the soldiers play a major on-camera role,
documenting the battles, conducting impromptu
interviews with fellow soldiers, and turning the
cameras on themselves to present a "video diary"
of their dangerous and confusing mission.
By the end we get to know Sergeant Stephen Pink,
24, a burgeoning writer who joined the National
Guard to earn money for college; Specialist Mike
Moriarty, 35, who joined to prove something to
his wife, children and himself, and as a gut
reaction to September 11; and Sergeant Zack
Bazzi, 24, a Lebanese-born Arabic speaker who
experienced wars in Bosnia and Kosovo.
Each soldier has a different perspective on the
cause of the conflict (freedom, money, oil,
power) and on its effects (one suggests that
with George Bush's reelection in 2004 people
should start preparing for "Operation Iranian
Freedom").
Moriarty seems the most troubled as he tries to
reconcile his patriotism with his anger at the
way that private industry (including Dick
Cheney's Halliburton) is profiting from the war.
Pink, the most articulate, is able to express
his intense feelings through metaphor. His most
potent description is comparing a nearly severed
hand hanging from a bloody arm to a child's
mitten hanging from a winter coat. Bazzi, the
most conflicted, seems able to understand,
having lived through the civil war in Lebanon,
why many Iraqis are not happy about the U.S.
presence. His political observations also seem
the most acute, including the memorable line, "A
good American will always love his country—and
be suspicious of his government."
It's clear from the tone of the editing (which
includes participation by Steve James of Hoop
Dreams fame) that Scranton is not a fan of
the war. But she does not exclude moments when
the soldiers express their sense of duty, pride,
honor and global responsibility even as they
grumble about the hellhole they have been cast
into.
This record of daily life includes the regular
explosion of roadside bombs, bursts of gunfire
out of nowhere, and the hunting down and killing
of a pair of snipers, their bodies blown to bits
by the force of U.S. weaponry. The overall
impression is one of chaos. Men unprepared for
such a conflict alternate between a sense of
compassion for the Iraqis and raw expressions of
racism. One of the most moving sequences
involves a young Iraqi mother who is killed as
she tries to cross a busy military highway.
The soldiers' families play a pivotal role.
Bazzi's Lebanese mother bemoans the fact that
the family barely escaped one war and now her
son is participating in another. Pink's
girlfriend is forced to grow up and face some
hard truths. Moriarty's loving and patient wife
understands her husband's need to prove himself
under fire, but worries about her two small
children.
The War Tapes is not an extensive
examination of the complexities of the Iraq war.
It offers a corner of the truth and a glimpse of
moral quandaries that are not pleasant to face.
Sergeant Bazzi observes, "I love being a
soldier. The only bad thing about the army is
that you can't pick your war."
John
Petrakis teaches screenwriting in Chicago
Copyright
2006 CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission
from the August 8 2006 issue of the CHRISTIAN
CENTURY. Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O.
Box 378, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097.
Visit the
Christian Century website.
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