The “American Sniper” Cultural Moment: How Iraq Became the New Vietnam
February 1, 2015
Photo Credit: screenshot YouTube.com
So you want to see a rah-rah, gung-ho war movie this weekend, right? One that combines convincingly chaotic video-game-style action scenes and a misty-eyed reverence toward American troops? One that portrays our recent military campaigns in the Middle East as a noble, heroic and misunderstood crusade to save civilization? Well, I’ve got the movie for you. No, no – I don’t mean that one. Even if you haven’t yet seen “American Sniper,”which continues to rack up huge box-office numbers and inspire endless thumbsucking “think-pieces” from the commentariat (yes, mea culpa), for sheer jingoism and pro-war revisionist propaganda it cannot compete with “Alien Outpost.” Which is not officially about the real world or recent history at all, but rather a low-budget science-fiction flick about an alien invasion. It’s about aliens who hide out in the hinterlands of Iran, Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan and hate our freedoms — and who brainwash zombie Muslims into killing Americans.
Whatever you make of the intersection between Clint Eastwood, Bradley Cooper and the late Chris Kyle, the Navy SEAL sniper turned ghostwritten memoirist turned grotesquely symbolic murder victim, they have brought us a strange and telling cultural moment. Amid the enormous furrow dug through the landscape by “American Sniper,” no one is likely to notice the bizarre pro-war parable found in “Alien Outpost” (which was made by the visual-effects supervisor from “Game of Thrones”) and still less the lightweight rom-com “Amira & Sam,” a movie written and directed by an actual military vet that tries to convert America’s poisonous war experience into a romantic escape fantasy.
All three movies, and no doubt many others yet to come, are responding to the same problem: that war really happened, and real people were sent to fight it. Most of us didn’t go fight the war and don’t know those people. We had “other priorities,” as Dick Cheney famously put it in discussing his Vietnam-era draft deferments. We experienced the war, if at all, as Pentagon-cleansed propaganda reports from “embedded” flacks – and then it turned out there was no “Mission Accomplished” to celebrate and we didn’t want to hear about it anymore. (My son and daughter were born the week the war went south in 2004, when those American contractors got dragged through the streets of Fallujah. I’ll never be able to lose that association.) But now that Iraq is supposedly behind us, it’s looming up grinning at us in the rear-view mirror, like the evil 18-wheeler on a haunted highway.