GQ: Pentagon reports quoted the Bible at start of Iraq war

WASHINGTON (RNS) The Pentagon included Bible verses on the covers of confidential reports at the start of the Iraq war, featuring photos of soldiers and quotes about “the full armor of God” and seeking divine help, GQ magazine reported. The magazine’s Web site features images of covers of the “Worldwide Intelligence Update” from 2003. One […]

WASHINGTON (RNS) The Pentagon included Bible verses on the covers of confidential reports at the start of the Iraq war, featuring photos of soldiers and quotes about “the full armor of God” and seeking divine help, GQ magazine reported.

The magazine’s Web site features images of covers of the “Worldwide Intelligence Update” from 2003. One report, with a photo of a tank, quotes Ephesians 6:13, which begins, “Therefore put on the full armor of God.”

Another, with a photo of now-deceased Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, quotes 1 Peter 2:15: ” It is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men.”


GQ writer Robert Draper said the cover sheets were created by Maj. Gen. Glen Shaffer, a director of intelligence who reported to both Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Richard Myers.

“When colleagues complained to Shaffer that including a religious message with an intelligence briefing seemed inappropriate, Shaffer politely informed them that the practice would continue, because `my seniors’ — JCS chairman Richard Myers, Rumsfeld, and the commander in chief himself — appreciated the cover pages,” Draper wrote.

The Associated Press reported that the Pentagon said Monday (May 18) that Bible verses are no longer included on the cover of daily intelligence briefings.

Robert Parham, executive director of the Baptist Center for Ethics, wrote in a column Monday that the report provides “a painful reminder that a crusade mentality coursed through the veins of the Pentagon.” The Rev. C. Welton Gaddy, president of Interfaith Alliance, called the use of the biblical verses “offensive morally and sacrilegious spiritually.”

Family Research Council President Tony Perkins defended the practice Tuesday, saying that there is historical precedence for presidents relying on faith, such as Abraham Lincoln quoting the Bible in his second inaugural and Franklin Roosevelt praying over the radio waves during World War II.

“We’re removing God from everything,” Perkins said. “I wonder what it would have been like if Abraham Lincoln had backed off of his emphasis on Scripture … where this nation would be,” Perkins said.


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