[Mb-civic] Maimed

ean at sbcglobal.net ean at sbcglobal.net
Sat Oct 16 21:07:21 PDT 2004


Maimed for Oil and Empire
by Nicole Colson
www.dissidentvoice.org
October 12, 2004
First Published in Socialist Worker

“I think it’s worth it, Jim.” During the September 30 presidential debate,
George Bush didn’t hesitate when asked if the war on Iraq was worth the
hundreds of deaths and thousands of terrible injuries suffered by U.S.
troops.

Too bad debate moderator Jim Lehrer couldn’t ask Sgt. 1st Class Larry
Daniels the same question. Daniels is one of hundreds of U.S. troops with
critical injuries at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, the U.S. military
hospital in Germany where nearly all ill or wounded troops from Iraq and
Afghanistan are sent.

In mid-September, Daniels and his men were guarding Iraqi contractors
repairing a chain-link fence near the Baghdad airport when a car bomb
exploded. Today, his arms are pinned with metal rods and wrapped in
bandages from just below the shoulders to the tip of his fingers. Shrapnel
wounds scar his back, from behind his right ear to his ankles. And Daniels
is one of the “lucky ones”--because doctors believe he’ll make a full
recovery and won’t suffer disabilities.

Col. Earl Hecker, a critical care doctor at Landstuhl, says that the
casualty situation for U.S. troops is far worse than most people in the
U.S. can imagine. "[The public has] no idea what's going on here, none
whatsoever," he told New York Newsday. Then he blurted out, "Bush is an
idiot."

Hecker has every right to feel angry. On an average day, he sees 35 young
men and women transported to Landstuhl, mainly from Iraq. Doctors and
nurses at the hospital say it is like something out of a nightmare--where
“the cost of the Iraq war is measured in amputated limbs, burst eyeballs,
shrapnel-torn bodies and shattered lives,” wrote Toronto Star reporter
Sandro Contenta.

Since September 2001, more than 18,000 military personnel have come to the
hospital from Iraq and Afghanistan--roughly 20 percent because of combat
injuries, the rest due to accidents or illness. While the Pentagon has
reported approximately 7,300 soldiers injured in combat in Iraq, that
number doesn’t reflect soldiers evacuated for illnesses, like diarrhea or
persistent fever, which are often related to living conditions.

And it doesn’t count the thousands of soldiers sent home because they are
suffering from mental health problems, like post-traumatic stress
disorder. At Landstuhl alone, more than 1,400 soldiers have been admitted
for mental health problems.

Back at home, the Pentagon says that some 28,000 troops out of the 168,000
who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan have sought medical care from
the Veterans Administration. Nearly 20 percent of those--well over
5,000--have done so for mental health reasons.

It’s no wonder why. According to a New England Journal of Medicine study
released in July, during the six weeks that the Iraq war lasted
officially, 95 percent of Marines and Army soldiers surveyed said that
they had been shot at, 56 percent had killed an enemy combatant, and 94
percent had seen bodies and human remains. "It's probably the biggest
challenge to mental health [in the military] since Vietnam," Col. Gary
Southwell, chief of psychology services at Landstuhl, told Newsday.

For these soldiers, help may not be available, even if they manage to make
it home alive. The Veterans Administration (VA) has been overloaded for
decades--and has a current backlog of more than 300,000 claims.

Of the claims for benefits filed by soldiers returned from Afghanistan or
Iraq, fewer than two-thirds have been processed--leaving more than 9,750
recent veterans waiting for help, according to the Washington Post. And a
September 20 Government Accountability Office report concluded that the VA
isn’t able to determine if it can handle a rush of post-traumatic stress
disorder cases.

Meanwhile, soldiers who are injured in Iraq and sent home are in for a
rude awakening--a 50 percent pay cut. When Marine Lance Cpl. James Crosby
left Iraq, he was unconscious, his legs paralyzed, his guts pierced by
shrapnel.

According to the Boston Globe, that's when the military cut his pay.
“Before you leave the combat zone, they swipe your ID card through a
computer, and you go back to your base pay,” said Crosby. “You need that
pay more than ever, to move your life around.” In a wheelchair and
attached to a colostomy bag, Crosby told the Globe: “I still have to fight
the consequences of what happened. I struggle every day.''

That struggle is leading more troops and their families to question the
war. "The army is not going to like what I have to say, but I think we
have no business being there," Larry Daniels’ wife, Cheryl, told Newsday.

She says that she voted for Bush in 2000, but has changed her mind this
year. "I will definitely vote for Kerry, not because I prefer Kerry over
Bush, but because I don't want Bush back in office,” she says. “I'm hoping
that if Kerry takes office, we'll be pulling out" of Iraq.

Unfortunately, as Kerry has made all too clear, he won’t answer the hopes
of people like Cheryl. During the first presidential debate, when asked if
U.S. soldiers were “dying for a mistake,” Kerry answered “No, and they
don't have to...I believe that we have to win this. The president and I
have always agreed on that.” That means more U.S. troops killed and maimed
for oil profits.

"I don't want to go to Iraq"

Will more troops be heading to Iraq? No matter who sits in the White House
in January, the answer to that question is a definite yes--since both Bush
and Kerry have made it clear that they believe the U.S. has too much at
stake to withdraw.

That’s why the Pentagon recently announced plans to deploy an additional
15,000 troops to Iraq in the first four months of 2005. But with the
occupation spiraling out of control, and thousands of troops killed or
injured, the military is facing a crisis--both in the number of troops on
the ground in Iraq, and in levels of recruitment and retention.

Last month, the Pentagon announced that the Army National Guard fell
nearly 10 percent short of its 2004 recruiting goal of 56,000
enlistees--the first time it has fallen short since 1994. This despite the
fact that the Army even eased some of its standards for people to qualify.

Meanwhile, the average mobilization for members of the Reserves throughout
the military has more than doubled--to 342 days this year, from 156 days
during the 1991 Gulf War. The Pentagon has issued a controversial
stop-loss order, preventing soldiers whose tours of duty were up or who
were scheduled to retire from leaving the military.

And the brass have called up more than 4,400 Individual Ready Reservists,
former soldiers honorably discharged after finishing their active-duty
tours, but who remained technically eligible for call-up. As of September
28, 1,765 Individual Ready Reservists had been scheduled to report for
duty. But, according to the Army, some 622--about 30 percent--failed to
show up.

Of course, when orders don’t work, the Army figures that threats will do
the trick. According to the Rocky Mountain News, soldiers from a Fort
Carson combat unit were recently issued an ultimatum--re-enlist for three
more years, or be transferred to other units expected to deploy to Iraq.

“They said if you refuse to re-enlist with the 3rd Brigade, we'll send you
down to the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which is going to Iraq for a
year, and you can stay with them, or we'll send you to Korea, or to Fort
Riley [in Kansas], where they're going to Iraq," said one of the soldiers,
a sergeant. "I don't want to go back to Iraq. I went through a lot of
things for the Army that weren't necessary and were risky. Iraq has
changed a lot of people.''

Nicole Colson writes for Socialist Worker. This article first appeared on
the SW website (http://socialistworker.org/).

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