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Dear Soldiers: Your Government Lied to You
By Aaron Glantz
26/01/08 "Antiwar"
-- - When young American men and women sign up to serve in
US military, our government makes a basic promise to them: that
if they are wounded in the line of duty they will get the care
they need. Unfortunately, for tens of thousands of veterans of
Iraq and Afghanistan, that's a promise that only exists on
paper.
On Feb. 18, 2007, the headline
"Soldiers Face Neglect, Frustration at Army's Top Medical
Facility" splashed across the front page of one of the nation's
premier newspapers, the Washington Post. The article,
which described unsafe conditions and substandard care at Walter
Reed Army Medical Center, began with the story of Army
Specialist Jeremy Duncan, who was airlifted out of Iraq in
February 2006 with a broken neck and a shredded left ear,
"nearly dead from blood loss."
"Behind the door of Army Spec.
Jeremy Duncan's room, part of the wall is torn and hangs in the
air, weighted down with black mold," the article read. "When the
wounded combat engineer stands in his shower and looks up, he
can see the bathtub on the floor above through a rotted hole.
The entire building, constructed between the world wars, often
smells like greasy carry-out. Signs of neglect are everywhere:
mouse droppings, belly-up cockroaches, stained carpets, cheap
mattresses."
The Washington Post's
coverage of the Scandal at Walter Reed sparked outrage and
finger-pointing across official Washington, but the controversy
did not solve the problem of substandard care. Eight months
later, in September,
Sergeant GJ Cassidy died while receiving treatment for blast
injuries at Fort Knox. A GAO report released at the time of his
death showed half of the military's Warrior Transition Units had
"significant shortfalls" of doctors, nurses and other caregivers
who to treat wounded soldiers.
It's not known how many other
soldiers have died the way GJ Cassidy did – alone while
allegedly seeking medical care from their government. But what
we do know that increasingly veterans of the Iraq war are taking
their own lives, when the Pentagon and the VA fail to provide
adequate medical care.
A CBS news investigation in
November found that 120 veterans kill themselves every week; or
over 6,000 per year. CBS asked all 50 states for their suicide
data, based on death records for veterans and non-veterans, and
found that veterans were twice as likely to commit suicide,
Among those taking their own lives was
Sergeant Brian Jason Rand, who served two tours in Iraq. On
February 20, 2007, the Clarksville, Tennessee police department
found his body lying facedown under an entertainment pavilion on
the banks of the Cumberland River, with a shotgun beside it.
Then there are those who become
homeless because of government inaction. On any given night
200,000 veterans sleep homeless on the street. Increasingly
those veterans are younger folks who served in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
People like
Specialist James Eggemeyer, who ended up homeless just a few
months after returning home from Iraq with a severe case of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder brought on by loading the bodies of
dead Iraqis into a Blackhawk helicopter. The VA took so long to
process Eggemeyer's disability claim that he had to live out of
his truck while he waited. The average wait time for a veteran's
disability claim to be decided is now 183 days. More than
600,000 disabled vets are waiting.
Tens of thousands more veterans
are being totally denied medical care and disability benefits
they were promised after serving abroad.
The numbers are staggering:
11,407 U.S. soldiers have been discharged for drug abuse after
serving in Iraq or Afghanistan; 6,159 have been kicked out for
"discreditable incidents"; 6,436 have been discharged for
"commission of a serious offense"; 2,246 have been discharged
for "the good of the service"; and 3,365 have been discharged
for "personality disorder," according to Pentagon data I
obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Among
those dishonorably discharged after honorably serving in Iraq is
Specialist Shaun Manuel who returned from a tour in Iraq to
find his newborn son dead of a rare genetic disease called
Muscular Spinal Atrophy. Manuel said the situation was made even
more painful when his superiors ordered him to begin training
for a second tour in Iraq.
"My son passed away," he told
me. "You gonna' send an emotionally distressed soldier to Iraq –
who knows what he's going to do? I'm ready to just blow the
whole world up because I didn't see my son being born and then
he just passed away on me with no warning."
Manuel never filed paperwork to
medically excuse him from the deployment. Instead, he withdrew
and buried himself in alcohol. He estimates he drank three
fifths of liquor a day. At one point, his wife had to call the
police during a domestic disturbance. So the military expelled
him with dishonorable discharge and now bars him from getting
health care and disability benefits.
Even those who haven't seen
combat can be in for a fight.
Private Durrell Michael threw out his back loading
generators on a US military base in South Korea. He could barely
walk or stand upright, but the Army tried to deploy him to Iraq
anyway. When he fought back, they gave him a dishonorable
discharge. Now, he's in another fight: with the VA for medical
care.
Independent journalist Aaron Glantz has visited Iraq three times
during the U.S. occupation and has also reported from more than
a dozen countries across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. He
is the author of
How America Lost Iraq. More information is
available at his Web site.
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