Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Memorial Day, 2008

Memorial Day is about honoring those who have sacrificed themselves for the nation, in our armed forces. We cannot honor them properly unless we know the full extent of their sacrifice.



We have to count the victims of Post Traumatic Distress Syndrome, what we used to call being shell-shocked, as victims of the war. The number of those victims has been covered up.

Investigative reporters at CBS News found that in 2005, 6,250 veterans took their lives, nearly 18 a day. Emanuel Margolis writes,


' Dr. Ira Katz, chief of mental health services for the Department of Veterans Affairs, sent an e-mail to a VA colleague this past February that read:

"Shh! Our suicide prevention coordinators are identifying about 1,000 suicide attempts per month among the veterans we see in our medical facilities. Is this something we should (carefully) address ourselves in some sort of release before somebody stumbles on it?"'


Margolis charges that Katz covered up this startling statistic, showing 12,000 attempted suicides a year while in VA care, when he testified before Congress.

Have 30,000 veterans died of suicide in the past 5 years? Have 60,000 tried to? Shouldn't these deeply depressed men and women be added to the casualty tolls? Is war a plague on the mind of those who fight it?

Margolis writes,

' • 120 veterans commit suicide every week.

• 1,000 veterans attempt suicide while in VA care every month.

• Nearly one in five service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan (approximately 300,000) have post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms or major depression.

• 19 percent of post-Iraq and Afghanistan veterans have been diagnosed with possible traumatic brain injury, according to a Rand Corp. Study in April.

• A higher percentage of these veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder than from any previous war because of "stop loss" or an involuntary extension of service in the military (58,300), multiple tours, greater prevalence of brain injuries, etc. '


19 percent of returning vets from Iraq and Afghanistan would also be nearly 300,000 persons, suffering from traumatic brain injury.

Wounded vets often face quality of life issues for the long term.



Others face profound moral dilemmas growing out of a conviction that they have been ordered to commit atrocities. The warping of the moral being may not be an inevitability of war but it is a severe risk.

Active duty soldiers in a war zone have a fear of becoming mere statistics, a fear I've had expressed to me in correspondence from Iraq. The LA Times profiles those soldiers from California who have given their lives to this war. The LAT says,

' Kelsey Johnson remembered that her husband, Marine Cpl. Stephen P. Johnson, 24, told her that he had "a really bad feeling" about an upcoming mission. Johnson, of Yreka, was among 31 troops killed when their helicopter crashed in the Iraqi desert.

"I dropped down on the ground and started screaming," she said. She was 19 when her husband was killed. . .

Army Spc. Daniel F. Reyes told his mother that if he died, he wanted to be buried next to his brother, Roberto Esparza, who was 21 when he was killed in a bike accident in San Diego.

Reyes was survived by his wife, Rebekah, 23, and year-old son, Daniel Fernando. "He was always thinking of us," she said. "He called me every morning in Iraq."

Like many of those killed, the severity of Reyes' wounds from an explosion precluded an open-casket service. Mortuary affairs personnel in the war zones have developed a word for such cases: unviewable.'


But in a way, all of the casualties from the Iraq War are "unviewable."

We aren't told the scale of the sacrifice by our corporate media or Washington officials. Michael Munk has done a fine job of focusing in like a laser on the real numbers of casualties for the Iraq War. Here is the last dispatch I have from him, dated May 6, 2008:

'US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 108 combat casualties in the week ending May 6, as the official casualty total reached at least 65,500. The total includes 33,325 dead and wounded by what the Pentagon classifies as "hostile" causes and 32,175 (since over a month ago on March 1) dead and injured from "non-hostile" causes.*

The actual total is over 85,000 because the Pentagon chooses not to count as "Iraq casualties" the approximately 20,000 casualties discovered only after they returned from Iraq -mainly brain trauma from explosions.**

In addition, a rare report showed that 1,123 "US civilian contractors" has been killed since the invasion, including a record 353 in 2007. No numbers are available on the wounded and injured, nor about casualties among the "contractors" who are not US citizens. (Houston Post, Feb. 9, 2008.)

US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb by routinely reporting only the total killed (4,073 as of May 6) and rarely mentioning the 30,004 wounded in combat. To further minimize public perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 31,325 (as of March 1)*** military victims of accidents and illness serious enough to require medical air evacuation, although the 4,058 reported deaths include 752 (no change last week ) who died from those same causes, including 145 suicide as of March 1.

* The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the Pentagon at this site (pdf.). The dead are reported by Iraq Coalition Casualties .

** see USA Today, Nov. 23, 2007

*** the number of "non combat" injured is reported by Iraq Coalition Casualties.

Visit my website '


I think all of us Americans fall down crying this time every year. We want it to be over with.

Labels:

20 Comments:

At 8:28 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I think all of us Americans fall down crying this time every year. We want it to be over with.


Oh please! If most Americans really wanted it to be over with, they would be out in the streets protesting.

 
At 8:40 AM, Blogger Rich Gardner said...

We've done our own part to see to it that Americans remember at our Sea of Tombstones here in Philly.

 
At 10:12 AM, Blogger thealewife said...

Juan,

I do not believe for a minute that because 120 veterans commit suicide every month that we should hand one third of the world's oil to our enemies.

 
At 11:47 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dr. Cole, thank you for raising this important element of the ongoing conflict. An additional and important issue that never receives attention is how the numbers are classified or defined. As i understand it, once again under the Bush Admin's perpetual orwellian challenges to the English language, they changed how a casualty was classified.

First combat deaths were redefined to mean only those who die outright on the battle field and do not receive any medical attention. If, however, they receive any medical attention, then they are classified as wounded, regardless of whether they die or not. This subtle, irrelevant difference, allows for the military and administration to bury the real casualty count because nobody pays attention to wounded numbers, only the deaths.

I come from a Canadian military family (my brother, father and myself have all served) and i have experienced the direct effects PTSD on the family; put mildly it destroys families more insidiously than a phyisical injury, because it lingers and hides in the psyche of all members of the family and destroys the essential trust between the injured and their essential support systems.

 
At 12:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you, Juan. Very well written.

-a combat Veteran

 
At 1:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Our progressive talk-radio station here in Portland (KPOJ-AM, radio home base of Thom Hartmann) has been running a PSA about honoring the soldiers this Memorial weekend. It ends with a man thanking those who sacrificed their lives for the sake our "benefits and lifestyle."

Benefits and lifestyle!

I was dumbfounded. This is what we are about? What the sacrifice of life itself is for? I wonder if we have lost our moral compass, and whether we are still in touch with the principles and passions for liberty and the honoring of human life and purpose that our country was founded upon.

 
At 1:43 PM, Blogger karlof1 said...

thealewife does not want her profie to be publicly viewed, so I cannot go to her blog to confront her ugly and absolutely uninformed comment. Iraq's oil belongs to the Iraqis; it is not "ours." Nor does Iraq have 1/3 of the planets reserves; best estimates put Iraq's reserves at 6-10% of global recoverable reserves.

Regarding Juan's sentiments, I count myself very lucky that my time served in the Army didn't result in my needing VA care. The VA cover-up of vet suicides is almost as disgusting as the whole criminal enterprise itself. I would remind alewife that her words support war crimes and war criminals far more distructive than anything "our enemies" have perpetrated.

For something uplifting during this Memorial Day weekend, I suggest reading the transcript of a speech given by David Korten, author of The Great Turning, who provides a cause for our dilemma and steps to follow to arrive at a solution.

 
At 2:21 PM, Blogger clif said...

Thank you Juan from a Desert Storm vet.

I couldn't agree more.

To "thaalewife" how do you justify stealing something under someone else's country. The oil under Iraq belongs to the Iraqis, not you or me. If anyone "handed" it to the Iraqis blame God, he put it there remember?

The deaths of US troops both in country and as a result of physically coming home but unable to leave what you saw and experienced there is not something to be disregarded like you did. They wore the uniform and served honorably, just were broken far beyond what they could cope with. I hope that you remember the veterans who gave their lives in country better then you remember the invisible wounded who made it home so shattered they gave up all hope.

 
At 3:12 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Prof. Cole,

I'd like to suggest a slight revision of that opening sentence. The slain GIs didn't "sacrifice themselves for the nation". They were sacrificed - the War Against Terror GIs at any rate - on the altar of something rather less exalted. Haliburton profits, Cheney's stock options, etc. etc. etc. What they were a part of hasn't been "for the nation", hasn't benefited the nation in any way, shape or form. It's harmed the nation. Hugely.

In that tried and true old phrase, they were cannon fodder.

 
At 4:13 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

.
Please join me in prayer:

"Dear God, please help us find our way."

.........

and to Mr. Duncan Kinder,

I can sympathize with the sentiment you express,
but I do not believe that mass public protests can occur in our over-connected society.
I think that day has passed.

However,
the Government will respond to lawsuits.
I encourage you to find a way to help the Third Branch to engage on the issue.

..........

and to Karlof1 and clif,
who were repulsed by the comments from the Ale Wife,

perhaps she believes what our President has told her,
and us,
that the ordinary citizens of Iraq are our enemy,
and we cannot let that enemy control the oil that we need.

If you don't recall Bush explicitly declaring the men, women and children of Iraq as the enemies of the USA,
you have to at least admit that those are who we are fighting in Iraq,
not "al-Qaeda" or "criminal elements."


the Avid Student
.

 
At 4:29 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This veteran thanks you for your memorial Day blog.

Politics aside, a very tiny portion of the American citizenry is bearing the incredible burden (willingly) of our foreign policy.

I, too, came home from Iraq not feeling "right." I had served 15 months as a n enlisted combat MP and prison guard. It took me 18 months to feel "normal" again.

Now I'm an Army officer and every day I see Soldiers who remind of how I was when I came home. It's heartbreaking. We owe these Soldiers for their service. We owe them the very best mental health treatment and counseling. Whatever it takes.

God bless, Richard

 
At 5:01 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Important article just out by Lawrence Wright on mastermind of Al Quaeda:
http://www.mauinews.com/page/content.detail/id/504036.html?nav=10

 
At 11:00 PM, Blogger Dancewater said...

Michael Munk has missed a huge number of casualties – the vast majority of them – like all the Iraqi ones.

And the military in this Iraq war did not sacrifice for their country – they are being used as extortion rackets for multi-national corporations.

As to “thealewife” – well, he or she is without morals and without compassion. Just unbelievable, really.

Also, I am out in the streets protesting most every week. Going to Furman University next Saturday to protest bush directly. He's supposed to make the graduation speech.... those poor kids.

 
At 4:21 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"I, too, came home from Iraq not feeling "right." I had served 15 months as a n enlisted combat MP and prison guard. It took me 18 months to feel "normal" again."

I wonder, what about the Iraqi victims of such
enlisted combat MP and prison guard? How many month it will take them, if they are still alive after encouter with him?

I guess it is OK for him to torture and murder and then "feel normal".

 
At 1:10 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lidia:

You call me a murderer and torturer... and you don't even know me.

What a dark view of human nature you must have. I feel very sorry for you.

At Abu Ghraib, I created a "safe cell" for weaker and younger prisoners to protect them from sexual preditors. And I informed my chain of command and the JAG lawyers who were at Abu Ghraib about the prisoners' conditions at the prison, which were subpar.

And I treated my prisoners with the utmost humanity every day. I empathized with the agony they felt in being away from their families.

Question:

How could you call me a torturer and murderer if you don't know me?

Is that how you imagine all soldiers? All American soldiers?

Do you think I am a liar? Do you think that you would be a torturer and murderer if you in my position?

I'm curious how you mind works...

 
At 10:25 PM, Blogger thealewife said...

dancewater,

I am just trying to make the point that even if that crazy number of veteran suicides was correct it has nothing to do with winning the war. Like President Carter, I believe that a threat to our energy supply is the same as an attack on America soil.

These issues are distractions. Suicide is serious and veterans need our care and concern, of course. I was trying to remind everyone that the challenge in front of us is winning the war.

 
At 2:05 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thealwife,

So you're saying that this is our energy? It's not, it's Iraq's energy, ir's Iraq's oil. Whatever happened to buying it on the free market like most normal countries? So now we just steal it? The U.S. embarked on an aggressive war, destroyed a country, stole it's oil, nade the region more unstable and unsafe. Bush, Cheney and everyone responsible for making the decision to go to war should be tried as war criminals just as the Naxis were at Nurenberg.

Austin< TX

 
At 3:13 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lidia

One of the things that got me started about Abu Gahrib was the documented torturing to death of detainees. I'm not talking demeaning or uncomfort here, I'm talking about the torturing to death of inmates. There has been many. To look over one case google Hamad Al Jamidi, he was one of two documented detainees tortured to death on Nov 4, 2003 at Abu Gahrib. Iraq was invaded to allow International Oil companies to steal Iraq's oil. The Oil deal give 88% of the Iraqi Oil to Non-Iraqis. The only cost was about 1 million dead, a country destroyed, and a future generation enslaved. Yes they could have bought the oil, but that cost is much higher than stealing it, you see none of the profiteers died or was exposed to the dangers of war.

 
At 1:44 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Please include the Coast Guard in the P.T.S.D. crowd.We see a lot up close.We really try to save everyone that need help at sea.We are and have been one of the front lines on the war on drugs(did not say it worked)but along with search and rescue ,we are still a military branch of a civilian agency.(D.O.T.or now Home Land Security.)Thank you for your space and I'm thankful I live in the USA! Please America dont forget us in the debate or treatment. Semper Parautus.

 
At 5:12 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Cliff Carson, I answered to Abu-Graib prison guard, but my post was censored

So much for liberal blog!

 

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