Veterans For Peace President,
Mike Ferner, Responds To President Obama’s Rebranded
Occupation Of Iraq
Written by Mike Ferner Wednesday, 01 September 2010
Source:
http://www.vfp-northcountry.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=87:the-national-vfp-office-responds-to-president-obamas-speech&catid=5:2010-news-info-item&Itemid=6
by Mike Ferner
A veteran’s perspective makes it clear that two
major points must be made in response to President
Obama’s announcement regarding combat troops leaving
Iraq.
First, there is no such thing as “non combat
troops.” It is a contradiction in terms. It is
internally inconsistent. It is illogical. It is
simply not true.
Ask any of the millions of men and women who went
through basic training and they can tell you that
every U.S. troop anywhere in the world was
indoctrinated and trained in the basics of combat.
While in Iraq, the transition from mechanics or
communications back to combat-ready soldier takes
but an order. “Non-combat troops” is simply the
latest in a long line of military euphemisms meant
to obscure painful reality.
The second point can best be made by drafting a
section of the President’s remarks for him. If
Veterans For Peace were to do that it would read
something like this.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
“And now, fellow Americans, let us begin a new era
of candor and honesty about the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Specifically, I’m referring to the true
costs of war – something that must be considered if
we are to judge if continued war is worth it.
You have seen that the cost to taxpayers of these
wars has exceeded one trillion dollars, nearly all
of which has been considered ‘off budget,’
appropriated by extraordinary or ‘supplemental’
spending bills. It may be hard to believe, but large
though that figure may be, it is only the smaller
portion of what we will spend in total.
We are already investing unprecedented amounts in
Veterans Administration staff and facilities to try
and cope with the millions of men and women who have
cycled through a war zone deployment – and of course
many have been through multiple deployments.
Our experience thus far tells us to expect literally
hundreds of thousands of cases of PTSD and Traumatic
Brain Injuries – injuries that are often difficult
to diagnose at first and difficult to treat. These
are, of course, in addition to the many thousands of
visibly wounded who, at great expense, must go
through rehabilitation and a lifetime of support in
order to function to their fullest. Thousands more
will require years, perhaps decades, of long-term
care because their injuries have left them so broken
they require round-the-clock attention.
But since we are initiating an era of candor, we go
farther – and by that I mean the cost to families,
communities and society as a whole. Volumes have
literally been written on this point, but let me
leave you with a brief example you can easily expand
for yourself.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
We have already heard of the abnormally high rate of
suicides among returning veterans. The real number
is undoubtedly higher since some will always remain
a mystery. We’ve heard also of a growing tide of
domestic violence that leaves families broken and
terrorized.
Beyond the draining medical, psychological and
emotional costs to the individuals directly
involved, imagine the cost to the communities where
this occurs: whole battalions of police, fire, EMT,
courts, probation officers, social workers and
sadly, prison guards will be needed to deal with the
true costs of war. It is uncomfortable to admit, but
this is indeed one area of the economy I can
guarantee will grow significantly.
Then there is an exponentially greater cost borne by
the people of Iraq and Afghanistan – greater in
every way: emotionally, economically, in human
suffering, in destroyed opportunities, in shattered
lives and minds, in hearts that will remain forever
broken. We can do precious little to repair much of
that kind of damage. But I can tell you this, my
fellow Americans, we must at least pay the bill to
rebuild the roads, water and sewer plants,
hospitals, schools and residences we have destroyed.
It is not pleasant to describe such things and
indeed, these costs will continue to weigh heavily
on our nation well into our grandchildren’s
generation. But we cannot pretend otherwise.”
This is the message that should come from the White
House tonight if truth were indeed the coin of the
realm. We won’t hear it, but that will make it no
less true.
Ferner is also author of “Inside the Red Zone: A
Veteran For Peace Reports from Iraq,” (Praeger/Greenwood,
2006) |