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The Forever War of the Mind

41phwf2b7usl__sl500_aa240__150Apparently Max Cleland, author of “Heart of a Patriot: How I Found the Courage to Survive Vietnam, Walter Reed and Karl Rove," does not get—unlike neocons, the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and Dr. Sally Satel—that veterans just need to avoid their ‘culture of trauma.’ Check out his piece in the New York Times.

“Every day I was in Vietnam, I thought about home. And, every day I’ve been home, I’ve thought about Vietnam.” So said one of the millions of soldiers who fought there as I did. Change the name of the battlefield and it could have been said by one of the American servicemen coming home from Iraq or Afghanistan today. Wars are not over when the shooting stops. They live on in the lives of those who fight them. That is the curse of the soldier. He never forgets.

     The Forever War of the Mind

While the authorities say they cannot yet tell us why an Army psychiatrist would go on a shooting rampage at Fort Hood in Texas, we do know the sorts of stories he had been dealing with as he tried to help those returning from Iraq and Afghanistan readjust to life outside the war zone. A soldier’s mind can be just as dangerous to himself, and to those around him, as wars fought on traditional battlefields.

War is haunting. Death. Pain. Blood. Dismemberment. A buddy dying in your arms. Imagine trying to get over the memory of a bomb splitting a Humvee apart beneath your feet and taking your leg with it. The first time I saw the stilled bodies of American soldiers dead on the battlefield is as stark and brutal a memory as the one of the grenade that ripped off my right arm and both legs.

No, the soldier never forgets. But neither should the rest of us.

Veterans returning today represent the first real influx of combat-wounded soldiers in a generation. They are returning to a nation unprepared for what war does to the soul. Those new veterans will need all of our help. After America’s wars, the used-up fighters are too often left to fend for themselves. Many of the hoboes in the Depression were veterans of World War I. When they came home, they were labeled shell-shocked and discharged from the Army too broken to make it during the economic cataclysm.

So it is again, with too many stories about veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan ending up unemployed and homeless. Figures from the Department of Veterans Affairs show that 131,000 of the nation’s 24 million veterans are homeless each night, and about twice that many will spend part of this year homeless.

We know of the recent failures at Walter Reed Medical Center, where soldiers were stranded in substandard barracks infested with rats while awaiting treatment. I was in Walter Reed myself at that time seeking counseling for post-traumatic stress disorder, which, ignited by a barrage of Iraq headlines and the loss of my United States Senate seat, had simply consumed me.

I never saw it coming. Forty years after I had left the battlefield, my memories of death and wounding were suddenly as fresh and present as they had been in 1968. I thought I was past that. I learned that none of us are ever past it. Were it not for the surgeons and nurses at Walter Reed, I never would have survived those first months back from Vietnam. Were it not for the counselors there today, I do not think I would have survived what I’ve come to call my second Vietnam, the one that played out entirely in my mind.

When I was wounded, post-traumatic stress disorder did not officially exist. It was recognized as a legitimate illness only in 1978, during my tenure as head of the Veterans Administration under President Jimmy Carter. Today, it is not only recognized, but the Army and the V.A. know how to treat it. I can offer no better testament than my own recovery.

Weeks before the troubles at Walter Reed became public in 2007, my counselor put it to me simply. “We are drowning in war,” she said. The problems at Walter Reed had nothing to do with the dedicated doctors and nurses there. The problems had to do with the White House and Congress and the Department of Defense. The problems had to do with money.

When we are at war, America spends billions on missiles, tanks, attack helicopters and such. But the wounded warriors who will never fight again tend to be put on the back burner.

This is inexcusable, and it comes with frightening moral costs. There are estimates that 35 percent of the soldiers who fought in Iraq will suffer post-traumatic stress disorder. I’m sure the numbers for Afghanistan are similar. Researchers have found that nearly half of those returning with the disorder have suicidal thoughts. Suicide among active-duty soldiers is on pace to hit a record total this year. More than 1.7 million soldiers have served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Imagine that some 600,000 of them will have crippling memories, trapped in a vivid and horrible past from which they can’t seem to escape.

We have a family Army today, unlike the Army seen in any generation before. We have fought these wars with the Reserves and the National Guard. Fathers, mothers, soccer coaches and teachers are the soldiers coming home. Whether they like it or not, they will bring their war experiences home to their families and communities.

In his poem “The Dead Young Soldiers,” Archibald MacLeish, whose younger brother died in World War I, has the soldiers in the poem tell us:“We leave you our deaths. Give them their meaning.” Until we help our returning soldiers get their lives back when they come home, the promise of restoring that meaning will go unfulfilled.

Max Cleland, the secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission, was a Democratic senator from Georgia from 1997 to 2003. He is the author, with Ben Raines, of “Heart of a Patriot: How I Found the Courage to Survive Vietnam, Walter Reed and Karl Rove.”


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Posted by on Nov 7 2009, With 0 Reads, Filed under Coping. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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5 Comments for “The Forever War of the Mind”

  1. Jim Starowicz 'Nam '70-'71

    Related: Veterans and supporters ask Coburn to drop hold on bill http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=16&articleid=20091107_16_A1_WASHIN225160

    “I would say that we cannot now turn our backs on the obligation to care for those who fought,” Akaka said.

    “When we, as a body, vote to send American troops to war, we are promising to take care of them when they return. I firmly believe the cost of veterans’ benefits and services is a true cost of war and must be treated as such.”

    What (r)’s are good at Obstruction, especially as to Veterans, especially this past Decade plus and while Rubber Stamping two occupations and all wanted by the military industrial complex for their war profiteering, Blood Wealth!!

    • i totally agree with you god bless ua and us veterans because noone else does

    • Joe 'Ragman' Tarnovsky Vietnam Combat Veteran 68-69-70

      Well said, Jim, and Welcome Home, Brother. The only issue I have is that I respectfully request and ask that you stop calling what we receive as “benefits” and replace that word with “ENTITLEMENTS.” My reason for this respectful suggestion is the word “benefits” to many of those that NEVER served day one for this country, conjuures up the image of WELFARE and people getting something for nothing. Our “ENTITLEMENTS” are what we have earned and our entitled to for our loyal and faithful service and are an extension of the low pay we receive for putting our lives on the line. Even though the troops today get paid much more than we did during Vietnam, their pay is still a pittiance for the risks and sacrifices that they must take to protect us and our country. I also like the word obligation that you used in referring to what this country owes veterans and again, Jim, well written and stated! Welcome HOME!

  2. i thin k its disgusting that the veterans have to wait so long for their benefits. when we were sent to vietnam to fight for a war that was needlessy we went didnt we. then when we come back home the disregard us like garbage. the va and washington are waiting for us to die off first thats the problem im not the only one saying this hundreds of veterans i know feel the same way i do./ so pleas tell the president and the man in charge of the va that time is against us
    they should be ashamed of themselves.
    thank u
    jerry

  3. MY war is a forever war and I fight it each night and every day that I live and remember that I was despised for my service. I will not live too much longer as the AGENT is taking me away but I was killed in 1965, and only learned it a few years later. I cannot forget, and my VA Psychiatrest will have night mares for the rest of his life if he ever listens to any of his patients and stops telling us “You can’t personalize the fact that the VC were shooting at you”. It was very personal to me weither or not it was personal to them, or to him.

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