Newsweek - National News, World News, Health, Technology, Entertainment and more... | Newsweek.com
Full Post
Posted Thursday, December 27, 2007 12:56 PM

Meet the New Generation of War Veterans

David Botti

From Newsweek's Dec. 31, 2007-Jan. 7, 2008 issue:

 

I grew up in an era when war veterans were the aging men at Memorial Day parades wearing triangular hats. It never crossed my mind that a vet might someday be a kid like me. If it had never crossed yours, either, this year probably changed all that. At my graduate school in New York, I can count at least five classmates who know an Iraq War veteran firsthand—and that's just one class, in one school. More than 1 million veterans have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan, lifting our collective profile by the sheer weight of our numbers.

Advertisement

During the past year, veterans' issues were all over the media—and often the news was grim. In February the Walter Reed hospital scandal broke, with revelations about decrepit housing and substandard care. Next came a series of reports on Iraq War data: we learned that the Army suicide rate had reached a 26-year high in 2006; that there'd been 4,698 desertions during the 2007 fiscal year, an 80 percent increase since 2003; that the number of Iraq vets diagnosed with mental-health issues triples during their first six months at home. I followed these stories with a strange sense of relief. For too long, people seemed to think veterans came home and simply melted back into society. Now vet issues were finally getting attention—even if it took bad news to make it happen.

When I started my blog this year, I wondered if there would be enough news about veterans to get me through one day. I couldn't have been more wrong. There we were in the rhetoric of politicians, in countless newspaper features, even on reality TV. For the blog, I've made an effort to examine not only the challenges that my fellow veterans face but also their accomplishments. As one Wall Street Journal columnist wrote, "The media struggles in good faith to respect our troops, but too often it merely pities them."

Stories like the Walter Reed scandal can invite this kind of pity and overshadow the fact that most of us are immensely proud of our service. A single tour in Iraq or Afghanistan can define a person's entire life; collectively, our experiences will echo for decades. If 2007 was the year when veterans' issues entered the public's consciousness, we need to make sure they don't go away in 2008.

You must be a registered user to comment.  Click here to register.  Already a user?  Click here to login.

Member Comments

Posted By: tonyn (December 31, 2007 at 1:52 AM)

Christmas day this year was spent at the VA hospital in Palo Alto, Ca visiting my daughter (who lives in the Fisher House on site) and my son-in-law, Sam, who is recovering from TBI, compliments of an IED explosion from July 2007 in Iraq.  Sam said his first word in five months last week---sort of: "uh-huh", after my daughter asked him a question. She and the therapist were floored when they heard him respond verbally.  I also saw him smile for the first time in five months.  He can't walk and can only use his right hand to communicate in simple sign language (one finger for yes and two fingers for no).  Sam is 23.

Dan (name changed for privacy), who doesn't look a day over 18, is in the Air Force is also a victim of an IED attack in Iraq---he was stooped in a wheel chair in the therapy room when we arrived on the 26th for Sam's therapy session.  The therapist was asking Dan if he knew where he was and why he was there.  He spoke in monotones and stared off into space as the therapist spoke to him---he did answer the questions correctly.  My daughter said he has incredible anger issues and is prone to throwing his *** at the nurses on his bad days.

Mario (again a pseudonym) is 21 and in the Army---also recovering from TBI after receiving a bullet in the head in Iraq.  Mario has a wife and two young children staying at the Fisher House on site at the VA hospital. The therapist moves a curtain around his therapy area as he is wheeled in for his session.  I’m wondering why they are using a curtain, but soon understand why, as Mario lets out blood curdling screams as the physical therapist works on him.  After a while, I hear giggling and laughter from behind the curtain as Mario says his second word after being wounded, “amore”.  Last week, my daughter said Mario spoke his first word which was “agua”.  Little miracles do occur among the despair and anguish.

Our new generation of war veterans:  so young---so damaged.  They will spend the rest of their lives trying to recover from their wounds. Will they get forgotten like so many Vietnam era veterans?  Welcome to an hour at the polytrauma center at the VA hospital in Palo Alto.

Tony

http://www.prayingforsam.com


 
The Peek
 
 
PROJECT GREEN

For decades, tiny Barrow, Alaska, has been largely unknown and unnoticed. But with increasing global activity in the Arctic--especially from oil speculators--things are changing … fast.

Sponsored by
 
 
 
 
Sponsored by
 
 
 
loadingLoading Menu