Archives » Friday, January 25, 2008
David Botti
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Jan 25, 2008 11:01 AM
When movie-goers in the United Kingdom sit down to watch the Iraq war movie "In the Valley of Elah ," they'll first be greeted by a new advertisement by the organization Combat Stress: Ex-Services Mental Welfare Society . As the Guardian reports ,
Combat Stress was founded in 1919 to help WWI veterans recover mentally
from shell-shock. Today, after growing concern over the lack of
treatment available to today's veterans, Combat Stress is ramping up a
public relations campaign to highlight the issue:
Combat Stress is alarmed at the huge increase in veterans from the Falklands, Sierra Leone, Northern Ireland, Iraq
and Afghanistan, who come knocking on their door for help. A few are
still turning up suffering long-term effects from the second world war
and Korea. The oldest applicant for help recently was aged 100.
What's their reasoning for this alarm? Eight years ago 300
veterans sought help from Combat Stress; during the last fiscal year
the number jumped to 1,000. The number of Falklands War vets who've
committed suicide has risen to 300—more than the 256 British soldiers
who were killed in the war itself. Of particular note is how many view
the Iraq war's unpopularity in the UK as exacerbating vets' mental
health issues. From the Guardian:
The problems of veterans today are compounded by the widespread
recognition through much of the army that the Iraq campaign is
unpopular, nasty, unpredictable and brutal—and, in the views of a
significant minority of soldiers and officers in private conversation,
a pretty unnecessary conflict at that. In the first and second world wars, the plight of service personnel
was shared by almost everyone in the land. More than 1 million soldiers
served in Northern Ireland over 30 or so years, so that became part of
the national experience.
But combat in Iraq and Afghanistan is not a national experience, and
the services are worried that they appear in the minds of many now to
be detached from most of British national life. Though more American
soldiers have been involved—more than 3,000 killed and nearly 50,000
injured, physically or mentally—Iraq is not a shared experience
nationally for Americans in the way that Vietnam was.
Combat Stress' advertisement doesn't hold back any punches, as it
tries to impart what's going on behind the closed doors of veterans'
homes:
A well-trained fighting machine reduced to nothing more
than an empty shell. Combat stress is their calvary, the infantry to
fight off their demons. They were protecting you, now they need your
help.
You can view the advertisement here:
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