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July 20, 2008 at 23:18:26

Headlined on 7/20/08:
The Costs of War: The Parents' Agony

by Ann Wright     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 
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Every day for a parent of a person in the United States military is a long day filled with concern for their daughter or son. Parents of nine US Army soldiers were notified of the deaths of their family members in Afghanistan this week.

July 16 and 17, 2008 have been extraordinarily long days for another group of parents.

In Washington, DC, on July 17, 2008, John and Linda Johnson, the parents of US Army Private First Class (PFC) Lavena Johnson met US Army criminal investigators concerning the classification of the death of their daughter who died three years ago on July 19, 2005 in Balad, Iraq. The Army labeled her death as a suicide despite evidence from materials the Army reluctantly provided to the parents that she was beaten, bitten, sexually assaulted, burned and shot. Despite numerous questions from Dr. Johnson about the Army's investigation and determination of suicide, the Army stuck to its guns that Lavena Johnson committed suicide. After the briefing, the Johnsons asked Congressman William Lacy Clay and Congresswoman Diane Watson to request House Oversight and Governmental Reform committee Chairman Henry Waxman to hold hearings that would require production of witnesses who will testify under oath to their knowledge of how Lavena died– an attempt to get information that the Army has so far failed to provide.

On July 16, 2008, at Fort Knox, KY, the Helen and Eric Burmeister, the parents of Private First Class (PFC) James Burmeister, attended the court-martial of their son. After being in three IED explosions in Iraq, upon his unit's return to Germany, James left his unit and flew to Canada. He stayed in Canada for ten months and while there, in hopes of ending the practice, spoke publicly about "bait and kill" zones used by some military units to entice Iraqis into a zone with interesting objects and then shooting them. James voluntarily returned himself to military control at Fort Knox four months ago. In those four months despite shrapnel still in his body and raging PTSD, James was provided with minimal medical and emotional assistance. He was court-martialed on July 16, 2008 for being absent without leave (AWOL) and was convicted. The prosecution brought up the public statements and interviews Burmeister gave on "bait and kill." He was sentenced to six months in jail, a loss of pay, reduction to private and a bad-conduct discharge that will deny him medical assistance for physical and emotional wounds suffered on active duty. He was taken from the court directly to jail.

On July 16, 2008, in Boise, Idaho, the parents of US Army war resister Private First Class (PFC) Robin Long waited for the news that their son had been deported from Canada and placed in the hands of the US military. Ironically, war-resister Long was handed over to US officials at the Peace Arch on the US-Canadian border, just north of Seattle, Washington. Three years ago, in 2005, Long went to Canada after refusing to serve in Iraq, a war he called an "illegal war of aggression." A Canadian federal judge on July 15 ordered that Long be deported after she ruled that he failed to provide clear and convincing evidence that he will suffer irreparable harm if he is returned to the United States. Long was taken by Washington State police to a civilian jail to await the arrival of Army military police who will transport him to the military prison at Fort Lewis, Washington. Eventually, he will be returned to his unit in Colorado for probable court-martial. At least 200 other US military personnel are in Canada. Several have requested refugee status but have been denied and risk deportation.

The costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan continue to mount. The lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans and millions of Iraqis and Afghans have been permanently damaged by these wars. Support the families, but end the war.

Retired US Army Reserve Colonel Ann Wright served 29 in the US Army and Army Reserves. She also was a US diplomat and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. She was on a small team that reopened the US Embassy in Afghanistan in December, 2001. She is the co-author of "Dissent: Voices of Conscience."

 

Colonel (Retired) Ann Wright is a 29 year US Army veteran. She also was a US diplomat for 16 years and served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia. She resigned in March, 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq.

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5 comments


Wolfie

NO FASCISM HERE, NO FASCISM OVER THERE,. ALL'S CLEAR!

So our present "enemy" is our own conditioned lack of progressive awarness, our love of ease, our unwillingness to dispel our social and moral delusions, our headlong rush into the mindless attitude that "everything is okay."

     Even though our society faces a truly alarming situation, people find ways to ignore the peril. One way to do this is to assume that such an episode as the 1930s-1940s Nazi terror is no longer a threat. But we have a number of horrible examples of what happens TODAY to a society when its people fail to develop progressive awareness abilities, the most ghastly perhaps being that of the September 11th terrorist attacks.

     Ever since this indefensible horror, few Americans have had the ability to ask the critical questions:

by Wolfie (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 29 diaries, 1176 comments) on Monday, July 21, 2008 at 12:07:56 AM
 



Wolfie

OBAMA'S YOUTH LEAGUE WILL MAKE MEN OUT OF BOYS

"Comradeship can become the means for the most terrible

dehumanization-

-and it has become just that in the hands of the Nazis. They have drowned

the Germans, who thirst after it, in this alcohol to the point of delirium

tremens. They have made all Germans everywhere into comrades, and

accustomed them to this narcotic from their earliest age: in the Hitler youth,

the SA, the Reichswehr, in thousands of camps and clubs--and in doing this

 they have driven out something irreplaceable that cannot be compensated

for by any amount of happiness.

 

"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comradeship is part of war. Like alcohol, it is one of the great comforters

and helpers for people who have to live under unbearable, inhuman

conditions. It makes the intolerable tolerable. It helps us cope with filth,

calamity, and death. It anesthetizes us. It comforts us from the loss of all

the amenities of

civilization. Indeed, that loss is one of its preconditions. It receives its

justification from bitter necessities and terrible sacrifices. If it is separated

from these, if it is exercised only for pleasure and intoxication, for its own

sake, it becomes a vice. It makes no difference that it brings a certain

happiness. It corrupts and depraves men like no alcohol or opium. It makes

them unfit for normal, responsible, civilian life. Indeed it is, at bottom, an

instrument of decivilization. The general promiscuous comradeship to which

the Nazis have seduced the Germans has debased this nation as nothing

else could."

Sebastian Haffner, Defying Hitler, 2000,

the first-hand account of a German man who was forced

by Wolfie (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 29 diaries, 1176 comments) on Monday, July 21, 2008 at 12:55:16 AM
 


Former Lawyer, current Business Consultant,history buff, Christian, father of 2 sons and a supporter of democratic government.
ArchieFormer Lawyer, current Business Consultant,history buff, Christian, father of 2 sons and a supporter of democratic government.

Agony?

There is no draft so why are parents agonizing over what was a freely made decision of their offspring to join the U.S. military? Did they or their children think it was going to be a walk in the park? The U.S. military is in the business of killing people and sometimes guess what, the people getting killed fight back. I know it's very rude of them to do so but I personally can understand their position. Anyway the U.S. has an answer for those ungrateful wretches that dare fight back. You see if they aren't killed on the streets of their towns and villages (sorry I forgot to mention that the U.S. always goes to other peoples' countries to kill them) then they will be captured and thrown in a torturous hellhole for 5 or 6 years to soften them up before trying them for fighting back. Don't worry one way or another America will get them. So the upshot of all this boils down to the fact that I personally have no sympathy for any of the parents or their offspring who willingly put themselves in harms way in order to do Bush's dirty work. None!

by Archie (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 1087 comments) on Monday, July 21, 2008 at 11:16:07 AM
 



Wolfie

HELLO ARCHIE

The parents and the soldiers themselves are being untrue to their human

"Being". Is not man a child of God? Could God make us imperfect? We are

perfect, but the collective mind over the millenium has adopted the ego. We

are acting from the misery and pain inherited by the body.

This ego, or call it memes or genes or demons, is not us. It will cause others

 suffering and it will cause it's own mind and body to suffer.

Please treat the suffering as anyone else should be treated, with love, and

that means kindness and empathy.

by Wolfie (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 29 diaries, 1176 comments) on Monday, July 21, 2008 at 10:55:36 PM
 


Former Lawyer, current Business Consultant,history buff, Christian, father of 2 sons and a supporter of democratic government.
ArchieFormer Lawyer, current Business Consultant,history buff, Christian, father of 2 sons and a supporter of democratic government.

Agony

Wolfie I know you're right. I'm really just railing against the unnecessary lives that are lost when the ones in charge have no empathy, no understanding and no redeeming qualities which gives rise to these unfortunate statistics, this suffering and horror. Please accept my apology.

by Archie (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 1087 comments) on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 at 3:18:10 PM
 

 

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