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For the first time since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003,
active-duty members of the military are asking members of
Congress to end the occupation of Iraq and bring U.S. soldiers
home.
More than 100 soldiers announced Wednesday that they are
seeking protection under the Military Whistleblower Protection
Act (DOD directive 7050.6) to file a protected communication
to Congress without fear of reprisal.
Among them is Navy Seaman Jonathan Hutto, who had to leave
his base in the state of Virginia and change into civilian
clothes to take part in a morning teleconference.
"The discussion needs to shift from whether to stay
or get out to how best to get out," he told reporters.
Hutto said he had doubts about the war while his aircraft
carrier battle group was bombing Iraq from the Persian Gulf,
but only decided to come forward publicly after an old professor
of his from Howard University sent him a book published in
1975 called Soldiers in Revolt, which documents rank-and-file
soldiers' resistance to the Vietnam war.
"Iraq, just like Vietnam, is a war that's not about
a real threat to the security of America," he said. "We
say it's time to step out and say that. To our political leaders
and policymakers we say the occupation has to come to an end."
The message that Hutto and other troops are sending to their
congressional representatives is brief and to the point.
"As a patriotic American proud to serve the nation in
uniform, I respectfully urge my political leaders in Congress
to support the prompt withdrawal of all American military
forces and bases from Iraq," it says. "Staying in
Iraq will not work and is not worth the price. It is time
for U.S. troops to come home."
The 100 active-duty soldiers who are formally appealing for
redress join an increasing number of veterans of the Iraq
war calling for a U.S. withdrawal.
"Normally the military and military families lean conservative,
especially in a time of war, so to see these kinds of activities
is very telling about the situation we're in now," said
Tim Goodrich, a former Air Force pilot from Buffalo, New York,
who served in both Afghanistan and Iraq.
Goodrich, along with other disenchanted veterans, has formed
a political action committee called Iraq Veterans for Progress.
"We support candidates who want to end the war against
their opponents who are allied with the [George W.] Bush administration's
strategy of 'stay the course' and we help them win,"
he told IPS. "We help them win by sending them unemployed
Iraq veterans to campaign for them. We pay their salary and
help get our message out."
One reason for the rise in discontent is the high percentage
of veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan who return from the war
with serious injuries. According to documents obtained by
the National Security Archive at George Washington University,
25 percent of veterans of the "global war on terror"
have filed disability compensation and pension benefit claims
with the Veterans Benefits Administration.
One is a July 20, 2006, document titled "Compensation
and Pension Benefit Activity Among Veterans of the Global
War on Terrorism," which shows that 152,669 veterans
filed disability claims after fighting in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Of the more than 100,000 claims granted, Veterans Administration
records show at least 1,502 veterans have been compensated
as 100 percent disabled.
The numbers hardly surprise Adele Kubein, a graduate student
in a teaching position at Oregon State University and a member
of the group Military Families Speak Out. Her daughter Makesha,
a member of the Oregon National Guard, was blown out of her
helicopter in Iraq.
"Her leg was shattered and she was kept in combat two
more months after that with a shattered leg," Kubein
told IPS. "She was eventually medically evacuated out,
and she was held on a base in Colorado interminably. They
were not going to release her because there was no plan in
place for medical assistance for National Guard members. They
were threatening to release her from the military without
further medical care."
Kubein said she contacted her congressman, Democrat Peter
DeFazio, and explained her daughter's situation. DeFazio then
took the floor of the House and demanded she be returned home.
"At this point all politicians like to jump on the bandwagon
for individual troop issues," she said. "They like
to say that by doing that they are supporting the troops.
What we are trying to say to Congress entails more than one
than helping one of them at a time. Supporting the troops
is to bring them home."
"My daughter will never again be able to walk around
the block without excruciating pain," she said. "I
think about the [budget] cuts the Bush administration is making
in Veterans Affairs. This is a legacy that we are going to
have to bear and I hope that every time an American sees a
disabled veteran they realize that we are all complicit in
what happened to our troops."
(Inter Press Service)
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