SOLDIERS ARE WAKING UP!

IRAQ VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR

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LETTERS AND MESSAGES FROM SOLDIERS/VETERANS  - THEY DESERVE TO BE HEARD!

Soldiers/Veterans:  Email your letter or message to granddelusion@gawab.com and we will include it here.

From RV, USMC – Iraq War Veteran – 2 Tours

Thank you for everything, and you are going to have to remain patient with me because of all of the stupid stuff I will continue to do. I second guess everything from traveling to putting on a pair of socks. I do not trust a soul (sorry).

I remember coming home and the struggle to get a job. Unemployed days and helicopter-noise sleepless nights. Having holidays and wondering..WHY? Second guessing every situation, even down to the decision of whether or not to hug my kids as they get on the bus. Secretly making myself late to change time, to avoid a life and death situation that I make believed in my head.

Now I look at the sadness in my sons face, and I know it’s just this war carrying over into his little six year old body. I get him for 4 days a month, and what do I to for 1 of those days?  Yell at him because I need to make him stronger for when the war comes here. He draws pictures of me in the Marines, and they are his little works of art, but I don’t like them. We spend quality time, don’t get me wrong, but this is all new adjustment once again. I just love to hold him at night.

My wife has a journal that contains 100 stories of destruction, of me blacking out and destroying our property in a rage (without alcohol involved). My kids are scared of me. My love for them is what got me through the days and nights at war, but something in the process of surviving those days and nights somehow killed our love. My memory feels crippled, and I try to understand the distance between me and people I should love.

Chapter 2: Veterans Day (long question to Americans)
Today I came home to two letters in the mail from the VA. One letter that notified me that I owe for the medication I am receiving to help with anxiety and concentration. The second was a letter notifying me that my education benefits are being cut, starting in August. Now, by this point I am able to laugh it all off, so do not worry. I don’t have much fight left in me, and I don’t mind because I am done fighting anyway. The loneliness has been the only friend to stick with me for this long, so I guess you can call it my best friend. Sense of pride and duty to my country have long faded. I feel safe and content in knowing that I have nothing to lose, and I consider myself lucky for that. I can survive in any situation (If I want to) and I don’t care about your technology or the power and money that you gained while I was fighting your corporate war. You comfortably sleep all night, and I lay wide awake. During the day people ignore me, as I observe them soaking up propaganda from their TVs. I would love to talk about truth, or even about strawberries growing in a garden. The same people’s children are at home, basking in the glory of virtual war on X-box, and it keeps them occupied long enough so they can get their daily dose of lies from their own box.

My last feelings of anger slowly become replaced with questions, I wonder to myself- How safe do the American people feel? Are they too distracted to feel alarmed? Because when the skies start falling here, I’m not so sure all our veterans will get out of bed. We have no jobs or families to protect, and we already know the outcome of war. Plus when it’s all over will anyone even remember? When a Just War does arrive at our door will we know its there? Basically, to sum it all up and put it into words everyone can understand- ” I hope y’all can fight.”

The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive veterans of early wars were treated and appreciated by our nation.  -  George Washington


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Why I Hate To Hear the Star Spangled Banner and Refuse To Say the Pledge

I remember a time when I would threaten a person for not respecting our flag and loving our country. “Love it or leave it,” I used to say; “these colors don’t run” was another one. I loved my country and thought it loved me back. I was gung-ho all the way.  I thought there was no greater occupation than to fight and defend one’s country. Hell, my dad did it, and his before him. I would often boast how there had been a Gaddy in every war since the American Revolution. I hoped to have the opportunity to defend my country in a war, like my dad, my uncle, and both my grandfathers

I attended and graduated from Virginia Military Institute, still believed in defending America, and was commissioned into the U.S. Army. I wanted to be the best soldier and patriot I could be. 9-11 happened and I was fired up, ready to go seek revenge for what had been done to my country and its people. I ridiculed the plastic patriots that were suddenly waving the flag and yelling, “America is #1,” because I had been doing it for years.

I believed my government and its multitude of lies when it ordered me and others, to protect freedom, and spread it to the oppressed people in the Middle East.  The army was the army; it had its faults, but I was going to fight America’s enemy and I was ready, even excited. So, in October of 2004, I was deployed to Iraq; Northern Iraq to be exact, a nice little vacation spot named, Tal Afar. I didn’t find the enemy of America there; I found regular people who were just trying to be free and out from under the new oppression that we placed on them as a conquering army. I didn’t find crowds of cheering people thanking me for their freedom; I found hell; a place where death and destruction awaited the freedom-creating US Army around every corner.

Being a student of history, the longer I was there, the more I began to feel very Roman, killing and conquering all in the name of Caesar Bush and the empire called America. I watched as my commander committed war crime after war crime, shooting civilians and calling it victory in battle. He would place whole neighborhoods and villages in my detention facility for months; flex cuffed, thrown into old dirty bunkers, constantly interrogated, denied medications, and kept from their families. His reason for this action that created more enemies than it eliminated: he wanted to, and was sure his actions would be called heroic and would earn him accolades and promotions. Most soldiers on his staff were too worried about their careers to call him on his criminal actions; those who did were relieved of command and called cowards or “gone over to the other side.”

I watched as he was promoted and his commanders praised him, completely ignoring his war crimes. I too, did things that I am not proud of, things I must live with every day. I began to find it impossible to justify what I was participating in, I refused the awards and decorations that were offered, for that is not what I saw the heroes of my youth do for their country. That’s not what my country told me I would be doing, that’s not how defenders of freedom and democracy are supposed to conduct themselves, at least not the ones they told us about in school. I was supposed to bring freedom and democracy to the oppressed and defend my country from her enemies, not put innocent people under the boot. I found myself, and my country, being the oppressor of freedom, not the liberator as we claimed.

I believed the honest people of America would hate me and call for my arrest if they knew what was going on, but, I came home and they thanked me and bought me a beer. They said, “good job,” “We hope you killed a lot of those SOBs for what they did.” What they did was nothing; I was more a terrorist than any Iraqi I meet on the street or in battle. The only difference was I had a state sponsor.

I came home, my body and mind damaged, not as bad as some, but damaged just the same. I looked for help, but there was none. When I told my superiors, including my Chaplain, how I felt about the war, they tried to get me out as quickly as possible so I would not become a “bullet” on the general morning SITREP, and a statistic that would hurt the war effort.

I have gone to the VA repeatedly, but have not gotten any help. They gave me drugs, told me nothing was wrong with me. They told me to just stop bitching and that I should be grateful I get free healthcare. Officially, The VA told me there was nothing wrong with me that I was not in combat, because I didn’t have the 10-cent badge I had refused. A badge I refused because the army, in attempts to make people feel better about the crimes they had committed, handed them out like candy. I have been continually told nothing is wrong with me, despite the fact their own physicians were treating me for PTSD and had diagnosed me as having classic symptoms. Granted, the VA’s kind of treatment is to drug you out of your mind and put you on such an emotional roller coaster that you’re better off without that kind of treatment. Hell, I am a walking drugstore thanks to the VA; I’ve got uppers, downers and all-a-rounder’s.

I am lucky I have the job I struggle to maintain everyday because of the insurance. I struggle to feel normal again, trying to fix the damage to my body and mind that was broken in a country I should have never been in. Recently, I have discovered what my dad warned me about many years ago was true: my country does not care about me; I am just a warm body that once used, they can throw away and forget.

All those pseudo-patriotic Christian warmongers want to give me for my emotional nightmares and guilt is a beer and a thank you. So wave your damn flag and feel good about yourself when you say thank you to a vet. Go ahead, buy him a beer and congratulate him on his personal body count. I say this: don’t thank us for what we did, because if you knew what we really did in your name, you would not thank us and buy us a beer.

Help us, because the country you so blindly support will not, and for God’s sake do not support sending more of our youth into that hell. Their blood, and the blood of the innocent they kill is on your hands!

February 17, 2009

Christopher Gaddy [send him mail] served as a Captain in the U.S. Army Cavalry in Korea and Iraq as an Intelligence Officer.

  1. One Answer
    March 26th, 2012 at 14:00 | #1

    The young don’t understand, because those that return and do understand, don’t speak of it to no one. Vets need to go to highschools and other places, like the recruters do. The Vets should be giving speeches that would discurage younger people from enlisting.

    If Vets (Enmass) began to go on tour across America, and give speeches, and speak about the details of the vets tours over seas, about what happened to them, and the “Other side”, about how their treated after they return, maybe then more youth would not join up with the military.

    Marches, demonstrations, protests, letters of concern, etc, etc, will have no real effect aginst the propaganda the government and their media outlets put on the youth and public. The tactics of recruters and their lies to encurrage youth to join, should be made known to our youth. The crimes done aginst other U.S. & allied soldiers should be made known to them as well.

    Perhaps you may have commited some war crimes that has left you feel numb some, but that information and experience would be a waste if it were not used for a good purpose to guide our youth away from making the same mistakes. In your case, your mistakes are not without a just cause, that being that you were lead to them via lies by the government and recruters. You didn’t have any idea of what was REALLY in store for you at the time. However, now, you know the truth. Truth you could pass on to our youth, BEFORE they make the same choice in their lives.

  1. May 17th, 2011 at 07:42 | #1