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Coming Home

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Tuesday, 03 August 2010 17:00
A US soldier attaches a yellow flower to his helmet during a joint patrol with National Security Forces in the Arghandab Valley of Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, 08/03/10. (Getty Images)

A US soldier attaches a yellow flower to his helmet during a joint patrol with National Security Forces in the Arghandab Valley of Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, 08/03/10. (Getty Images)

 

 

Reader Supported News | Perspective

ow that you have returned home from Iraq and Afghanistan and the killing and dying has ended, I wish I could tell you that your hell is over, that time will heal all wounds, even those of the mind and the spirit. I would like to give you hope that the nightmares and the memories of the horror will eventually fade, and your life will be as it was before. But to do so, I believe, would be to continue the lie that has victimized you and so many others. You see, as a Marine Corps Officer in Vietnam, I have seen the futility, the waste, and the insanity of war, and as a veteran, have experienced the difficulties of transition, of living life in its aftermath. After much soul-searching and years of self-chastisement, I have accepted, albeit hesitantly and uneasily, responsibility and culpability for my actions, and at long last have eventually managed, somewhat, to forgive myself. Or at least to live with what I had done and what I became. So while others may offer you a façade of honor and glory, or "comfort" you (and themselves) with illusions of war's grandeur, I will offer you nothing but the truth, what I see as the reality of war and of coming home, a reality attested to by tens of thousands of psychological, emotional and moral casualties, and by a long and disgraceful history of American neglect and maltreatment of its returning warriors.

The truth is that no one who has truly experienced war escapes its ravages unscathed. No one is ever made whole again. Like it or not, that is our reality, yours and mine. As a "grateful" nation "welcomes" you home and "thanks you" for your service, they will begrudge you your "benefits" and deny you the care you require to treat the physical, psychological, emotional and moral injuries inevitable in war. And war's deleterious effects are not yours alone. Family and friends won't understand why you have changed, but will try desperately to help you "get over it," to "put the war behind you," and to "go on with your life," as though being affected by war is a conscious decision we make. But when it becomes apparent that the effect and impact of war is deep seated and complex and beyond their capability to remedy, they will grow discouraged by their helplessness, frustrated by the lack of assistance forthcoming from a government bound by contract "to care for him/her who shall have borne the battle," and dismayed by the indifference and lack of concern from a nation that mouths meaningless rhetoric of gratitude, concern and support. All that remains is to mourn the loss of innocence of the child they sent to war. Truly, war's devastation is far-reaching.

But how does one "get over" such horror? Wars come and go, eventually becoming the stuff for historians to record and politicians to reinterpret. America will quickly forget, if they noticed at all, the death and destruction prosecuted in their name, and go on with their consumer-driven lives as though the horror and atrocities never occurred. For you, however, the war will never end, and though years may pass, you will remember it as though it were yesterday: the feelings, the sights, the sounds and the smells.

You will forever hear the screams of the wounded reverberate through your mind, and relive endlessly the final tragic moments of a young life cut short by war as you lovingly held and comforted a dying comrade in your arms. You will remember the frustration and futility, the ambiguity of purpose and conflict of principles. You will remember that in unnecessary and immoral wars of aggression and occupation, there was no coherent strategy, no method to the madness, only killing and being killed. You will remember the confusion, and that in the struggle to survive the next improvised explosive device or suicide bomber everyday living became a netherworld of horror and insanity in which life lost all meaning. As an inevitable consequence of war's dehumanization and desensitization to death and destruction, judgments of right and wrong - morality - oftentimes became irrelevant, and brutality and atrocity become a primal response to an overwhelming threat of annihilation. You will remember how life amid the violence, death, horror, trauma, anxiety and fatigue of war eroded our moral being, undid character, and reduced decent men and women to savages capable of incredible cruelty that would never have been possible before being sacrificed to war. And for this, we must suffer.

I would like to tell you that America, the nation you love and chose to serve, appreciates your sacrifices and honors your service. But in reality, those who oppose the war and occupation believe you are at best misguided, at worst, a murderer. For the rest, their gratitude and appreciation is all pretense, a charade choreographed by war criminals to further mislead an uninformed and apathetic citizenry of sheep in order to encourage their continued indifference and/or support for their agenda of killing and destruction. For most, members of the military are cannon fonder, an expendable commodity to be exploited when political leaders and corporate magnates believe it profitable and in their interest. Henry Kissinger made this quite clear, "Military men are just dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign policy." In addition, when you are no longer useful and have served their purpose, they will abandon you to face the demons of war alone, no longer a "hero" but a nuisance, a burden on the economy, and a reminder of a war America would rather forget.

As you attempt to achieve some normalcy in your life, you will realize that although you have returned home, the struggle for survival continues in earnest. And sometimes, when things seem most bleak, you may look back upon your time in Iraq and Afghanistan and see death as benevolent, and those who died in battle more fortunate than we who are condemned to live as penance for the sacrilege of war. As evidenced by the fact that the number of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans committing suicide exceed the number of those killed in combat, sometimes, when no help is available, and living with the consequences of war becomes unbearable, and seemingly nothing can make it go away, in your depression and despair you may think that death is the only solution.

Though war can never be forgotten nor put behind you, I have learned that by achieving an understanding of its nature and reality, by facing up to and working through personal issues regarding one's actions in the war zone, and by rejecting the lies of the myth makers, propagandists and war opportunists who portray wars for power, wealth and empire as a struggle for freedom, god and country, you can come to terms with your experience and find a place for it in your being. If our sacrifices, and those of our brothers and sisters whose lives were devastated or cut short by war are to have any meaning at all, we must again come forward, shoulder to shoulder, raise our voices in unison, and bear witness to the truth about war. We who know war for what it truly is have a unique perspective and profound responsibility to continue the struggle, this time not against some contrived evil of the war criminals' devise, but for right and justice in opposition to war itself and on behalf of peace. We must warn those political and corporate leaders who wage war easily and have hijacked our nation and ignore our Constitution and International Law that we reject their mythology and their rhetoric of false patriotism, and will not unquestioningly and blindly support unjust, unnecessary and immoral wars. It has been my experience that working to effect real and positive change for the betterment of humankind provides an opportunity for "atonement," an avenue to healing, a means for rehabilitation, and for coming home at last.

My generation's time is nearing an end, and so we bequeath to you the onerous responsibility of becoming the gadfly that must awaken America from its lethargic and apathetic slumber. I challenge you, therefore, to turn your pain and suffering into righteous indignation and outrage, to take up the gauntlet, and become a warrior for peace.


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+15 # Guest 2010-08-03 23:28
I served in Vietnam and must comment that this is the single, best admonition I have ever read. For those of us who survived, the war never ended. The hell of it is a haunting that will not end and the only, only, thing one can do to make sense of it is to take ownership of one's own experience, take responsibility for one's actions and find opportunities for redemption where one can. I have learned as a sole survivor of one engagement, to make my survival worthy of me by living with as much integrity and honor as I possibly can and to ALWAYS question authority and to speak truth to power. The internal psychic damages have nearly killed me more than once but what has pulled me through has been a life of compassion and humanitarian service and what has enriched me deeply has been the many opportunities to seek atonement in the service of the least of us whom most would choose to neglect. Love, mercy, forgiveness...I have found these things only by striving to give these away. All wars are crimes.
 
 
+11 # Guest 2010-08-03 23:59
I grew up in Germany before and during World War II. 'Battle Fatigue' was the term used then for shell-shocked adults - but not for children. So I emerged from that war with a severe case of battle fatigue - and never knew it. This article resonates intensively with me. As a child I was never involved in killing, which may have saved me from the worst effects of being strafed, bombed and shot at. How about the hundreds of thousands, nay, the millions of children in Iraq and Afghanistan who were killed? How about those that were wounded, crippled permanently, losing eye sight, legs, arms? Yes, indeed, we must stand up for peace, pray for peace, fight the ruthless lies and deception with what we know. And forgive ourselves and others. Pete Edler, Stockholm
 
 
+11 # Guest 2010-08-04 00:26
This is one of the most brutally honest pieces I've ever read. It's painful to read because of its honesty, but is something everyone returning from war should receive as the most direct and honest advice they will receive, and something everyone sitting comfortably at home should be forced to reflect on.
 
 
+5 # Guest 2010-08-04 00:56
So true, so true. There should not be any war whatsoever; however, they are waged and the "small people" become the pawns in war, to die or to suffer afterward untold suffering. I weep for all of you. I am sorry that you spent your time so needlessly as the next war is always at hand!
 
 
+11 # Guest 2010-08-04 01:29
Thank you for your words, Mr. Bica. It is one of the wisest and best articles I have read in a long time.
 
 
+8 # Guest 2010-08-04 04:17
It is always great to get the unvarnished truth which sets the stage for the change that needs to follow.

You, Mr. Bica, have set that stage; you seem at the end to leave the battle field to those who have come out of this disastrous period of American

You have served and survived. Congratulations .

So who better to assume a leadership role for all the maimed this conflict has created?

You've been there. Help those in dire need that you admit will face the anger of those who don't want to face their own culpability.

Thank you for your article.
 
 
+6 # Guest 2010-08-04 05:43
This is the most articulate & powerful reading of my mind and so many others. In a letter to this month's Atlantic Magazine, I came up far short of Mr. Bica, but was able to mention an outlet of healing: membership in Veterans For Peace (VFP) or similar groups. Support from kindred souls, peacemaking work that helps make amends, honoring warriors but not wars, proving peace also is patriotic, can aid a lifelong healing process. VFP helps 85,000 Iraqis get safe drinking water, delivered 54,000 free phone cards to patients in 148 VA hospitals, supports schools & hospitals in Afghanistan & Vietnam, etc. Membership dues may soon go up to $40/yr.
We're not for everyone, but may be part of your solution.
 
 
+4 # Guest 2010-08-04 05:44
INCOMPARABLY WELL-SAID, MAC BICA
 
 
+6 # Guest 2010-08-04 06:44
Mr. Bica.
Please keep repeating your message in every forum you can and ask all your fellow veterans to do the same. This is the message we need. "Support the troops" should--but obviously does not-- mean refraining from sending them to foreign shores to kill and be killed or to cope with the damage done to them for the rest of their lives. Humans are not naturally killers. Governments work hard to turn them into killers and to the extent that the governments are successful, the veterans can pay the price forever. It is the veterans who speak out on these matters who have the best chance of making people listen and learn.
 
 
+4 # Guest 2010-08-04 07:39
Without truth there can be nothing of value to human beings. Thank you Mac for writing truths and exposing untruths and giving some hope that enough sane people still live and are active trying to turn this country from the dark night it is moving toward.
But, war is only one expression of the madness that grips our country (world). The hundreds of TV channels running day and night, the action movies that depict violence/callousness to others, the stories/games/news and their attendant advertising using adults who are paid to behave like fools and monsters leaves little reference for people watching them, but to turn to nihilism or the discipline of military life.
Thank you.
 
 
+4 # Guest 2010-08-04 11:10
This is an eloquent analysis from the inside, which, blessedly, few of us have had the opportunity to experience. I shall forward this widely, as the message needs to be circulated. The War Machine of Pentagon and military industrialists is a powerful contender for our hearts and minds with its endless propaganda and censoring of truth.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-08-04 12:46
I wish to add my thanks for writing about the truths and falsehoods of war and our "leaders". I was of military age in the 1960s, but had a "deferment" - otherwise I probably would have gone to Canada or jail. I did demonstrate quite a bit and as loudly as I could.

You wrote: "But in reality, those who oppose the war and occupation believe you are at best misguided, at worst, a murderer". I do think that most of our soldiers are "misguided" and duped. Our leaders are, indeed, war criminals.
 
 
+3 # Guest 2010-08-05 05:08
I was a teenager in the sixties. My brothers and boyfriends and those of my girlfriends were going against their Will to Viet Nam. Some went proudly and died anyway. Except for a marker and a memory, they're gone, no less tragic than the baby who died in his sleep and never cried out. Mothers have taught that silence to their little ones since life began. Crying out reveals the location of the family or your community. I have had enough of Hell to know that it IS where I am. Only in Hell would mothers allow this to continue. Grandmothers, where is YOUR rage? We can end this once and for all. Teach your grandsons truth. I am.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-08-05 05:09
Gee, does that mean I can't write it in my journal because I shared it with you?
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-08-05 07:55
The choice is not war or absence of war (peace). The choice is the war system or a system of enforced law. The latter is within the means of our generation, given modern technology for travel and communication. It awaits enough people willing to obtain the political power to achieve it. For at least one comprehensive plan, whether you agree with it or not, see my City, Save Thyself! Nuclear Terror and the Urban Ballot. www.citysavethyself.com
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-05 10:10
War is Big Business, War is Corporate, War keeps the rich -Richer! We are at a point where "Privatized Warriors" (mercenaries) from other lands (and ours) have been outsourceing our Military!!! Are we willing to become North Korea? Sold out and slid under the bus! No-No-No! I am also a Viet-Nam Vet...What else can I say except those of us that can "Must" learn what PEACE that we can and share it like Life Blood.
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-08-05 16:58
What would you have us do? Overthrow the Gov't by force? Shall we track down and kill war profiteers? Assassinate politicians who repeatedly vote for the war funding bills? Voting hasn't worked. Bringing about peace through violence is tricky business. Bringing about peace through peaceful protest has never worked. I was "there" too by the way (PBR's)
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-08-09 11:37
Daniel thank you for all your words - this is a gift---you gave to me today....

"by living with as much integrity and honor as I possibly can and to ALWAYS question authority and to speak truth to power"
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-08-20 18:21
I too severed in Vietnam and Cambodia and walked away wondering why so many had to die and why no one had to answer for it. And still we let corruption and greed lead us into still more wars of hate. It is you and I who must put and end to the insanity so no more young men and women must die without reason.
 
 
0 # Snowleopard56 2010-12-27 21:50
Henry Kissinger made this quite clear, "Military men are just dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign policy." In addition, when you are no longer useful and have served their purpose, they will abandon you to face the demons of war alone, no longer a "hero" but a nuisance, a burden on the economy, and a reminder of a war America would rather forget."

It's amazing how very true this has become, for I have been cast aside as if am Obsolete, no longer useful to those powers that I have once severed.

IMHO, I've come to the conclusion that any armed conflict serves no other purpose other then to reduce the population where it's more manageable to feed.
 

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