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Masters writes: "You want to support our troops? Give the man some space when he gets home. Give the woman a job."

File photo, silhouette of soldiers. (photo: TecheBlog.com)
File photo, silhouette of soldiers. (photo: TecheBlog.com)



Support Our Troops? Then Bring Them Home.

By George Masters, The Washington Post

08 April 12

 

'm driving.

Jack, my co-pilot, sleeps in the passenger seat. His chin rests on my upper leg. The car in front of us wears two Support Our Troops ribbons. One is yellow; the other red, white and blue. Both are made in China. On the rear bumper is a faded black MIA sticker. That driver probably means well, but by now I've seen too many ribbons. While the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq kill and maim, I think of how they are also shaping the future of returning veterans. Many of these men and women will come home and go missing, and you won't even know it. Returning from a war is more than getting off an airplane and putting on civvies. Combat changes a person. It changed me.

I'm driving angry.

I want to tell the guy in front of me: You want to support the troops? Get them the hell out of the line of fire. Or, if you think this war is so necessary, get over there yourself. If you're too old, pull your kids or grandkids out of college and send them.

I'm driving sad.

You want to support our troops? Give the man some space when he gets home. Give the woman a job. Don't say how you would have been there if you could have and reel off excuses why you weren't. He may be quieter than you're used to and kind of keep to himself. She might be missing an arm; he could be in a wheelchair, knowing he'll never again chase his kids down a beach. Both may drink a bit. She may smoke pot, dress wild and date around. She might play music loud. He could go to the movies for hours and come home and cry for no reason you can see. Don't lecture them. Don't tell them to forget about the war - they can't. Don't try to tell her how she's escaping reality. She's had all the reality she can stomach. He may carry what you call an attitude. She might have a low tolerance for shenanigans and a quirky sense of humor. If you touch her when she doesn't want to be touched, she could very well turn around and bust you in your chops.

If you've never hunted humans, if you've never been hunted, if you haven't been shot at on a regular basis, just try to appreciate what this person has been through. Then get down on your knees and thank your lucky stars it wasn't you.

I'm driving lost.

It's Vietnam, 1968, Quang Nam province. I work up a spit of bleeding gums, saliva and bug juice and spit into cow-cropped dry grass. Rolling my shoulders, keeping the radio man in sight, I wonder about the skeletons we passed an hour ago. No way to tell who they were or how it happened. Three sets of bones, picked and bleached, partly clothed in faded, rain-flattened tatters. Outside four fighting holes, two of the skeletons lie mostly intact, arms reaching, legs cocked as if trying to crawl back to their open graves. The third had no skull. Bones lie everywhere in the parched, knee-high, wheat-colored grass.

Concentrating on the ground, on where to put my feet, I breathe in shallow drafts and scan the hot, windless valley. Alone under my helmet, wet under my flak jacket, the sweat rolls like marbles down my legs. Single-file I follow Valdez, the radio man. Where Valdez steps, I step. I feel more than see the forward progress of Koster, the point man. Then Frenchy, Davis, Stillman, Billy Mac. Hearing Barberra behind me I'm aware of Duke and Ski like a snake knows its tail.

Packed inside myself I'm scared. The rifle angles down to the left across my body. On full auto my finger's hooked outside the trigger guard. Feeling the sun steam through the damp towel around my neck, I want to turn a canteen upside down behind my head. Not enough water left in the canteens for that. Damn windless heat thumps me through the flak jacket.

We cross an open field of cracked earth and yellowed grass that crunches beneath my boots. Toes cracked and bleeding, heels aching, my swollen feet fester in the canvas and leather as heat worms up through my soles. Twin belts of gun ammo cross my chest, triple canteens hang off the back of my belt. An M-16 bandoleer is slung over my shoulder, and the magazines inside clink gently. Two grenades, like giant steel eggs, hang smooth and round off my flak-jacket pockets. C-ration cans clink against the sticks of C-4 explosive in my trouser kangaroo pockets. I hate being in the open like this.

Breathing shallow to keep the burn out of my lungs. My big leg artery pulses with fear; my crotch is laced up tighter than my jungle boots. My eyes sting as I scan the valley left to right, right to left. One foot in front of the other. The sun crouches up there like a big animal with its jaws open and growling.

Too scared to let my mind wander, I do anyway. I remember a girl back in the World - her face, the way she looked at me when we ate ice cream. Heat and water loss scramble my thinking, makes my tongue thick. Stay here, don't drift, I tell myself. Easy to get sun drunk. Easy to sleep walk. Shake it off, bite your lip. I do and taste how the bitter bug juice mixes with the sweet copper of bleeding gums and the salt that drips off my nose.

I talk to myself. Mumble is more like it. Watch where you put your feet, look for movement, for a wire, a vine, stick and stone signs, a slight depression, for geometry - a straight line, circle, triangle, for what doesn't belong. Don't stare, you'll get hypnotized. Scan. Doing it without thinking, repeating the movements like an endless rosary, my Marine squad stretches a hundred meters single-file along the floor of Happy Valley.

I'm driving home.

The car with the ribbons turns off. I go straight. Rolling down the windows, I crank up the radio and scratch Jack between his ears. He likes his window all the way open. He moves to put his face in the breeze. You want to do something for our troops? Bring them home.

 

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+56 # Peacedragon 2012-04-08 11:03
Amen
 
 
+56 # Erdajean 2012-04-08 13:36
And AMEN. One of them is mine. The point man, scouting ahead, a kid who went to Sunday School and learned about Jesus, ordered now to shoot anything in the way. He tells me (as he has been told, told. told) that he is doing this to keep MY freedom. While the Taliban runs the U.S. Congress. Is that not a crock?
Can I say to this kid, No, beloved child, you are doing this to make the Middle East safe for the lousy, filthy-rich U.S. oil barons. No, I can't tell him that. But if he lives to come out of there, to see,in his dreams, the people he has shot, and the buddies blown apart, beside him, in time, he's going to KNOW who he did it for.
What then?
There is no end to this horror, while any of us live. God love you, George Masters, and give you peace.
 
 
+31 # jbkenley 2012-04-08 14:30
The brother of a U.S. soldier who was among three central Ohioans killed in an Afghan suicide bombing says Americans shouldn't forget "we are a nation at war." I agree, and it is one we never should have attempted. Our leaders tried to do the impossible. I thought our President knew this. In my opinion he should have changed tactics much sooner than he has planned. It seems our leaders do not understand the tribal culture. You cannot win them over one by one. Bring our troops home now, fast.
 
 
+22 # Erdajean 2012-04-08 16:51
jb, Our "leaders" don't give a rat's anal orifice about the Afghans' tribal culture or anything else about the people. What our "leaders" care about are the wishes -- no, demands -- of Big Oil, from whom their OWN blessings flow. They'd sell their Granny (and every American kid)for dog food to keep the Rich Guys happy. What you conclude is the one truth: Bring our troops home NOW. And then deal with our politicians however we must, to set this country right again.
 
 
+18 # wantrealdemocracy 2012-04-08 17:09
We are a nation at war. Why? What are 'our' leader trying to do that is so impossible? They are doing what they want and the positive thing for them is that they are rich and powerful. And the people they hang around with are also rich and powerful. Theses people who claim to be good and bringing democracy to a tribal culture are lying. They are getting richer and the hell with anyone who is not in their club. And we, the people of this nation, are not in that club. We need to shut down their club and enforce laws of decency and compassion---bu t that can't be done. Our society has lost any moral base. Our government is depraved.
 
 
+31 # Barbara K 2012-04-08 12:56
Absolutely! Get them out of the long war and bring them home to safety. How many more have to die before it is enough? Why are they there? What good is coming of it? Bring them home now! We've lost too many lives and limbs and treasure now. It is doing no benefit to us, so just bring them home to the arms of their loved ones so the mending can begin for them. Those countries have been at war for centuries, and they will be at war again after the last American is killed over there.
 
 
+42 # wfalco 2012-04-08 13:29
I was about to comment-but I can't. I just read Mr.Masters'fine piece a second time, and what can possibly be added? Peacedragon already stated my only thought.
 
 
+28 # Bodiotoo 2012-04-08 13:51
Bring our troops home! Happy Easter.
 
 
+38 # Mainiac 2012-04-08 13:55
The very first mistake in supporting our troops came when the first orders came down to be ready for deployment. Each of these wars, and I include Vietnam, are illegal according to International Law and according to our Constitution. The laws that make it illegal to be an aggressor by invading another country are also incorporated into the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Military personnel are only required to follow the orders of their Commander in Chief if those orders are legal.
Our young people have to stop, look, and listen before they step in another piece of crap. And we need to support those who make the legal and moral decision to refuse to go.
 
 
+20 # John Locke 2012-04-08 15:24
Mainiac: and to educate the rest as to why they should not go!
 
 
+25 # cordleycoit 2012-04-08 15:07
We are waging pointless wars, What is the point of the war in Afghanistan in one sentence. Something about a pipeline and revenge for an attack by Saudis. What about the war on drugs in Mexico there are 60,000 dead. The narco traffickers are building training camps in Central America. Legalize it. Stop thinking problems are solved by shooting people. Bring our people home to a real G.I. Bill lower tuition ramp up health care. And look after those who have served. It's simple.
 
 
+23 # Regina 2012-04-08 15:18
The American imperialist obsession with "making the world safe" has truly run out of any remnant of justification. When we went into Vietnam, the French (of "French Indo-China") had the brains to crawl out. When we went into Iraq the first time, it was to salvage Yemen -- maybe justifiable. When we went into Afghanistan it was totally wrong -- it was not the Afghan government that attacked us on 9/11. When we went into Iraq the second time it was strictly for the corporate barons, including Cheney and miscellaneous cohorts. That's a pretty rotten batting average for judgment, principle, and our national interest. Yes, let's crawl out of Afghanistan and try to salvage America.
 
 
+13 # Bodiotoo 2012-04-08 16:07
Make that Kuwait...fdo rthe first Iraq war, 9/11 should have been a police action...i.e. Wanted For Murder...all plotters associated with it...occupation does not and will not work...see American Revolution and Washinton's stategy (once he realized he could not take them on directly except on his terms...)...war only works to a positive conclusion when one side is totally annialated...an d we don 't fight wars like that...if we did, nuclear devices would be dropped. Bring ther troops home.
 
 
+15 # grindermonkey 2012-04-08 15:18
Give them an education. Bring back the GI Bill and bring them home.
 
 
+18 # oakes721 2012-04-08 15:31
'SPORTING OUR TROOPS' in a media spin for the profiteers of weaponry and wars, all evidence is cleansed away from the TV screams for political gain. WAR is not a sport. There is no winner in war, no give but plenty of take: politicians and Congressmen on the take. But with the money they also take our nation's honor, trust and integrity. Peace of mind is robbed away by the war-makers, leaving only a deep denial to numb the sense of responsibility we were taught to grow up with. All of our most precious and fundamental laws are now be reversed to protect the guilty. Follow the money.

Thank you for painting a needed picture.
 
 
+19 # Vardoz 2012-04-08 15:36
Man I hear you- Too bad we have a govt that doesn't give a damn and too bad people are so ill informed and passive!
 
 
+16 # dick 2012-04-08 15:40
A confidant of LBJ's said Lyndon told him he went in for reasons having ONLY to do with his own political career, then lied about the Gulf of Tonkin. Schartzkoff & Powell have both written that Saddam would have left Kuwait without war, but Bush,Sr., WANTED a war. We all know that OIL, Operation Iraqi Liberation, was a Big Lie, & Blair aide says Saddam was under control. But we are GUNG HO for wars at the beginning, & become anti-war only when they turn sour. That dodge won't hunt. After W & Little Tommy Franks decided to let Bin Laden escape & pursue oil instead, the Taliban & border Al Qaeda really did represent a threat. Yes, appreciate & support our troops & their families. But DO NOT SUPPORT imperial wars at the outset, & DEMAND that Israel liberate Palestine, or we'll REALLY be in an unprecedented mess.
 
 
+17 # lachrymosa 2012-04-08 15:51
One more perspective. My son was Army and then Reserve, 16 years altogether in Bosnia, Rep. of Congo, Germany, Angola, & Namibia. He went to Iraq with great enthusiasm to teach a team of 160 Iraqis in mine removal. He came home bitterly disillusioned with the war and two months later took his own life. But here's the thing. He went to Iraq post-Army, as a contractor. My son was as patriotic, idealistic, honorable as a contractor-empl oyee as he was as soldier. But the contractors earn no respect, are not mourned. Their deaths do not make the news, their suicides are, literally, not counted. Now that we've begun to see the burden these wasteful wars placed on young men, please don't lump all the contractors in with their greedy corporate bosses.
 
 
+17 # Granny Weatherwax 2012-04-08 16:30
Yes, the stop-lossed poor 'hood kid finding himself there, however delusioned about patriotism and safeguarding freedom, is a victim too.

Smedley Butler had it right - War is a racket: your life and future for my oil, kid.
 
 
+13 # 4yourinformation 2012-04-08 16:58
BRING THEM HOME! Fuck that stupid pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pak/India via Afghanistan. Fuck the dumb lithium deposits and other goodies. Fuck the Taliban and the corrupt Kabul government. Stop trying to tell everyone what to do. BRING THEM HOME!
 
 
+13 # Yakpsyche 2012-04-08 17:57
I feel for all the troops and veterans. The anger, the sadness, the craziness. I dont' agree with commentators reaasons for being at war. Its not only that the wars are lllegal, but that their illegality is known and deliberate. When the soviet union "fell" and the pentagon realized the US is the only superpower left, it wasn't enough. A megalomania on the part of our rulers emerged. The Blueprint For A New American Century, explains how a "Pearl Harbor-like" event was needed for the American people to support pre-emtive war. This was only the first step. The long term goal is to establlish American controlof the entiire planet with orbiting nuclear warheads. Compare to the emerging drone missle system. Its not just the oil- tthe bullies with the billions want to take the planet. World government as dictatorship. Kille the middle class. Militariization of US society is coming along nicely. People have been trained at airports to be searched. Treatment of the Occupy movement shows the constitution has been suspended. Last week SCOTUS said strip searches are legal for anything. Homeland Security is rapidly distributing military equipment to local police forces Habeus corpus is suspended. Snoop cameras are proliferating, the national email reading center is being built in Utah.
The troops won't be brought home. They're pawns in the game.
Better to use our enetgies to educate so new kids don't sign up.
 
 
+10 # Susan W 2012-04-08 18:06
I have a ribbon on my truck...and my front door...and I gave away eight more of them which are posted on trucks and cars and doors at places unknown. They are white and I purchased them early on in the "war on terror" from United for Peace. These are white, the international color of mourning and peace. Printed on them is the mantra "Bring the troops home now."

Not all ribbons are equal...my soul aches for what my country has become. When will we ever learn.
 
 
+15 # barryg 2012-04-08 18:45
I too am a Nam vet. And I am pissed a lot of the day and night. Some of the responders have some misconceptions although there are some who get a lot of the picture.

No one accused attacked us on 9/11. The .001% did. Just like the Tonkin Gulf, the Lusitania, the Maine, etc. War makes profits. Things are as they are in all aspects of our culture because they work for the 1% that way.

And did you know that the Taliban cut off the opium from Afghanistan. That is as much a reason as oil. There is still no pipelines but Opium production has doubled. Viet Nam was as much about the French Connection as it was about profits on producing war materials.

This is a beautiful piece. A huge thanks to George Masters. It should be indelibly imprinted on the eyelids of every american along with General Butlers book.
 
 
+4 # noitall 2012-04-09 00:16
Right on, man! Now our communites are over run with heroin addicts and those profiting are as much addicted to this war (and their continued supply of Opium) as our communities are to the Heroin that these profiteers seem to be so freely able to import. Could the profits be being shared with the "deciders"?!
 
 
+10 # L mac 2012-04-08 19:16
Bring 'em all home. Now.
 
 
+8 # ghw 2012-04-08 19:58
Bring the troops home for sure. Meanwhile guys. just don't go!
What if they gave a war and no one came? We have tries this way for thousands of years and the result has been over and over the same. Definitely time for a change perhaps.
 
 
+5 # noitall 2012-04-09 00:10
support the troops-BRING THEM HOME for a couple of weeks. THEN put them through boot camp to help them back into their community and to undo the brainwashing that they were subjected to in their first boot camp. The Pentagon budget has the funds to do this. The health care funds do not exist in sufficient amounts to address the physical and mental issues that come home with the soldiers. It is insane and irresponsible to just send these people home as though they didn't suffer the experiences they did in the name of U.S. empire building on behalf of the corporations of the so-called New WOrld Order. Help each individual by developing a plan for him/her personally that will address all their needs in order for them to return to their homes and their roles in their family and community.
 
 
+5 # unitedwestand 2012-04-09 00:38
I've often heard that a President's legacy is often enhanced in importance if they've had a war under their belt.
We need to change that requirement for greatness in people's psyche, and require instead that greatness is achieved if they kept us at peace.
The war profiteers have seen to it that we accept the concept of never ending wars, and the "war on terror" has been their wet dream.
 
 
+6 # tclose 2012-04-09 05:33
A moving piece by George Masters. As a veteran, thank you.
 
 
+5 # Shea Brown 2012-04-09 05:33
Talk to your neighbors and families,, keep these points in the minds of your friends,, we need to learn how to stand up to our own government. These pages continue to make that quite obvious.
 
 
+3 # sharag 2012-04-09 20:48
Bring em home now, bring em home yesterday.
 

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