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Guardian: Families of US soldiers in Iraq lead anti-war protests




Dissent on the home front: families of US soldiers in Iraq lead anti-war
protests 

Troops' relatives speak out as death toll rises and morale falls 

Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
Saturday October 25, 2003
{HYPERLINK "http://www.guardian.co.uk"}The Guardian 

News of the death of Jane Bright's son, Evan, arrived with the US military's
greatest triumph in Iraq since the fall of Baghdad. In Mosul, the 101st
Airborne cornered and killed Saddam Hussein's sons, Uday and Qusay.
Outside town, a US patrol came under attack, and Ms Bright's son, an
infantryman, was killed along with two other soldiers.
That was on July 24. Her anger has not abated. "There are some terrible
things going on there," she says.
Yesterday, other American families waited for official confirmation of death,
after reports arrived of one soldier from the 101st Airborne killed near Mosul
and two members of the 4th Infantry Division killed in a mortar attack near
Samara. This brought to 108 the number of US troops to die under hostile
fire since May 1, when President George W Bush declared an end to major
combat.
The growing toll and reports of poor conditions and low morale among
troops have produced an undercurrent of dissent among US military
families. The Guardian has found that 75% of the 478 troops removed from
the Iraqi theatre because of mental health issues have been reservists.
In researching this story, we received more than 70 emails and phone calls
from relatives of US forces overseas. All but two were negative - about the
treatment of soldiers, the reasons for the Iraq war, the pain of family
separation and the insensitivity of the military bureaucracy.
The criticisms - a breach of military culture - is viewed with concern at the
Pentagon, which sent a team to Iraq this week to investigate 13 cases of
suicide in recent months. It has also promised better treatment of sick
soldiers, and has vowed to expand the programme of 15-day furloughs
introduced last month - despite the failure of about 30 soldiers to catch their
flights back to Iraq. But many on the home front remain furious, and today's
anti-war protests in Washington and others US cities will kick off with
candlelight vigils by families of soldiers serving in Iraq.
Horrific
Ms Bright's unease set in soon after her son arrived in Iraq, and grew
deeper with calls and emails home in the months before he was killed. "He
had lost 25 pounds from dysentery. My daughter-in-law told me he called
one day and he sounded very upbeat. She said, 'Why are you so happy?'
He said he had just got food and water.
"I don't care what the administration says about flag-waving and children
throwing flowers. It is just not true. The stories coming back are horrific. All
he told me was that he had seen and done some horrible things, that they
had all done and seen some terrible things."
The stories coming back from Iraq have helped to chip away at the culture
of stoicism. So have the circumstances of the deployment. An underclass
that grew up to view military services as a ticket to advancement or a
college education now finds itself going off to two distant wars - in
Afghanistan and Iraq - in less than two years.
It is still uncommon for families of soldiers to voice criticism. Some are
afraid of retaliation against their relative serving in Iraq. But there are
signs
of growing outspokenness, in part because of the Bush administration's
decision to rely heavily on reservists and National Guard members to fights
its wars.
Almost half of the 130,000 US troops on the ground are drawn from these
sources - weekend warriors now serving overseas tours of duty that were
recently extended to 12 or 15 months. The Pentagon is planning to send
another 30,000 reservists to Iraq next year.
On the home front, families may be less than understanding of having their
lives interrupted. Not knowing how long their relatives will stay in Iraq has
fuelled resentment and deepened anxieties about losing jobs, falling behind
on mortgage payments, and family separation.
For Barbara Willis, whose son is a reservist serving in a postal unit at
Baghdad airport, it is the idea that he was pulled out of college in his final
term of study for a degree in business education, only to sit at Fort Dix,
New Jersey, for three months, waiting to be sent to Iraq. "If only they'd have
said, 'Stay at home until you finish your education,'" she said. "I am not
against President Bush but it gets very aggravating the way he is ruining all
these young people's lives."
The families of reservists have taken the separations harder than those on
active duty, who are used to military life. The experience of war, with its mix
of tedium, brutality and the capriciousness of the US military bureaucracy,
also appears harder for the reservists and National Guard members to bear.
Rattled
Reservists are beginning to speak out, saying they are made to do the
"grunt work", and are treated unfairly in provision of supplies - especially of
bulletproof vests for which there are shortages - and of military furloughs.
"The equipment they tried to hand us was items that were bound for the
trash pile," Nicholas Ramey, a reservist from Indiana working in a public
affairs unit, writes in an email.
"Vietnam-era flack vests held together by dental floss and a prayer would
keep us safe ... It was like pulling teeth trying to get the things we needed.
As 'dirty reservists', we didn't deserve the same respect, even though we're
supposed to watch the active duty's backs."
Such stories are increasingly common among reservists, and circulated
among family members at home. The friction, combined with growing
confusion about their mission in Iraq, has rattled even longstanding
members of the reserves.
None of the people the Guardian contacted said their family member would
re-enlist. Some have taken a decision to get out - even those who have
devoted their lives to the reserves. "My husband has 20 years in the
military, and loved every minute of it," says Candance Gordon, the wife of a
reservist from Texas. "He will be resigning his commission the minute he
steps foot on American soil, and he says almost everyone he knows is
doing the same. The only ones staying in are those who have long
contracts, or no family, or make more money being in the reserves than in
their civilian life."
The biggest complaint is the one most difficult for the Pentagon to remedy:
that service personnel are under strain from long deployments in Iraq.
Families described the slow agony waiting for details about each fallen
soldier. They are also thinking about homecoming. Several said they feared
their children or spouses would be unrecognisable.
Others said they detected anger and depression in their emails that would
be difficult to fix when they returned. "They're changing. They have
dehumanised the Iraqis. They call them 'hajji' now - that's like 'gook'. I am
old enough to remember the Vietnam war, and I remember," says Adele
Kubein, whose daughter is a National Guard mechanic serving in Iraq.
On one occasion, her daughter telephoned her, sobbing. "She said, 'Mom, I
have shot people. I am never going to be able to come home and live a
normal life again. How can I come home and live a normal life when every
second I am trying to be alert to see if I will be shot?'"
Dear Mom... Emails from the war zone
>From a female member of the National Guard serving in northern
Iraq 
"I don't see anything wrong with doing whatever it takes to stay alive. There
is nothing sacred about kids with guns. There is nothing sacred about
anybody trying to kill anybody else, it don't matter how old they are. I hate
this shit ... I don't mind Iraq, I don't mind war, but I absolutely hate the
situation I'm in, and I'm beginning to hate most of the people I'm surrounded
by."
>From a reservist serving as a mechanic near Baquba 
"I was offered to go on a convoy today but I did not go. They came back
late tonight, and it turns out that the Iraqi people opened fire on them from a
rooftop in a small town. We returned, but did not kill any of them, no one
was hurt. This happens all the time. No one really aimed at the enemy. You
just get scared and pull the trigger and open up in the direction you think
they are firing from."
>From an artilleryman's wife 
"The morning they shipped out they handed them their papers and things
were missing that were supposed to be in there. Now I talk to him via the
computer because the phones are never working. I'm on anti-depressants
and sleeping pills. I try to make it through the day without crying but lately
that's impossible. I never thought that this would be so hard. I wake
wondering if my husband is still alive and I turn on the news to see more
soldiers dead in Iraq."
>From a reservist from Indiana 
"Everyone hears that morale is high and it is a bold-faced lie. The only
people they ever talk to are these commanders. The reserve soldiers never
get to speak their mind. We are the pawns of this war. We watch the active
duty retire, and move to new assignments. We watch their tours end as we
are still trapped because of poor post-war planning." 



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