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Killing U.S. Troops Slowly
www.consortiumnews.com
By Michael O'McCarthy
March 9, 2007
Editor's Note: Some Bush administration officials have expressed shock
at the mistreatment of Iraq War veterans at Walter Reed and other medical
centers. But this scandal has many antecedents, including the neglect shown to
many veterans who served in Vietnam and in the first U.S. war with Iraq.
In this guest essay, writer and political organizer Michael O'McCarthy
explains why the latest disclosures shouldn't have come as that much of a
surprise to the Pentagon or the White House:
Twenty-five years ago, March 14, 1981 Jim
Hopkins, Marine veteran of Vietnam, born on the Marine Corps birthday of Nov.
10, drove his army Jeep through the glass doors and into the lobby of the
multi-million dollar, showcase edifice of Wadsworth VA hospital, at Los Angeles,
California. He did so to protest the gross, willfully negligent treatment given
US veterans within the VA system, specifically, those veterans of the US war in
Southeast Asia, aka, the Vietnam War.
He fired
rounds from his AR 14 into the official pictures of then-President Ronald Reagan
and ex-President Jimmy Carter. For emphasis he then fired his .45 caliber
handgun and a shotgun screaming that he was not receiving the medical attention
needed. Hauled from the hospital by law enforcement, he screamed into the
cameras that his brain was "being destroyed by Agent Orange."
That sent both
a shockwave and a wake-up call through the U.S. and became a clarion call to
thousands of veterans who felt the very same as did Hopkins.
Ron Bitzer,
director and founder of the L.A.-based Center for Veteran's Rights, and I took
up his case. My specialty was dealing with vets suffering from Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder, (PTSD) who had come into conflict with law enforcement due to
their illness.
Hopkins' case
gave national voice to three major issues for vets:
1. The
failure of Reagan's administration to investigate the damage caused by Dow
Chemical's and Monsanto's dioxin-based defoliants spread all over Southeast Asia
known as Agent Orange, Blue and other quaint names – and its refusal to treat
vets and their families for its damaging effect on both, especially the obvious
appearance of birth defects of children born to the vets.
2. The
refusal to acknowledge the illness of PTSD and to investigate its damage on vets
and to provide appropriate treatment.
3. The
callous and insulting disrespect shown the vets by Reagan and his efforts to cut
both the benefits of the vets and to close their outpatient treatment centers.
After being
released from inpatient treatment from the VA hospital where we had him
transferred from the L.A. County Jail, Hopkins went on a speaking tour to vets.
Despite our best efforts to help him Hopkins died on May 17, 1981, with an open
liquor bottle and empty pill bottle found next to his body.
The news of
his death spread across the country, sparking a sit-in of the Wadsworth VA lobby
by veterans, who had come to view Hopkins as a hero. As Reagan alternately
ignored and then ridiculed the veterans while the VA proclaimed its innocence of
neglect, the protest grew until it became a hunger strike led by highly
decorated Vietnam combat veterans.
The hunger
strike drew mass coverage by the U.S. and world news. In the face of the aroused
public, Reagan ignored calls for investigation, but held off forced eviction.
When we rejected the government's poor-faith negotiations, Reagan called in the
Federal forces.
But we were
prepared and within days were camped out in front of the White House and had
forced meetings with various congressional Veterans committees. Fearing that any
moment one of the vets would die and would trigger an armed response by the many
outraged veterans across the country, Congress finally agreed to negotiate a
compromise:
The veteran's
strike would end after 53 days and Congress would over-ride Reagan so that the
Vet Centers would remain funded and open; there would be scientific and medical
investigations into both the effects of the dioxin defoliants and into the
illness of PTSD.
But despite it
taking so long for the government to address the issue, the substandard quality
of care in the military and VA hospitals was not news. In 1976, Ron Kovic's
Born on the Fourth of July was published, a full five years before
Hopkins's protest. In this book, Kovic, a paralyzed combat veteran of Vietnam,
documented, in graphic literary style, the mistreatment of vets in both hospital
systems. But nothing changed.
In 1989 Oliver
Stone made Kovic's book into a movie featuring an Oscar-nominated performance by
Tom Cruise playing Kovic. But neither the Congress nor the Presidency changed
the continuing ill treatment given veterans.
Desert
Storm
Then under
Reagan's Republican successor George Herbert Walker Bush, the U.S. launched
Operation Desert Storm, which extensively used depleted uranium weapons. Vets
came home from that U.S. victory complaining of various kinds of poisoning, both
from the depleted uranium and the suspected effects of chemical warfare
allegedly used by Saddam Hussein's forces.
The illnesses
came to be collectively known as Gulf War Syndrome, and like the earlier
response to illnesses related to Agent Orange, the military and the VA
immediately began denying any causal relationship to the vets' complaints and
those weapons. In other words, nothing had changed since.
Now, after all
these years, when we look at the scandal of Building18 where the Washington Post
reported that "part of the wall is torn and hangs in the air, weighted down with
black mold" and that "signs of neglect are everywhere: mouse droppings, belly-up
cockroaches, stained carpets, cheap mattresses," we know that still, nothing has
changed.
Today it is
undeniable that those who mastermind those callous, destructive wars against the
poor people of the world have the very same callous disregard for the health and
welfare of our working and poor people sent to fight their wars. In a nation
where profit rules over healthcare how can one avoid the reality that this
government cares not for its people but only the power of profit? It no longer
can.
The war
against the people of Southeast Asia was a war based on a President's lie: an
attack on the US in the Gulf of Tonkin that never occurred. It is in that way
akin to that of the current President; based on the lies of an obviously
mentally incompetent madman far more concerned with the false righteousness of
his crusader's mission and as it suits his petroleum industry masters than
concern for the American people.
As the great
anti-war movies "All Quiet on the Western Front," "Paths of Glory," "Johnny Got
His Gun," "Coming Home," and "Born On The Fourth of July" have illustrated time
and time again: governments use poor and working people as their cannon fodder,
discarding those that survive as they do their junk military weaponry, while the
manufacturing engines of war, profit and outlive war.
For over four
years news stories have addressed the Bush-Republican cuts in the VA budget.
Simultaneously, the dollar amount spent by Bush-Republicans has risen to an
astronomical figure of over $400 billion.
Correspondingly, the profits of the military-industrial-media complex have grown
exponentially with the war budget increases. Simultaneously the number of
injured veterans has outgrown the VA's negligently conceived plan of treatment
and as a result. This is in keeping with the malevolent attitude of
Bush-Cheney…the two are married in purpose.
The calls for
the impeachment of Bush, Cheney, et al, because of their malfeasance in office,
deliberate lies and misuse of government services in pursuing their war of
petroleum profit and their acts of war crimes, have done little to move Congress
into action.
However,
nothing has been as clear as the total and systemic neglect for the well being
of the average American citizen than the outrage that continues within the
military medical system and that of the VA.
Why have these
systems not been fixed as the politicians clamor for reform time after time? It
is more than just denial! There is a far more profound question to be asked
about this systemic maltreatment:
Why would a
Congress, which functions as the chief lobbyists of a "for profit healthcare
system," appropriately see to the delivery of the best example of socialized
medicine? Why is it that every time the harbingers of economic doom speak of
reform they talk of cutting the social welfare programs of Medicare and Social
Security?
Because the
system is geared to fail; its failures hidden under the flag of patriot zeal
until there is disclosure of its gross human casualty.
The truth is
that Reagan Republican administration, the chief proponents of "for profit"
Trickle Down Economics and its quisling Congress did not move until faced with
the threat of a popular uprising led by Vietnam vets.
The conditions
at Walter Reed are but symbolic of an entire system of malfeasance and
mistreatment as rotten and antihuman as when we took on and defeated Reagan 25
years ago; as fetid and of ill purpose as the wars that produce them.
In virtually
every appearance by elected politicians when they speak of the current war
publicly, they call out to "support for our troops." Yet they refuse to address
that which is killing them. The war itself.
And roused by
these hucksters the pathetically deluded, self-injuring American public adorns
their cars with "Support Our Troops" stickers while refusing to understand that
they are in fact supporting our troops with lip service as their own government
is killing them slowly.
With more war
in the planning as I write this, let me suggest that ruling power, especially
the reactionary power of Bush-Cheney, will never relent unless it faces
overthrow by democratic, yet undefeatable force. That time has come again. Or
again, nothing will change except this time matters will worsen.
Michael O'McCarthy is a poet, writer and political
organizer. He can be reached at:
Opolitique@aol.com
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