"WAR IS NOT A NOBLE ENTERPRISE"
Sarah Ruth van Gelder, YES! Magazine
An interview with New York Times war correspondent Chris
Hedges on the Iraq war, the trauma facing returning
soldiers and the killing of innocent Iraqis.
http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/20725/<snip>
That’s what we’re seeing in Iraq. The psychological cost — the emotional cost — that we’re inflicting on our soldiers and Marines is devastating.
One of the disturbing things about this war is that, because they are so short on numbers, they are treating people for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and then sending them back into combat situations.
So I’m worried about what we’re going to see over the long term as these young men and women are re-integrated into the society.
<snip>
When you are in a combat situation like that, you realize how easy it is to commit murder, how easy it is to commit atrocity, because you are so deathly afraid — and with good reason. But the consequences are devastating, because what you have done is to shed innocent blood, and often the blood of children. So you bring back not only the trauma of the violence, but that deep darkness that you must carry within you for the rest of your life — that you have been responsible for the death of innocents.
So it isn’t just an issue of trauma; it is, as well, an issue of morality. This is a horrible burden to inflict, especially on a young life. It’s why war should always be waged as a last resort, because the costs are so tremendous, not only to families who lose loved ones and will spend the rest of their lives grieving, but for those who return and for the rest of their lives bear these emotional and psychological burdens.
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