The Least Immoral Choice
Squander No More U.S. Lives in Iraq
By Sally Quinn
Tuesday, January 9, 2007
I am an Army brat. I have seen the effects of war firsthand. My father fought in World War II and in the Korean War. I lived on Army posts and saw or heard about the human devastation of war each day....Every day I read in the newspaper Stars and Stripes about soldiers being killed. I fell ill because of the emotional stress of having (my father) at war, and at age 10 I ended up in Tokyo General Hospital....(A)fter nearly nine months, I was transferred to Brooke General Hospital in San Antonio. My mother, younger brother, younger sister and I were placed on an Army hospital plane with the most seriously wounded soldiers, who were to fly back with us. There were no seats on the plane, only three rows of litters, five high, all filled with badly wounded and dying soldiers, most of them still kids themselves....
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I hope that when President Bush discusses sending more troops to Iraq, knowing that we will have to pull out sooner rather than later, that the conversation comes around to the human suffering. Does anyone at the table ask about the personal anguish, the long-term effects, emotional, psychological and financial, on the families of those killed, wounded or permanently disabled?
When I hear about the surge, all I can think of is those young soldiers on the plane to Texas. We have already lost more than 3,000 soldiers, and many more have been wounded and disabled.
We have three choices here. All three are immoral. We can keep the status quo and gradually pull out; we can surge; or we can pull out now. When I think about those young soldiers on that plane coming back from Japan years ago, I believe pulling out now is the least immoral choice.
(The writer is a co-moderator of On Faith, an online conversation on religion at
http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith.)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/08/AR2007010801417.html