“If you walk into a VFW or American Legion Post bar
and hear some guy telling everyone what a hero he was and how he fought the
enemy so well, but at the end of the bar there sits a man alone not talking to
anyone, chances are great that the silent man was the one who really saw the
thick of combat, while the braggart never even saw action.”
I see the same thing today over and over, not in the bars, but on the Internet – veteran men, and it is almost always men, who wave the flag while telling us that we had to attack Iraq or that we had to attack Afghanistan for the safety of our country.
I see the same thing today over and over, not in the bars, but on the Internet – veteran men, and it is almost always men, who wave the flag while telling us that we had to attack Iraq or that we had to attack Afghanistan for the safety of our country.
After a while, if you read what these men have to
say, you will find very few even saw combat. In fact, most never made it to a
war zone, or they served in peace time. But inexplicably that does not stop
them from encouraging others to fight and die or be maimed.
Most men and women who have been in combat fall into
two camps: those who have seen the horror of actual war and speak out against
it, and those who have seen the same and are silent. Yes, there are always exceptions. Many career
military men and women will expound on the necessity of military action, but
you find that after retirement even these veterans seem to fall to one or the
other of the camps, silent or anti-war.
Those veterans who espouse the virtues of armed
conflict seem to have some money involved. Either they have a book to push, or
they are employed by the defense industry or by some news organization that is
pro-war. It just galls me that men, who will even admit that they have no idea what
combat is like, will still push for more and more of it, and will disparage
those of us who call for peace and for bringing our troops home.
The odd thing is that as ravenous as these men seem
to be for battle and blood, many of them could have signed up to serve in
combat and filled that void in them that is so hell-bent on sending others, but
perhaps they had better things to do. When I was in the Marines in Vietnam, I
met men who had served in the Air Force or the Navy who, after their enlistment
was up, joined the Marines to, as they said, “See if I had what it took.” I am
sure the Army had its share of these veterans signing up for the same reason.
So the option was always there for these war enthusiasts to truly get out there
and “defend” our country, but they didn’t.
I can respect a war veteran saying he thinks we need
this war or that war. I usually disagree with them, but I can see they have the
experience to make their judgment even if I think it is flawed. But veterans
who get some sort of thrill at having “served” and make sure everyone knows
they “served,” but never made it to the war zone let alone to combat, make me
sick when they shout out a call to arms to our government and the general
population.
They have no idea what they are talking about. They
never had to put their friend or parts of their friend into a body bag. They
never had to see dead mothers holding their dead child after their unit had
opened fire on a village or town, and they were sent in to see what was left. They
never had to smell the smells or hear the screams that are tragically common to
every combat situation. They do not know whereof they speak.
Peace time veterans who wave the flag and push for
war still see themselves in the crisp dress uniforms with shiny medals everyone
who signs up gets to wear. They remember how people showed them respect because
they wore the uniform – the uniform that others made honorable in combat.
Maybe that is part of the problem for them. Deep
down inside, they know that they did not pay the price with their lives, their
health, their bodies, their minds, their sleep, their vocation, and their
families. They know that combat veterans pay a huge price that they didn’t. So
maybe they feel that they have to sound the battle-cry to appear as much a part
of it as their war-time comrades.
I wish more combat veterans would speak up, but I
understand how hard that is for many. They just don’t want to talk or write
about war, because it brings all their memories back to them. I do feel that it
is right that most who do speak out are solidly against war and want us to
start them only as a last resort. Almost all combat veterans know that when
Washington prolongs a war, it is no longer in defense of our nation, but rather
in defense of the profits all of our wars make for the defense industry.
I live in America and am grateful to be an American.
I also believe everyone has the right to voice his opinion about whether or not
we should go to war. However, I do wish those who advocate war but have never
actually been to war, would be honest enough to admit that they really don’t
have any idea what they are talking about. Admit they don’t have any idea of
what they are pushing our young troops into. Admit they are pushing them into
something they never had the guts to do. But I guess that would take courage.
About the author: James Glaser, a Marine Corps
Vietnam War veteran and former commander of American Legion Post 499 and former
commander of Veterans of Foreign War Post 3869, both posts in Northome,
Minnesota, works to educate the American public on the consequences of war. He
now resides in Tallahassee, Florida.
This article was published by the Future of Freedom Foundation.
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