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Matthew Alexander

Matthew Alexander

Posted: June 21, 2010 01:52 PM

The Cost of Torture on Returning Vets

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I've been following what happens to the soldiers who torture detainees after the soldiers' return from war. Some of you may remember that I wrote previously of Nancy Sherman's excellent book, The Untold War, about the effects on soldiers who do the right thing but still experience guilt. In light of former President Bush's admission that he ordered the waterboarding of Khalid Sheik Mohammad, and he'd do it again (which is an admission to authorizing a policy that cost us American lives by handing Al Qaeda its best recruiting tool), we should further examine the effects of this extremely ignorant and short-sighted decision. We're now beginning to see additional effects of this unlawful policy -- severe PTSD and suicides among those that were asked to torture and abuse detainees. Step in author Joshua Phillips and the men of Battalion 1-68.

Phillips investigated the case of one soldier, Adam Gray, who committed suicide because of the guilt he felt over torturing prisoners in Iraq. And what happens next you'll have to read None of Us Were Like This Before to believe because Gray's isn't the last suicide. Phillips continues to interact with Gray's former comrades to this day, and I can tell you from what he's related that the soldiers continue to battle with the mental scars of having tortured detainees. Those who authorized torture and defend it don't want to talk about this. They took honorable, patriotic young soldiers and convinced them to sacrifice the very principles that they had signed up to defend. That paradox is what Phillips investigates and brings to light. And he does it with the utmost respect for the soldiers.

Phillips is also, correctly, highly critical of two major failures of the military. The first is the failure of too many leaders to actively ensure that their soldiers treated detainees humanely. And, secondly, he points to the failure of military criminal investigators to pursue allegations of torture and abuse, which in effect was carte blanche approval for such unlawful activity. But mostly what makes None of Us Were Like This Before such an engaging read, and why there needs to be more attention on the issue of what happens to those who torture when they return, is that the stories are up close and personal. Phillips extensively interviews Gray's family members and other members of Gray's unit, and what emerges is a picture of the tremendous toll this policy has taken not just on the soldiers, but on our country. For those who thought that torture and abuse were isolated to Guantanamo Bay, Afghanistan, and Iraq (not counting the CIA's black sites or extraordinary rendition), think again. It's coming home.

If the military is to make amends for this disastrous policy, one way to do so is to take care of the soldiers who are suffering from the effects of having implemented it. It's the least we owe them.

 

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I've been following what happens to the soldiers who torture detainees after the soldiers' return from war. Some of you may remember that I wrote previously of Nancy Sherman's excellent book, The Unto...
I've been following what happens to the soldiers who torture detainees after the soldiers' return from war. Some of you may remember that I wrote previously of Nancy Sherman's excellent book, The Unto...
 
 
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05:20 PM on 07/18/2010
It sure seems like these vets suffered terribly. I read some of the book, and have to say it forced me to totally reconsider my positions on understanding American torture, and what the troops went through who got into it. Ya gotta read it to believe it, man.
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05:07 PM on 06/22/2010
These may be disabled veterans, but they are also war criminals. Torturing detainees should be considered willful misconduct and thus not a legitimate basis for VA benefits.
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12:07 PM on 06/22/2010
Let the record reflect that sympathy for the troops has officially jumped the shark.
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10:54 AM on 06/22/2010
Right -- and the guards at Treblinka suffered terribly.
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03:20 PM on 06/21/2010
Mathew, we need to go further than that. Its time to end this charade of the war, pull all of the troops out, make those responsible for this fake war and charge them with war crimes. That is the least we can do for the troops, anything less is a smack in the face to them. They would not be in that position had Bush and Cheney not trumped up fake charges, and attacking a country that never touched us. It was based on bogus information, they mislead the senate who voted to attack Iraq, allow the water boarding, and waste of human lives. That is a war crime. Yes, of course they need counselling, years of it to try to undo the damage caused by thier forced actions. But it cannot end there. You once said you wanted to interview cheney, was that serious or just a means to impress the ladies? Obama can put an end to this, and its time, or he is seen as acting in collusion with those responsible. Its fiscally no longer resonsible to remain in a fake war and its killing our men and women, a war crime.
11:23 PM on 06/21/2010
You're right that it's time to leave both Afghanistan and Iraq. Our objectives abroad have been expanding in scope from day one, and our indiscriminate methods of waging war have fortified the rhetoric of our enemies. However, everyone who strives for this goal would do well to remember not to be too hard on those who advocate less sweeping just political reform. Speaking out against any policy that falls short of complete withdrawal from Afghanistan and Iraq is counterproductive. The partisan aspects of Congress that are so prevalent today effectively preclude the kind of instantaneous political about face that the initial sentences of your comment seem to demand. Continue trumpeting your just call to arms, but remember to praise those who advocate even the smallest steps along the path to achieving our mutual goals.

I join with you in your call for the prosecution of those in the Bush administration who made the evils described in this article possible. The scars of their inhumane practices will tarnish our country's reputation for many years to come. Our failure to hold them accountable for their actions will be seen by future Presidents as an endorsement of their abuses.
Bellla
Trans & Proud
02:38 PM on 06/21/2010
I always say, Support the Military! Condemn the B-stards who wrote the orders! This inhumane policy that dishonored hundreds of years of tradition was ordered by ideologues who not only lacked the ethics to know it was wrong but (in general) refused to enlist themselves, having had "better things to do" when others were hearing the call. The only remedy for this obscenity is for those who advocated and ordered torture to be prosecuted under international law. The Hague is waiting...
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bloomingdedalus
02:20 PM on 06/21/2010
"That didn't work in Nuremberg." Soldiers are responsible for their conduct in war-time. What about Alyssa Peterson? She's a hero - she killed herself rather than participate in torture rather than participate in it and then complain that it made them feel bad. As a victim of U.S. torture - I'd actually support the troops who carried out such actions - but would desire nothing but a life-time prison cell for the adults who ordered it.