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The Ground Truth: the cruel fate of Iraq war veterans
By Clare Hurley
25 October 2006
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The Ground Truth: After the Killing Fields, directed
by Patricia Foulkrod, limited theatrical release September 2006
and available on DVD
Primarily made up of interviews with returned Iraqi veterans,
Patricia Foulkrods documentary, The Ground Truth: After
the Killing Fields, unflinchingly exposes one of the human
costs of the US occupation of Iraq.
The experiences of these young soldiers, some physically disabled
for life, and all suffering some degree of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) as a result of killing Iraqi and Afghan civilians,
represent one of the most severe indictments of the American ruling
elite.
The soldiers describe everything from the false advertising
and outright lies used to persuade them to enlist (If you
join the National Guard, you wont see combat overseas);
to the dehumanizing process of boot camp, where they are taught
to chant about killing ragheads and hajis;
to the denial of benefits and necessary medical support upon their
return.
The motivations of those interviewed in The Ground Truth
for joining the US armed forces differ. Some were patrioticSean
Huze, for example signed up on September 12, 2001, immediately
after the attack on the World Trade Center; others were simply
gung-ho, as Rob Sarra described himself. Or, as in
Demond Mullinss case, they needed money for education. After
serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, these veterans find themselves
betrayed, disillusioned and angry.
None of this is entirely new informationreports of the
failure to provide troops with adequate body armor and the attempt
to charge veterans for their meals while recovering in military
hospitals have already given some hint of the callousness of the
upper echelons of US military command. However, impersonal facts
and statistics gain a human dimension in the film.
Several of the sequences stand out. At a military recruitment
fair, toddlers are shown how cool it is to hold a missile launcher
on their shoulders and push the little red buttonBoom!
Marine vet Jimmy Massey comments that the process is designed
so that a recruiter is only successful if he or she is willing
to manipulate and lie to get kids to enlist.
Footage shot at a Marine training camp just prior to the Iraq
invasion confirms the abusive and degrading techniques used to
make killing a conditioned reflex. US Army Lt. Colonel David Grossman,
author of On Killing, explains how the word kill
never appears in any of the training manuals, and yet it is the
trainings paramount purpose.
If you look at warfare over time, the hardware used for
killing hasnt changed all that much, but the software (the
mind of the soldier) has changed tremendously, he says.
By the time of Vietnam, the military had crafted techniques to
condition soldiers to kill without hesitation, including civilians.
To this end, realistic simulations like video games and psychological
manipulation such as chants accompanying the physical training
are employed as a form of brainwashing.
Navy vet Charlie Anderson can still sing one such from memory:
Bomb the village, kill the people, throw some napalm
in the square.
Do it on a Sunday morning, kill them on their way to prayer.
Ring the bell inside the schoolhouse, watch those kiddies gather
round.
Lock and load with your 240, mow them little motherf-s
down!
Once in Iraq, the veterans describe being in a war zone without
front or rear lines, where the combatants look just
like the people, and they have no clear sense of mission beyond
Were here because of September 11, to take revenge
on the terrorists. Herrold Noel says, This war is
a different war. Youre fighting men, women, children, killing
a woman who may be pregnant...thats what messes with you,
youre not just killing another soldier.
Director Foulkrod was able to obtain video footage from the
BBC and unembedded sources, unlike the material shown in the American
mediacorpses of civilians lying in the streets, soldiers
raiding an Iraqi home at night, herding terrified women and children
into one room and putting plastic hoods on the men, stepping on
the heads of a row of male detainees to get them to lie face down
on the ground. Occupation is a situation of dominationbehaving
abusively, threatening. Killing is just the icing on the cake.
Several veterans describe a turning point when what they have
been trained to do becomes intolerable. Their morale broken, they
fight just so they can get home. One vet says, Three-quarters
of the troops in Iraq want to return home within the year.
Not surprisingly, coming home after such dehumanization and
fitting back into civilian life is an adjustment that these veterans
have found extremely difficult, one for which they have furthermore
received very little support from the Veterans Administration.
The tragic scale of disfigurement and amputations makes some wish
they had died in Iraq. Perhaps more insidious are the less-visible
injuries.
Again, the film puts a human face on the statistic that PTSD
is the second most common injury in this conflict after bullet
wounds, and that the official estimate admits that upward of 20
percent of veterans experience it. There are expected to be 20,000
new cases in 2006 alone, according to a report published by Knight
Ridder this past June.
The Veterans Administration tries by various means to avoid
taking responsibility for PTSD and having to treat it. One of
the methods it resorts to is a cruel Catch-22. Veterans
who indicate on a discharge survey that they are experiencing
symptomssuicidal thoughts, hypervigilance, rage, insomniaare
either kept in Iraq or on a US military base to be treated, and
are not reunited with their families. As a result, most soldiers
deny having symptoms, only to discover that when they later seek
help, perhaps after a violent incident, they are told
that since they answered No on the previous survey,
they dont have PTSD, but rather a personality disorder
that is not treated by the Veterans Administration as a combat-related
injury.
The film includes interviews with spouses and family members
who find themselves caring for extreme physical and emotional
trauma that places inordinate stress on families. The US military
journal Stars & Stripes acknowledges that the divorce
rate for Iraqi veterans has jumped from 9 to 15 percent, and alcohol
abuse rises from 13 percent to 21 percent within a year of returning
from combat, though others would put these figures higher. Furthermore,
the military will not accurately report the rate of suicides,
claiming instead that many of the veterans who take their own
life, as did 22-year old Jeff Lucey, whose parents appear in the
film, would have done so anyway.
The Ground Truth is a thoroughgoing indictment of the
war in Iraq. And yet, after having attested in detail to the gross
indifference and essential criminality of the US occupation of
Iraq, the filmmaker backs away from drawing the appropriate political
conclusions.
In an interview with the online journal Dark Horizons,
director Patricia Foulkrod says her intention was to show the
invisible (or it would be more accurate to say ignored) suffering
of the young men and women whod been deployed in Iraq. An
admirable goal, Foulkrods compassion for these soldiers
makes itself powerfully felt.
But as a self-defined child of the 1950s who remembers how
Vietnam veterans were denied necessary support supposedly because
antiwar protest turned the country against them, her overriding
concern is that her film be pro-soldier, more than
antiwar. The soldiers scathing condemnations notwithstanding,
she still wants them to be seen as heroes for having fought for
their countryheroes, she will admit, like those she remembers
epitomized in The Best Years of Our Lives, the 1946 film
directed by William Wyler about the difficulties suffered by World
War II veterans.
As a result, she acquiesces, unintentionally perhaps, to the
camp that equates opposition to the war with not supporting
the troops. Whether it was the result of her editing, or
her choice of questions, not a single vet is heard to say that
he or she thinks the war was launched on the basis of lies, that
it should be stopped, or that anyone in the government should
be held responsible. The words Bush administration
are never uttered, nor the word oil.
If Foulkrod hoped to gain a broader distribution by placing
her film politically in the middle, she gained little
by it. Even as it stands, if The Ground Truth were to be
as widely distributed as it should be, it would severely undermine
already flagging military recruitment and heighten opposition
to the reintroduction of the draft.
Since Foulkrod first encountered most of these veterans in
Walter Reed military hospital in 2003, many have progressed through
their recovery to become activists in various antiwar or veteran
support groups. Even if they are not representative of the majority
of Iraqi veterans, it is nonetheless significant. They have also
established bonds with groups of Vietnam veterans, who provide
the benefit of their own bitter experience.
At the end of the film, Camilio Mejia, one of the most outspoken
antiwar activists to have emerged from the Iraq War, says, We
are not fighting in Iraq to bring democracy and freedom.
Additional footage shows him leading a group of veterans on a
march through New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, where
he comments, One sees the same greed and indifference on
the part of the government and corporations to the American people
as one sees in Iraq.
Together with an empathy for these veterans, this should be
the main truth that one takes away from The Ground Truth.
See Also:
US atrocities in Vietnam
documented: Winter Soldier re-released three decades later
[26 September 2005]
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