General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWe Sent Them to Brutal Wars: Now, the Untold Story Of What Happens When Soldiers Come Home
http://www.alternet.org/books/how-wounded-return-americas-wars-afghan-bombThe following is an excerpt from Ann Jones' new book, They Were Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America's WarsThe Untold Story (Haymarket Books / Dispatch Books, 2013). Jones' new book takes us on a powerful journey from the devastating moment an American soldier is first wounded in rural Afghanistan to his return home for recovery. This excerpt picks up at Ann Jones' visit to Craig Hospital, a Level III Trauma Center at Bagram Airforce Base in Afghanistan. Craig Hospital is often the first serious medical stop on the "medevac pathway" that sends critically wounded soldiers to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany and the US for further extensive treatment.
At Bagram the three orthopedic surgeons work 14-hour days at a minimum with one night on call, the next night on backup, and the third night, if theyre lucky, asleep. When I talked with them in 2011 they were riding a long wave of wounds, and it was still spring. The winter when fighting falls off was just passing, and in summer they knew everything would be worse.
The catastrophic blasts brought other surgical specialties to Bagram. The explosions seemed to everyone only to get more powerful and the wounds more extensive. Blasts now regularly rose into the perineal area, where the two legs meet, to smash genitals and into the pelvic cavity to pulverize soft tissue and sever intricate bodily systems. In response to a surge of such catastrophic injuries, the army dispatched a urological surgeon from Walter Reed to Bagram in 2010. Six months later, in March 2011, a navy commander stepped into that position. It was his first deployment to a war zone, but after his residency at a level one trauma center and seven years of work as a Naval surgeon at hospitals in the States and Japan, he thought he knew what he was in for. After two months at Bagram, he told me, Nothing in my experience prepared me for the catastrophic nature of these injuries.
His first surgical patient, three days after he arrived at Bagram, was a young soldier who had stepped on an IED, triggering an upward blast that destroyed his legs and left his pelvic cavity hollowed out. His urinary system was in shreds. His testicles were destroyed. His penis was attached to his body by only a little thread of skin. That first surgery, the doctor said, was emotional for everyone on the surgical team. The others hadnt seen anything like these injuries for a while, he said, and I had never seen anything like it. To have to amputate that boys penis and watch it go into the surgical waste containerit was emotional.
In two months at Bagram, the urological surgeon had done 20 similar surgeries, though that was the worst. Injuries confined mainly to the testicles are easier, he says, but for the soldiers they are brutally serious. Most soldiers who survive blasts that require high-level amputations of their legs also suffer severe injury to the scrotum and ruptured testicles. Surgeons can debride and clean the scrotum, and in many cases salvage at least part of one testicle and put it back. Keeping even part of his genitals is a psychological break for the soldier, but since the testicles produce testosterone, he still faces the inevitable ill effects of a deficient supplya long and imperfectly understood list headed by osteoporosis, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular problems including coronary artery disease and atherosclerosis, erectile dysfunction with its attendant psychological difficulties, low sperm count impairing fertility, obesity, depression, and a lifetime seesaw of hormonal treatment.
kelliekat44
(7,759 posts)Thus, the masses don't even see or understand this...war fodder has always been the children of the poor, the masses, in large numbers. Privilege has allowed the children of others to stay home and make money by selling derivatives. The Civil War was the exception because of the roots of the war.
newfie11
(8,159 posts)From Vietnam to now how many people on both sides have been maimed or killed and for what?
Oil, money, anything the rich wants at the time!
We have been lied to for decades about the reason to go to war.
We have killed many innocents all for the rich to have another dollar.
Think bringing back the draft will stop anything?
The rich either kept kids in college or ( as in W's case) find a safe secure position in the military.
We need to stop this war insanity!
Scuba
(53,475 posts)Skidmore
(37,364 posts)When did he say this? Somehow I can see Cheney in the wings cackling maniacally and nodding in agreement. Yeesh. Humans can sure spit out some nasty rogues.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)... in "The Final Days" by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in chapter 14. Page 194 in the paperback version (1995).
Skidmore
(37,364 posts)I loaned my copy to someone before I had read it and never got it back. I don't remember who I loaned it to either. Now I have to get another copy.
indepat
(20,899 posts)the price paid by those serving a cannon fodder.