And
You Can Never Wash Off All the Blood
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Even
though there are constant reminders every day of the horror and
crimes going on in Iraq, the blood I am talking about flows in every
war and will leave a lasting stain on the mind of every Soldier
or Marine who fights in one.
It
was the fall of 1968 and I was hitchhiking by helicopter from Dung
Ha to Da Nang. I got a ride in a little Bell observation chopper
and we had to set down at an Army base about half way to Hue. I
was let off there because they wanted to get a wounded officer off
as fast as they could and this was the closest bird in the air around
them.
All
I can remember about the place is that everybody had a red diamond
on his shoulder and the LZ was filled with wounded. Right away I
was in there helping where ever I could and was asked to hold a
compress bandage on a guy's leg, or what was left of it He was bleeding
from so many places, but the leg wound was the worst. To this day
I don't know if there was fighting going on there or if these guys
were flown in to the LZ to be taken by someone else.
I
knew no one and the guy I was helping was screaming, as were many
others. When I finally got out of there, I had a lot of that guy's
blood all over me and there was no place to wash up. I remember
washing my hands with canteen water and then rubbing them in the
dirt, but I couldn't get all the blood off.
By
the time I got to Da Nang all the blood had dried hours before and
my hands itched. I finally got to take a shower and washed and washed.
Back then there wasn't today's fear of blood as there was no such
thing as HIV, but someone else's blood still felt weird. Somehow
that guy's blood has stayed with me all of these years.
Sometimes,
I find myself scratching at my hands and I am almost afraid to look
at them as I can still feel that warm blood as it seeped through
the compress I was holding. If you want to stop the bleeding, you
need to put some real pressure on a wound, and if you let up for
even a second, that blood starts flowing again and it leaves a lasting
impression on your mind.
So
the other day I was thinking about that blood again and then I thought
about how many Americans in Iraq will be stuck with that blood that
you can't wash away.
I
think we have had almost 800 Americans killed and about 10,000 wounded.
So, if let's say three guys have some part in helping a wounded
guy, or one that later dies, and others have to stand there guarding
as they take lots of looks at the blood, we could be talking about
3050,000 Americans who will be thinking about those who were
killed or were wounded, and all that blood, for the rest of their
lives.
All
of the politicians and talk radio hosts that keep saying we are
winning have no idea of what really happens in a war, or what happens
to the troops after the war is over. These guys think that the troops
can come home and change their uniform for civilian clothes and
everything is just fine, but it doesn't work that way.
If
you ever get the chance to have a real conversation with a World
War II or Korean combat veteran about his war, you will see that
as they get going, they start to talk like that 18-year-old kid
who was attacking that island or maybe a German hedgerow. Some Korean
vets can even start to shiver. This happens because that war experience
is sitting right there at the front of their mind. That memory has
been recalled so many times that the mind has it, and everything
else about their time in combat, upfront and ready to recall again.
Politicians
and those who never went to war can blow the battles off and declare
victory. Veterans can't do that. Soldiers and Marines from every
war have a piece of that war stuck in their heads for the rest of
their lives.
Many of them have blood that never washes off.
Sure,
one nation can declare victory over another, but really, both sides
lose. I don't agree with all of their politics, but combat veteran
Senators John McCain, John Kerry, and Chuck Hagel all know that
the cost of war is so high that we must spend it sparingly, while
politicians who have never heard their country's call to arms, will
start a war at the drop of a hat and think that a low number of
deaths is the only number written down on the score card.
May
25, 2004
Jim
Glaser [send him mail],
a Marine Corps Vietnam War veteran and Commander of VFW Post 3869,
works to educate the American public on the consequences of war.
His personal website is James-Glaser.com.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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