Luckily
They Were Only Wounded
by
James Glaser
by James Glaser
Lots
of times you hear people say with relief, "they were only wounded."
You can see in their faces that they are thinking that a soldiers
wound in combat is something like a person shot on television, where
they grab a hanky and hold it on the flesh wound in the arm or leg.
In
real life and real combat people don’t grab a hanky to dab at the
blood, because with so many wounds, huge chunks of flesh are ripped
off the body or maybe a limb is totally gone.
Two
years ago in May 1st, President Bush gave his now famous
Mission Accomplished speech. Since that day, on average, every day,
two Americans have been killed and sixteen have "only"
been wounded.
Thousands
of those who have only been wounded have lost an arm or maybe a
leg or it could be their eyes or their nose or heck, maybe they
only lost their testicles. Think about getting shot right in the
face and losing your nose and an eye socket and then think about
how lucky you were… only wounded.
The
American public has no idea of what the sound of screaming is like
when it comes from wounded men and women. Those that have to lend
aid to them can never forget it. With some wounds, blood pumps right
out into the air with every beat of the heart and that is why you
first try to stop the bleeding. Sometimes your buddy has to take
off his shirt and hold it over the wound, and it is a real relief
when the Corpsman or Medic gets there to take over.
The
sights and sounds and obvious pain Soldiers and Marines witness
every time some one in their unit is wounded, adds to the fear and
stress the whole unit suffers from. Seeing wounded children with
their high pitched screams is even harder to take, but the American
public gives a sigh of relief when they hear "three Marines
wounded."
In
Iraq the numbers of dead and wounded would be much higher, but we
only count those Americans who serve in the Military. We have literally
thousands of paid mercenaries who work for private contractors who
are paid with our tax dollars. These people make the big money in
this war when you compare what they get, to what our Soldiers and
Marines are paid. They make these high wages because this is very
dangerous work. We will never know how many of these "troops"
have been killed or wounded, because like the Iraqi civilians who
are killed or wounded, we don’t keep a public count.
We
know that 176 coalition troops have been killed so far in Bush’s
war in Iraq, but we have no number for the wounded. If the ratio
is the same as ours, then over 1,400 coalition troops have been
wounded.
Every
Soldier or Marine that suffers a debilitating wound will be paid
compensation for the rest of their lives and many will be calling
a VA Hospital home for months if not years. We still have troops
in our government hospitals from World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.
They are some of the troops that were "lucky" enough to
be only wounded.
May
6, 2005
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
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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