Congress
recently voted to send $87 billion to Iraq, money that will be
used to build everything from roads to power plants to hospitals.
Yet while Congress appears ready to rubber-stamp unlimited monies
for nation building in Iraq, thousands of our own soldiers at
home are languishing with substandard medical care.
You may have
read about conditions at Fort Stewart, Georgia, where hundreds
of injured reserve and National Guard soldiers are housed in deplorable
conditions and forced to wait months just to see a doctor. These
soldiers made huge sacrifices, leaving their families and jobs
to fight in Iraq. Now they find themselves living in hot, crowded,
unsanitary barracks and waiting far too long to see overworked
doctors. This is hardly the heroes welcome they might have
expected. Only an exposé in a major newspaper brought attention
to their plight, prompting an embarrassed Defense department to
rush additional doctors to the base.
Many of these
men and women expressed shock at their treatment. They assumed
wounded soldiers returning from Iraq would receive priority treatment,
given the support the troops rhetoric coming from
Washington. Their complaints went ignored, however, until the
media became involved.
Similar mistreatment
of soldiers has been evident throughout our occupation of Iraq.
Some wounded soldiers convalescing at Walter Reed hospital in
Washington were forced to pay for hospital meals from their own
pockets! Other soldiers returning stateside for a two-week liberty
had to buy their own airfare home from the east coast. Still others
have paid for desert boots, night vision goggles, and other military
necessities with personal funds. Its shocking that our troops
are forced to pay for basic items that should be supplied to them
or paid from the defense budget.
Perhaps the
most shameful mistreatment of our veterans is in the area of concurrent
receipt benefits. Existing federal rules force disabled veterans
to give up their military retirement pay in order to receive VA
disability benefits. This means every VA disability dollar paid
to a veteran is deducted from his retirement pay, effectively
creating a disabled veterans tax. No other group of
federal employees is subject to this unfair standard; in every
other case disability pay is viewed as distinct from standard
retirement pay.
For years
veterans have fought for concurrent receipt benefits to no avail.
Last week Congress finally passed a very limited concurrent receipt
law, but the change is unlikely to satisfy those disabled veterans
who need benefits the most. Under the new partial concurrent receipt
bill, only those veterans in essence deemed disabled enough
will qualify; this means roughly two-thirds of disabled veterans
will not receive concurrent receipt benefits at all. Even severely
disabled veterans who do qualify may never enjoy their long-sought
relief, because the bill passed by Congress takes ten years to
phase in. How sad that some disabled soldiers will die in the
next decade without seeing a penny of their concurrent receipt
benefits.
Members
of our armed forces deserve more than platitudes when they return
from foreign wars with illnesses or disabilities. Unfortunately,
the trust our soldiers place in the federal government to provide
for their health care has been breached time and time again. Last
weeks partial grant of concurrent receipt benefits will
prove woefully inadequate for most of our disabled veterans, veterans
who could be well-served with just a fraction of the billions
Congress gave away in Iraq.