From the BBC:
“Are US veterans of Iraq,
Afghanistan and Vietnam treated equally?”
The Iraq war was seen as a
disaster - both by Americans and by people around the world. Yet those who
fought in the war are nevertheless honoured, a striking departure from the way
that service members were treated when they came home from Vietnam. David Bellavia, a former US army staff
sergeant, received the nation's highest combat award, the Medal of Honor, in
June 2019. President Trump honoured him during a ceremony at the White House,
describing his "bravery" and making him the first living recipient of
the award for combat in Iraq. David
Ballavia is the first living Iraq War veteran to receive the Medal of Honor The ceremony for Bellavia, who was surrounded
by members of US congress, senior military leaders and others, reflects the
honourable way that veterans of the Iraq war are treated in the US. The
treatment of Bellavia and other Iraq veterans stands in marked contrast to the
way that those who fought in Vietnam were once regarded. The wars in Vietnam and Iraq were
both deeply unpopular in the US and abroad and were seen as dark chapters in
history. Approximately 58,000 US service
members died or went missing in Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s and, according
to some estimates, 200,000 South Vietnamese soldiers perished. The toll of the war on civilians was
staggering. As many as two million men, women and children died. The Iraq war began in 2003, and over the years
nearly 5,000 US service members died. More than half a million Iraqis were
killed, according to estimates, in the conflict. For many, the war in Iraq was a
"fiasco", as one journalist, Thomas Ricks, entitled his book about
the conflict. Yet the US troops who fought in
the war have not been blamed for its failure or imbued with a sense of shame.
Instead they are made to feel appreciated for their service in the military. "Even
if someone disagrees with the politics of the war, they still honour the
veterans," says Jason Nulton, an administrator at Ohio Valley University
in Vienna, West Virginia, and a US air force veteran who has written about the
treatment of those who served in the military. That was not the case after Vietnam. Veterans
of that war recall being treated badly upon their return and bearing the brunt
of the blame for a misguided war. Back
then veterans were seen not as "victims of a cruel war", historian
James Wright argues in the New Yorker magazine. Instead, Wright explained, they
were seen as "perpetrators of a cruel war". One of the Vietnam
veterans, Ed Barick, 73, a retired truck driver who lives in San Diego, served
as a US army engineer from 1964-67 and returned to a nation that was deeply
opposed to the war. "I remember
being spat on and called 'baby killer'", he says, adding in an understated
manner: "It was a little bit irritating." In contrast, US civilians
are now more supportive of the Iraq veterans. Washington State University's
Alair MacLean studied the way that US service members came back from battle,
showing that World War II veterans fared better upon their return than those
who served in Vietnam. When the troops
came home from Iraq, she discovered, they were seen as "different"
from those who had not served in the military but were not stigmatised. Instead
the Iraq veterans benefited from "symbolic capital", she wrote,
setting them apart in a positive way from the civilians around them. The shift
in the public image of US veterans has occurred in part because of the way that
the men and women themselves appear in public and also because of changes in
cultural understanding of war and its aftermath. During the Vietnam war, the
troops who were badly injured on the battlefield had little chance of survival.
But with new medical techniques and equipment, the US troops who were wounded
in Iraq had a better chance of surviving - even when their injuries were
serious. Of the troops who were severely wounded in Vietnam, about 76%
survived, according to Military Medicine. In Iraq, the survival rate climbed to
80% because of improvements in medical care on the battlefield and afterwards
in medical clinics. Severely injured US service members were able to come home
from Iraq, and as a result the effects of the war were more visible. Civilians
in the US saw wounded veterans, men and women who lost limbs, carrying on with
their lives. This helped to bring the war home for the civilians, showing them
the impact of war in a visceral way. In
addition, people in the US, whether they live in civilian or military worlds,
are now more likely to talk about the psychological impact of war than they
were in the past. As veterans of both the Vietnam and the Iraq war explain, the
stigma attached to post-traumatic stress still exists, but it is less
pronounced than before. David Hamilton,
who became a stand-up comedian after serving as a US army specialist in Baghdad
from 2005-06, says he received loads of support from his community immediately
after returning to California. As he landed at the airport he saw a
"bright yellow and white" poster that had the name of his unit on it.
He says the poster looked "like love, energy and time had been put into
it". A warm homecoming, he says, especially compared to the way that
people were treated when they came back from Vietnam. The personal toll that the Iraq
war has taken on individuals, whether through physical or psychological
challenges, has changed the overall narrative of the war and had an impact on
the reception that veterans receive in society. In the end, civilians are more
accepting of the men and women who served in Iraq than they were of those who
fought in Vietnam. Most people in the US still believe that the Iraq war was a
mistake. Yet even its critics see the bestowing of the medal on Bellavia,
"a model of leadership and personal sacrifice", says Pete Mansoor, an
Ohio State University professor who served in Iraq, as a positive gesture. After the war, Bellavia went back to civilian
life. He he wrote a memoir - House to House - about the battle in Fallujah, and
is now the host of a radio station, in Buffalo, New York. Looking back at his
experiences in Iraq, he said that he was not concerned about the politics of
the war and that it was not his place to evaluate its merits. "We have nothing to apologise for,"
he told reporters as he prepared to receive his medal. "We serve our country. We do what our
leaders tell us to do."
^ It’s good to see that ordinary
Americans are finally realizing that wars aren’t created by the soldiers. They
are created, funded and run by the President and Congress and fought by the Military
so going after the soldiers (like people did during the Vietnam War) isn’t all that
smart – if you are against the war. I am
a Military Brat and there are 4 generations of my family that served or are serving
in the Military. That doesn’t mean I blindly believe that everything the US
Military does is good, but I can distinguish between what the soldiers serving
do and what the politicians running things do. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48779253
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