Victims

12
Nov
2004

Death Comes Knocking

by Bob Herbert

New York Times

November 12, 2004

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/12/opinion/12herbert.html

The e-mail to John Witmer from his daughter Michelle came on Father's Day in 2003.

"Dear Daddy," it said, "Happy Father's Day. I love you so much and you can't imagine how often I think of you. I hope you have lots of fun today and that the weather is lovely.

"We had a briefing telling us to prepare ourselves as best as possible for what lies ahead. Things like children running out in front of vehicles to try and get them to stop. We have to prepare ourselves to hit people because stopping is not an option. I guess every convoy that's gone up north so far has taken fire or been ambushed. The question of whether we will or not is not even really a question, more like a guess as to when.

"These things, as you can imagine, are a lot to take in. I'm doing my best. I've been a little depressed lately but I'm trying to keep my chin up. I really miss home. Tomorrow will be exactly three months since I got deployed. Wow, time does not fly. Jeez, this letter wasn't supposed to be down. Sorry. Back to the point. Happy Father's Day. I love and miss you so much.

"Love, Shelly."

Specialist Michelle Witmer of New Berlin, Wis., survived for nearly 10 more slowly moving months in Iraq, until she was cut down by enemy fire in Baghdad last April 9. She was 20 when she died.

The e-mail was read on camera by her dad in an extremely moving documentary, "Last Letters Home," http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/lastlettershome/
which was jointly produced by The New York Times and HBO. It premiered on HBO last night.

In the hourlong program, grieving relatives read aloud from letters, cards and e-mail sent by troops who died in Iraq, and comment on the ways they've been affected by the loss of their loved ones. The program is not about pro-war or anti-war sentiments, or grand geopolitical visions. It just gives us a glimpse of the searing personal toll that is inevitable in war. I imagine it would be difficult for anyone to see it and not take the war more seriously. Anything that imposes such unmitigated agony should give us pause.

Second Lt. Leonard Cowherd III of Culpeper, Va., commented in his last letter to his wife, Sarah, about how young so many of the soldiers were, which was interesting because he was only 22 himself. He wrote:

"Some of these guys out here, Sarah, they're just kids. I'm not that old myself but I couldn't imagine going through the experiences these guys are going through at the age of 18, 19 and 20. If you saw them walking down the street you would think that they belonged in an arcade or at a movie theater doing stuff kids do. Not putting their lives on the line every second of every day."

The Cowherds were married last year and spent only a few months together before Lieutenant Cowherd was shipped to Iraq. He was shot to death in Karbala in May.

A theme that runs through the documentary is the overwhelming sense of dread that grips relatives when their doors are knocked upon by soldiers or marines in dress uniforms.

"It was the lightest tap on my door that I've ever heard in my life," said Paula Zasadny, the mother of Specialist Holly McGeogh, a 19-year-old who was killed by a bomb in Kirkuk.

"I opened the door and I seen the man in the dress greens and I knew. I immediately knew. But I thought that if, as long as I didn't let him in, he couldn't tell me. And then it -- none of that would've happened. So he kept saying, 'Ma'am, I need to come in.' And I kept telling him, 'I'm sorry, but you can't come in.' "

As much as possible, the reality of war is kept at a distance from the American people, which is a shame. My own belief is that the pain of war should be much more widely shared. That would help guard us against wars that are unnecessary, and ensure a more collective effort in those that are inevitable.

This documentary takes us a small step toward understanding the awful depth of that pain.

Melissa Givens was told by a chaplain that her husband, Pfc. Jesse Givens, who was 34, had drowned when his tank fell into the Euphrates River. Distraught, she insisted that the chaplain was lying. But she said that was O.K., because she would never tell anyone that he had lied. She said he could walk away and she would just forget about the whole thing.

Private Givens died on May 1, 2003, the day that President Bush, on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln, declared that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended."


Informant: NHNE

5
Nov
2004

2
Nov
2004

What really happens to some Veterans returning Home from War

The War Comes Home: Vets find acceptance, help from their fellows

The article below describes what really happens to some veterans returning home from war. This is what Americans need to see: not only are there serious physical wounds from war, but there are also significant and lasting mental scars from war.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/NewsArticle.cfm?ID=2344

Army First Lieutenant Jullian Philip Goodrum Battles The Army

Under Fire: Haunted by Memories of War, A Soldier Battles The Army

The article describes the battles Army First Lieutenant Jullian Philip Goodrum wages each day since his return from the Iraq War. Goodrum is fighting the emotional trauma of war. And when he sought medical care, Army Lieutenant Colonel Ronald Stevens confirms, "I acknowledge that he was turned away." Then, when Goodrum sought civilian care, the Army filed charges against Goodrum for not following Army rules. Goodrum's plight reveals how far some soldiers must go to obtain the care they earned fighting the war in Iraq. This raises the questions: Why aren't charges brought against Stevens for refusing to provide medical care to Goodrum? Where is the accountability?

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/NewsArticle.cfm?ID=2343

1
Nov
2004

Jon Wershow : Son Killed in Action during Iraq War

Father Writes Newspaper About Son Killed in Action during Iraq War

Jon Wershow writes, "My son, Jeffrey Mattison Wershow, died in Bagdad, Iraq, on July 6, 2003. He proudly went to Iraq as a member of the Florida National Guard in which he enlisted after a three-year stint with the 82nd Airborne Division.... [However,] My son is dead because our president misled us into a war in the Middle East." The words of a grieving father writing about his son killed in action speaks truth to power.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/NewsArticle.cfm?ID=2335

31
Okt
2004

Pentagon suppresses details of civilian casualties

Pentagon suppresses details of civilian casualties, says expert:

The Pentagon is collecting figures on local casualties in Iraq, contrary to its public claims, but the results are classified, according to one of the authors of an independent study which reported last week that the war has killed at least 100,000 Iraqis.

http://207.44.245.159/article7192.htm

29
Okt
2004

Letting Down the Troops

The thing to always keep in mind about our troops in Iraq is that they were sent to fight the wrong war. America's clearly defined and unmistakable enemy, Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda, was in Afghanistan. So the men and women fighting and dying in Iraq were thrown into a pointless, wholly unnecessary conflict.

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/29/opinion/29herbert.html?ex=1256788800&en=f4c46f35da79cadc&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland
http://snipurl.com/a5tu


From Information Clearing House

27
Okt
2004

Black on White – Voices and witnesses about Electro-Hypersensitivity – The Swedish Experience

Swedish EHS witness at WHO-meeting

400 Swedish Electro-Hypersensitives witness at WHO-seminar in Prague

At the International WHO-Seminar on EMF Hypersensitivity in Prague (Czech Republic, October 25-27th ) more than 400 Electro Hypersensitives from Sweden will present their experiences through ”Black on White – Voices and Witnesses about Electro-Hypersensitivity – The Swedish Experience”, published today. The book is based on presentations and letters from electro-hypersentives to the Swedish Council for Work Life Research (RALF) in March 2000.

Black-on-White discloses how electro-hypersensitives (EHS), in spite of the Swedish official disability acceptance, still are confronted with distrust from physicians, healthcare, social insurance institutions and authorities. Nevertheless, the witnesses express a great strength and hope for the future and present a growing understanding from work-life and society. Several of the EHS reporting their experiences are white-collar workers within education, engineering, IT and telecom.

The EHS experiences now being published in English and accepted for a poster presentation at the WHO-seminar is an important step to share the “Swedish Experience” with the growing number of EHS in the “wireless society” world-wide. The book is also intended for politicians, researchers and healthcare authorities in all countries where Electro Hypersensitivity is still a questioned disability.

PDF Abstract http://www.feb.se/feb/blackonwhite-abstract.pdf

PDF/e-Book “Black on White – Voices and witnesses about Electro-Hypersensitivity – The Swedish Experience”, Rigmor Granlund-Lind, John Lind, Mimers Brunn Kunskapsforlag (2004)
Download PDF (1.3MByte) http://www.feb.se/feb/blackonwhite-complete-book.pdf

Swedish version published 2002; Svart på vitt – Röster och vittnesmål om elöverkänslighet, Mimers Brunn Kunskapsförlaget, ISBN 91-88884-05-8

WHO http://www.who.int/peh-emf/meetings/hypersensitivity_prague2004/en/

WHO on EHS: “Sensitivity to EMF has been given the general name “Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity” or EHS. It comprises nervous system symptoms like headache, fatigue, stress, sleep disturbances, skin symptoms like prickling, burning sensations and rashes, pain and ache in muscles and many other health problems. Whatever its cause, EHS is a real and sometimes a disabling problem for the affected persons, while the level of EMF in their neighbourhood is usually no greater than is encountered in normal living environments.”

25 Oct 2004 - www.feb.se

http://www.feb.se/NEWS/news2004.html#WHO-BW20041025

--------

A brain tumors' epidemic in Medellin
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/4557468/



http://omega.twoday.net/topics/Victims/

Fighting the wounds of war

After 19 months, the war in Iraq worsens: the article below is graphic, yet very important for Americans to read and thus understand the sacrifices our Nation's young men and women are making every day. "This is raw, dirty, gut-checking business," said Army Lieutenant Colonel Poffenbarger after a recent shift, his brown Army boots streaked with blood. "These are 19- and 20-year-old Americans. And they're really badly injured. It's something that really stays with you." Poffenbarger is a former Green Beret and chief of neurosurgery at the Brooke Army Medical Center at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/NewsArticle.cfm?ID=2305

An Iraq War Soldier Speaks: Robert J. Acosta

Alternet performs a tremendous public service with their interview of Robert Acosta: "One bad day in Iraq and a 19-year-old boy faces a lifetime without his right hand. This veteran speaks about his hopes and fears – and the long, hard road ahead." Acosta is featured in the new Operation Truth television advertisment raising strong questions about the Iraq War. Veterans for Common Sense believes the views of war veterans remain a critical part of the public discussion about the Iraq War.

http://www.veteransforcommonsense.org/NewsArticle.cfm?ID=2299
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