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Amy Goodman
NationofChange / Op-Ed
Published: Thursday 24 May 2012
Leading thousands of protesters in a peaceful march against NATO’s wars, each veteran climbed to the makeshift stage outside the fenced summit, made a brief statement and threw his or her medals at the gate.

Memorial Day: Honor the Dead, Heal the Wounded, Stop the Wars

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Gen. John Allen, commander, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, spoke Wednesday at the Pentagon, four stars on each shoulder, his chest bedecked with medals. Allen said the NATO summit in Chicago, which left him feeling “heartened,” “was a powerful signal of international support for the Afghan-led process of reconciliation.” Unlike Allen, many decorated U.S. military  veterans left the streets of Chicago after the NATO summit without their medals. They marched on the paramilitarized convention center where the generals and heads of state had gathered and threw their medals at the high fence surrounding the summit. They were joined by women from Afghans for Peace, and an American mother whose son killed himself after his second deployment to Iraq.

Leading thousands of protesters in a peaceful march against NATO’s wars, each veteran climbed to the makeshift stage outside the fenced summit, made a brief statement and threw his or her medals at the gate.

As taps was played, veterans folded an American flag that had flown over NATO military operations in Bosnia, Kosovo, Serbia, Afghanistan and Libya and handed it to Mary Kirkland. Her son, Derrick, joined the Army in January 2007, since he was not earning enough to support his wife and child as a cook at an IHOP restaurant. During his second deployment, Mary told me, “he ended up putting a shotgun in his mouth over there in Iraq, and one of his buddies stopped him.” He was transferred to Germany then back to his home base of Fort Lewis, Wash.

“He came back on a Monday after two failed suicide attempts in a three-week period. They kept him overnight at Madigan Army Medical Center at Fort Lewis. He met with a psychiatrist the next day who deemed him to be low to moderate risk for suicide.” Five days later, on Friday, March 19, 2010, he hanged himself. Said his mother, “Derrick was not killed in action; he was killed because of failed mental health care at Fort Lewis.”

On stage, Lance Cpl. Scott Olsen declared: “Today I have with me my Global War on Terror Medal, Operation Iraqi Freedom Medal, National Defense Medal and Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal. These medals, once upon a time, made me feel good about what I was doing. ... I came back to reality, and I don’t want these anymore.” Like the riot police flanking the stage, many on horseback, Olsen also wore a helmet. He is recovering from a fractured skull after being shot in the head at close range by a beanbag projectile. He wasn’t shot in Iraq, but by Oakland, Calif., police at Occupy Oakland last fall, where he was protesting. On stage with the veterans were three Afghan women, holding the flag of Afghanistan. Just before they marched, I asked one of them, Suraia Sahar, why she was there: “I’m representing Afghans for Peace. And we’re here to protest NATO and call on all NATO representatives to end this inhumane, illegal, barbaric war against our home country and our people. ... It’s the first time an Afghan-led peace movement is now working side by side with a veteran-led peace movement. And so, this is the beginning of something new, something better: reconciliation and peace.”

The night before the protest and the summit, Allen threw out the first pitch at the “Crosstown Classic” baseball game between the Chicago White Sox and the Chicago Cubs. Members of the teams joked that Allen could join them in the dugout, if he would only quit his day job. I dare say, the members of the Iraq Veterans Against the War wish he would.

After the march and the return of the medals, I caught up with Kirkland’s mourning mother as she embraced her new family: those who were protesting the wars that had taken the life of her son. I asked if she had any message for President Obama and the NATO generals. This quiet, soft-spoken woman from Indiana didn’t hesitate: “Honor the dead, heal the wounded, stop the wars.

© 2011 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate



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ABOUT Amy Goodman

Amy Goodman is the host of "Democracy Now!," a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 900 stations in North America. She is the author of "Breaking the Sound Barrier," recently released in paperback and now a New York Times best-seller.

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8 comments on "Memorial Day: Honor the Dead, Heal the Wounded, Stop the Wars"

Pikewich

May 25, 2012 2:26pm

We should add to the mother's statement:
“Honor the dead, heal the wounded, stop the wars."

With "weep for the individual denial we live within: that we must go to war for "Noble Causes"". There is nothing "Noble" about war.

When will we wake up and stop allowing ourselves to be tricked into killing other mother's sons and daughters and leaving our mothers childless so that the Media-Military-Industrial-Government-Complex can continue to profit by our sacrifice?

Are we tired of being stupid yet?

clefman

May 25, 2012 1:02pm

Honor the veterans and give them the support they need when they come home. It's deplorable the way they are treated after their service. They are forced to serve when inept diplomacy fails, they are sent into combat with inadequate training and tools to accomplish the tasks assigned. Putting the nation on a war footing only solves economic problems when the entire nation agrees with the stance. It worked in the 40's, but ever since then a great many died merely for political posturing and that must be stopped. Throw the lobbyists out with he rest of the trash and put an end to government dictated by military and arms dealers.

Dwight Thomas Powers

May 25, 2012 9:12am

War is not 'good business', as sarcastically used to be claimed during the Vietnam War. We Vietnam Veterans were treated as 'throw aways' by this society, when we returned from our own hellhole, and by and large, we refuse today's fine troops to be treated as we all were. The wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan have needlessly wounded or killed many American troops, that so many supposedly 'support'. Well American businessmen and women, how come you are not hiring as many Veterans who so desperately need your true "support", by allowing them to prove to you, just how valuable they all are, to our society. One party claims to be 'job creators' and is still supporting tax cuts for the rich, now in effect for 10 years. Where are the jobs for these fine Americans and others, you GOP blowhards? Why do you continue to fight those on the other side of the aisle, who repeatedly have tried to get more of our Veterans jobs.Why did your own 'professional POW', Mc Cain, fight hard, to prevent the most recent needed by Veterans, inmprovements to their G.I.Bill. Get off the pity pot Republicans. This is not about you and your corporate stooge Romney being envied. It's about all your lies of what yoclaim you are for, when the EVIDENCE is clear that it is not. Stop the politics as usual and HIRE VETERANS. Memorial Day is about rememberence of our war dead, and NOT about barbeques and mall sales! Semper Fi to all my brother and sister Veterans and to all of our troops still, in harms way.

SHAFAR NULLIFIDIAN

May 24, 2012 9:30pm

Ms. Goodman:

Why did you blow off Ms. Lindaur⊴‽

Makes your Op-Ed piece a more than a little hypocritical doesn't it‽

Ronni85

May 24, 2012 4:40pm

WE need women to rule the countries of the world. They value life MUCH more than the men.

Riconui

May 24, 2012 1:33pm

Perhaps if we had a "news" media worthy of the name, perhaps if we resorted to demanding that wars require a declaration by the Congress, the way the Constitution demands, perhaps we would not find ourselves contemplating how we might extricate ourselves from a 10+ year war in a landlocked Asian country that we little understand, that we are not a welcome visitor, and that throughout history has been invaded over and over again with little hope of conversion of any kind. Perhaps if we lived in something like a democracy, we would not have been saddled with an incompetent boob like george w. bush and we might well not have troops in Afghanistan today with it's attendant misery and shocked and degraded troops coming home. For those who are asked to fight these wars, they never end. They just bring the war home with them and on it goes. No more chicken-hawks (I'm thinking of mitt romney here) with their finger on the American trigger, please!

anono

May 24, 2012 1:07pm

As long those morons who think they can rule the world remain, people will suffer the needlessness of wars. We may as well just give in now: "O-K Yobama, you're great omnipotent king of the world! You rule. yay. Now what asshole?"

Jackie Goodrich

May 24, 2012 9:58am

I think we need to pay more attention to the true nature of warfare instead of the mythology that is so carefully generated and tended throughout generations. We should listen more closely to those who have been directly impacted by war—soldier and civilian alike. Here is one place to start: http://soldiersandcivilians.org