Soldiers in Iraq are re-enlisting in large numbers. Why would they do that, given the fact that most of the soldiers oppose our continued presence in Iraq? Part of it is patriotism and commitment to the other soldiers in their unit, to be sure. But there is also a much darker reason. Let's suppose you're a soldier in Iraq, nearing the end of your enlistment. You have two choices:
- Re-enlist, get a substantial bonus, get the promise of lifetime medical care in the V.A. system if you're injured, get benefits to your family back home, and hope that you don't get blown to bits.
- Let your enlistment lapse and go into the Individual Ready Reserve, also known as the Backdoor Draft. You can be recalled to active duty up to 8 years from your enlistment date, unless of course the military decides to call you up later than that. In that case, you are no longer an active-duty soldier or Marine; you are classified as a Reservist. As such, you get no re-enlistment bonus, no benefits for yourself, only two years of V.A. medical care if you're injured, and no family benefits.
Clearly the Bush Administration's talk of supporting the troops is largely empty rhetoric, but what can the rest of us do to actually support the troops? For the troops returning to civilian life, it's a profound adjustment. I can tell you that it's a bit of a shock just spending a week in the desert north of Reno and then returning to civilization, and I'm sure that the contrast from the desert north of Baghdad is orders of magnitude sharper. It's like comparing a skinned knee to a double amputation, and that simile carries forward on another level: one is short-term, the other a lifelong issue. Being shot at, having no safe place to let down your vigilance, having to kill other human beings, and seeing widespread death and destruction, has to leave an indelible mark. If you know a returning veteran in your community, let him or her know that, even though you oppose the war, you don't hold the troops to answer for the damage the war is doing both to Iraq and to the United States. Let that veteran know that you want to help in any way you can. You probably won't have to sit through bloodcurdling stories of combat, IEDs, or other horrors, because the veteran may not be ready to talk about those things.
On a larger policy level, call your Congressman and tell him or her that you feel that the Backdoor Draft is a national disgrace, that Reservists deserve the same medical benefits as regular soldiers if they're injured on active duty, that it is immoral to send our troops to Iraq and Afghanistan for ever longer tours with ever shorter breaks between deployments, and that you want him or her to support the troops by bringing them home alive. The soldiers don't support the occupation, the American people don't support the occupation, and the Iraqi people don't support the occupation. It's only the two governments that think it's a good idea, and it's time to say enough is enough.
Technorati tags: Iraq War, Iraq Veterans Against the War, IVAW, Support the Troops
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