docwebster ([personal profile] docwebster) wrote2004-04-02 10:11 pm

File this under "Betrayal Of Trust 101"

(snagged from [livejournal.com profile] murnkay)


A stretched Pentagon is sending unfit soldiers back to Iraq long before they are ready to serve again.

Let's put this in bold, folks:

The army specialist came within inches of death last November 15, when the Humvee he was driving hit a roadside bomb, killing his sergeant. The entire left side of Gunn's body was splattered with shrapnel, his elbow was shattered and, as he lay in the US military hospital bed in Germany, he was tortured by nightmares.

Late on March 23, Gunn told his mother, Pat, that his commanders were putting pressure on him to return to Iraq, but there was no way he was getting on that plane. A few hours later, he was airborne.


Is THAT what you call supporting the troops? Disgusting doesn't even begin to cover it. There is a special place in hell for the filthy bastards that ordered this.

[identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com 2004-04-02 06:15 pm (UTC)(link)
However, I have to ask how good these troops are going to be in the field with half-healed wounds and bad cases of PTSD?

And where are the trooper's NCOs? They are supposed to act as the soldiers' advocate, after all. Were I the position of having an inadequetely recovered soldier returned to my unit, I would put him on the plane out myself.

[identity profile] realtimemike.livejournal.com 2004-04-02 06:50 pm (UTC)(link)
There is a saying in the Army that, while joked about, is based very much in the truth. There is a right way and a wrong way to do something, and then there is the "Army Way" to do something. It's beyond messed up. Hopefully, an NCO or medical personnel will see the soldier in the field and determine that he is unfit for duty and send him packing. Until then, the soldier in question has to have the understanding that any lawful order must be carried out. There was nothing unlawful about him receiving orders to ship out for "the Sandbox" as we called it when I was in.

There are a great many things the military does that are unconscionable to the public at large. Heck, as a medic, I got to weed out people based upon how serious their wounds were. Soldiers with wounds that in any civilian ER would get them to the front of the line I had to make the choice to set them aside, because it would take to much effort to stabilize them.

The other large problem the military has now is that it's NCO corps is anorexic at best. Fewer NCO's mean more things fall between the cracks, such as this soldier's plight. I can only hope that someone catches him at a battalion aid station and removes him from duty.

[identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com 2004-04-03 04:36 am (UTC)(link)
Trust me, I understand that.. former 11-Bravo here.