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Iraq war vet: Weve heard enough from the generals and
the politicians
By Bill Van Auken
9 April 2008
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Among the several hundred spectators who joined hundreds of
members of the media and the Democratic and Republican Senators
on the Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees was a fairly
small, but particularly skeptical audiencea group of veterans
returned from Iraq.
I would have rather not heard from General Petraeus at
all, said Geoff Millard, who served with the Armys
42nd Infantry in Tikrit in 2004 and 2005. I think we are
at capacity of hearing from politicians, pundits and generals.
Millard, who joined the Army in
Buffalo, New York and is now with the Iraq Veterans Against the
War, said that it was time that the voices of the enlisted men
and women who have participated in the Iraq war and occupation
were heard.
I want to start hearing from E-5s and E-4s; I want to
start hearing from boots-on-the-ground soldiers about their experiences,
he said. I think that every experience in Iraq, no matter
what the political views of that veteran, the stories themselves
inherently expose this war. Take a story of a guy grabbing his
buddy out of a burning Humvee, and thats a story that tells
you what this war is really about. These experiences have been
completely left out of the debate.
The former soldier said that if he had been asked to testify
he would have spoken about experiences that opened his own eyes
to the real character of the war.
I would talk about hearing generals, up to and including
Gen. George Casey, use the word haji to talk about
the Iraqis. I would talk about upper-echelon officers and their
racist attitudes towards the people of Iraq, to whom we are supposed
to be bringing freedom.
Millard said that while he believes the war remains today as
bad as it was when he was there three and a half years ago, the
mood of the soldiers themselves has undergone a change.
Most soldiers when I was there were against the war,
but they couldnt admit it, he said. And now,
its like, after doing two or three tours, those who still
support the war are in the minority.
Millard said that he and other veterans hope to soon have the
opportunity to give their own testimony on Capitol Hill, reprising
the Winter Soldier hearings that they themselves organized
recently in Maryland in which soldiers and Marines returned from
Iraq spoke of their experiences and the brutality of the war against
the Iraqi people.
See Also:
On eve of Petraeus testimony, US launches
raids on Baghdads Sadr City
[8 April 2008]
US congressional hearings on Iraq foreshadow
aggressive stance against Iran
[7 April 2008]
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