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Author: TriSec    Date: 05/04/2010 10:16:29

Good Morning.

Today is our 2,603rd day in Iraq and our 3,131st day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do, with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing wars, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

American Deaths
Since war began (3/19/03): 4395
Since "Mission Accomplished" (5/1/03): 4256
Since Capture of Saddam (12/13/03): 3932
Since Handover (6/29/04): 3536
Since Obama Inauguration (1/20/09): 167

Other Coalition Troops - Iraq: 318
US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,054
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 689
Contractor Employee Deaths - Iraq: 1,457
Journalists - Iraq: 338
Academics Killed - Iraq: 437


We find this morning's Cost of War passing through:

$ 990, 190, 500, 000 . 00


In case you missed it, this past weekend was MayDay. An astonishing 7 Mays ago, "President" Bush landed on the USS Abraham Lincoln and declared..."Mission Accomplished".

Of course, for the men and women that still fight....the mission won't be accomplished until they are back home with their families far from war. But even then, the transition home isn't easy. Some soldiers walk off the plane and go home. But others are carried by their comrades and cared for in a "Warrior Transition Battalion"...which is supposed to be an intensive care transition unit for wounded and traumatized soldiers. Sounds like a great idea. Except when it isn't.




COLORADO SPRINGS — A year ago, Specialist Michael Crawford wanted nothing more than to get into Fort Carson’s Warrior Transition Battalion, a special unit created to provide closely managed care for soldiers with physical wounds and severe psychological trauma.

Specialist Michael Crawford with his mother, Sally Darrow, in Michigan. He tried to commit suicide after being transferred to the transition unit.

A strapping Army sniper who once brimmed with confidence, he had returned emotionally broken from Iraq, where he suffered two concussions from roadside bombs and watched several platoon mates burn to death. The transition unit at Fort Carson, outside Colorado Springs, seemed the surest way to keep suicidal thoughts at bay, his mother thought.

It did not work. He was prescribed a laundry list of medications for anxiety, nightmares, depression and headaches that made him feel listless and disoriented. His once-a-week session with a nurse case manager seemed grossly inadequate to him. And noncommissioned officers — soldiers supervising the unit — harangued or disciplined him when he arrived late to formation or violated rules.

Last August, Specialist Crawford attempted suicide with a bottle of whiskey and an overdose of painkillers. By the end of last year, he was begging to get out of the unit.

“It is just a dark place,” said the soldier, who is waiting to be medically discharged from the Army. “Being in the W.T.U. is worse than being in Iraq.”

Created in the wake of the scandal in 2007 over serious shortcomings at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Warrior Transition Units were intended to be sheltering way stations where injured soldiers could recuperate and return to duty or gently process out of the Army. There are currently about 7,200 soldiers at 32 transition units across the Army, with about 465 soldiers at Fort Carson’s unit.

But interviews with more than a dozen soldiers and health care professionals from Fort Carson’s transition unit, along with reports from other posts, suggest that the units are far from being restful sanctuaries. For many soldiers, they have become warehouses of despair, where damaged men and women are kept out of sight, fed a diet of powerful prescription pills and treated harshly by noncommissioned officers. Because of their wounds, soldiers in Warrior Transition Units are particularly vulnerable to depression and addiction, but many soldiers from Fort Carson’s unit say their treatment there has made their suffering worse.

Some soldiers in the unit, and their families, described long hours alone in their rooms, or in homes off the base, aimlessly drinking or playing video games.

“In combat, you rely on people and you come out of it feeling good about everything,” said a specialist in the unit. “Here, you’re just floating. You’re not doing much. You feel worthless.”

At Fort Carson, many soldiers complained that doctors prescribed drugs too readily. As a result, some soldiers have become addicted to their medications or have turned to heroin. Medications are so abundant that some soldiers in the unit openly deal, buy or swap prescription pills.

Heavy use of psychotropic drugs and narcotics makes it difficult to exercise, wake for morning formation and attend classes, soldiers and health care professionals said. Yet noncommissioned officers discipline soldiers who fail to complete those tasks, sometimes over the objections of nurse case managers and doctors.

At least four soldiers in the Fort Carson unit have committed suicide since 2007, the most of any transition unit as of February, according to the Army.

Senior officers in the Army’s Warrior Transition Command declined to discuss specific soldiers. But they said Army surveys showed that most soldiers treated in transition units since 2007, more than 50,000 people, had liked the care.

Those senior officers acknowledged that addiction to medications was a problem, but denied that Army doctors relied too heavily on drugs. And they strongly defended disciplining wounded soldiers when they violated rules. Punishment is meted out judiciously, they said, mainly to ensure that soldiers stick to treatment plans and stay safe.

“These guys are still soldiers, and we want to treat them like soldiers,” said Lt. Col. Andrew L. Grantham, commander of the Warrior Transition Battalion at Fort Carson.

The colonel offered another explanation for complaints about the unit. Many soldiers, he said, struggle in transition units because they would rather be with regular, deployable units. In some cases, he said, they feel ashamed of needing treatment.

“Some come to us with an identity crisis,” he said. “They don’t want to be seen as part of the W.T.U. But we want them to identify with a purpose and give them a mission.”



But even above and beyond the Warrior Transition Unit, there's another group of soldiers that face an entirely different set of challenges when they return. Mothers. In this day and age, many women serve in the armed forces, and many of them have left children behind on their way to war. When men return, they are expected to be heroic and honourable and feted. Our women soldiers are entitled to the same treatment. But while the men get to rest and drink and ease back into civilian life...our women/mother soldiers have no such luxury.


Teri Jackson, a single mother who grew up in Southwest Austin , deployed to Iraq in March 2004, leaving behind her sons, then 11 and 8 years old. As soon as she got to the barren trailer in Balad that would serve as her living quarters for the next year, she decorated it with photos of her children and cheery memories of home.

A few days later, Jackson, 40, a U.S. Army truck driver, went on her first mission, hauling supplies to a distant base. Suddenly, her partner, who was driving at the time, slammed on the brakes, sending Jackson hurtling into the windshield. The move probably saved her life as a mortar round flew past the truck.

When she returned to her trailer, Jackson took down the photos from the walls.

"I said, 'You can't focus on your family.' I couldn't come and sit and see that every day. I had to focus on the mission," she said. "You get so numb. You have to turn off your emotions."

Jackson is part of a record number of women serving in the military — many of whom served as truck drivers, gunners and combat medics — who face unique challenges when they return home to their children from the war zone. She's also part of a historic wave of women who are fundamentally changing the military and sparking a push to revolutionize the lumbering Veterans Affairs medical system that was set up for older, male veterans — not women in need of child care and changing tables.

More than 212,000 women have served in Iraq or Afghanistan, 11 percent of the total deployed military force. Forty percent of active-duty women have children. And more than 30,000 single mothers have been deployed to the war zone, according to Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America.

Elwanda Hawthorne, a counselor at the VA-run Austin Veterans Center, says female veterans — and especially mothers — face a set of challenges when they come home that is different from those of their male counterparts.

Like male service members, women often return home emotionally exhausted. But, Hawthorne said, many mothers are thrust back into caretaker roles the moment they return from war. They get no time to readjust, even though the military advises service members to take time off to decompress once they return home.

"We learn to shut down but still function" while deployed, said Hawthorne, a veteran who served in both Desert Storm and Iraq. "When we come home, it's hard to flip the switch. \u2026 It's like, you look OK, you sound OK, so you must be the same person that left 12 months ago. But in actuality, they're not. Women are supposed to be the nurturers of families, but when they come home, that's when the female needs to be nurtured."

Leaving the combat zone behind

For Jackson, a homecoming after a medical discharge meant diving back into motherhood without missing a beat, despite the trauma she experienced in Iraq.

Both her parents had died in the previous year, and her engagement didn't survive the deployment. Jackson, who left the Army shortly after she suffered a herniated disk during a mortar attack on her base in November 2004 , said getting time to decompress after coming home "would have been lovely. But I didn't have time. \u2026 I have to accept what's given to me."

Jackson was vigilant, putting new locks on all the doors and constantly asking her boys where they were going and with whom. She would check the trash cans at the mall for bombs.

"My kids were walking on pins and needles," she said. "They kind of learned the hard way."

One morning, one of her sons jumped on her bed, spooking her. She grabbed him by his shoulders, and his eyes grew wide with fear. "It hurt me to see his face like that," she said.

Jackson said it took about a year and a half to pass through what she calls her hypervigilant stage. Eventually, after the VA accepted her claim for post-traumatic stress disorder, she received counseling, which she said helped her change her mindset. She now works as a medical technician at the Austin VA health clinic .


So, if by "mission accomplished", Mr. Bush meant that he has succesfully traumatized what is becoming an entire generation and their children....well, that's a job well done, isn't it?


 

46 comments (Latest Comment: 05/05/2010 02:25:12 by Raine)
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Comment by Will in Chicago on 05/04/2010 11:25:32
Good morning, bloggers.



TriSec, thanks for a very important blog. Our troops are not getting the care that they need when they get back home. We will have to work to change this.



In some news, the home of Rabbi Michael Lerner, founder of Tikkun magazine, has been vandalized by right wing Zionists.



Also, AAP has been hacked.

Comment by BobR on 05/04/2010 12:17:49
Jaysus TriSec... Helluva way to start a Tues morning...

Comment by Random on 05/04/2010 12:53:11
uuugggghhh...I hate my life.

Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 13:00:07
Morning, comrades.



Arizona, again! I'm just hearing the podcasts about their latest edict against accented English teachers. Ya know, we visited Arizona in 1999...my takeaway then was that there were very few 'natives'. Everyone our friends knew was from another state. Would that include Southern, New York, or Boston accents as well?



I'm recalling one of the earliest anti-Jewish edicts from Hitler. I don't have the time to look it up, but it was something petty. That was just the very beginning.



Here we stand at the same precipice.





Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 13:10:45
Morning

Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 13:15:28
Oh, and the water is back on! I can't get the story from here, but go to Boston.com and you'll see the story above the fold.



EPA approved tap water --->

Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 13:36:51
I'm having 70's Saturday morning flashbacks

Comment by Scoopster on 05/04/2010 13:39:14
Good morning all.. And now some quiet time..





Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 13:44:40
Jon STFU

Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 13:58:47
TriSec's Bits:



I wrestled with an 85-pound 16 foot 'Guide Canoe' at the store Sunday...and lost. I think I knoced my spine out of line.



I'm really glad the "Memphis Belle" is at the Smithsonian instead of Mud Island now. She might have been lost this weekend.



It's interesting that there were no Tea Partgoers screaming to keep the government out of our water supply this past weekend. By all accounts, it was handled superbly and the media is lining up to give out praise to the Governor and MWRA...



Heard on KO last night: Do you think the oil spill is the British getting back at us for the original Tea Party?





Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 14:08:28
John McCain appears to hate the basic tenants of our American Justice System.
"Obviously that would be a serious mistake until all the information is gathered," McCain said during an appearance on "Imus in the Morning" when asked whether the suspect, 30-year-old Faisal Shahzad, a naturalized American citizen from Pakistan.


Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 14:09:03
Here's the latest thing to worry about.



The Loop Current.



Lake Palin sits in the middle of that; note that it goes around the Keys and spawns the Gulf Stream.





Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 14:09:40
Quote by wickedpam:

Jon STFU
What the hell is wrong with these people?



Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 14:25:44
Quote by Raine:

Quote by wickedpam:

Jon STFU
What the hell is wrong with these people?







the same thing that's been wrong with him for God knows how many years now

Comment by Random on 05/04/2010 14:31:34




Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 14:39:17
Quote by Random:







Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 14:40:54
Heckova Job Brownie proves once again what and idiot he is. Says Obama WANTED this oil disaster.

Comment by Random on 05/04/2010 14:41:36
Make random feel loved. Well off he goes to the wild blue yonder!

Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 14:49:16
Quote by Random:

Make random feel loved. Well off he goes to the wild blue yonder!


Well, it sure is nice to see you back.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 14:50:18
Later Random

Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 15:02:30
Even for the GOP, this is hilarious. Read the description.

Comment by livingonli on 05/04/2010 15:18:35
Good morning everyone. Finally at least have my sound back on my desktop so I have full high-speed access on my desktop and can listen to all my shows live again at home even though I crashed this morning and just woke up for the local hour of Momma. And it's already 76 degrees even though the forecast high today was only 72.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 15:27:59
Quote by Raine:

Even for the GOP, this is hilarious. Read the description.




:spit: OMG is that real?

Comment by velveeta jones on 05/04/2010 15:32:05
Great blog today TriSec. Ah, but you had to mention pResident Bush and the MA banner, bringing what was an otherwise lovely day polluted by the memories of that miserable failure. Not that the oil spill and the TN flooding wasn't enough to bring down my day....





Comment by livingonli on 05/04/2010 15:34:58
Hi VJ. How's it going?

Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 15:35:42
Quote by wickedpam:

Quote by Raine:

Even for the GOP, this is hilarious. Read the description.




OMG is that real?
It is!

Comment by livingonli on 05/04/2010 15:50:38
VJ! Momma's coming to Asheville next month!

Comment by Scoopster on 05/04/2010 15:55:07
Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 15:56:46
Off to run an errand! BBL !

Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 16:23:50
I have decided to turn off Thom and Ed and listen to music until 3 pm.

Comment by Scoopster on 05/04/2010 16:30:40




ugh i feel terrible.. think imma go home now

Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 16:31:14
Here's the latest about that dome from the BBC.



There's also a handy diagram.



(I hope to Christ this works...)





Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 16:41:47
BP not what it seems.



For the last decade, BP has been busily engaged in a multi-million-dollar greenwashing campaign. Changing its name from British Petroleum to BP, the company adopted a new slogan, “Beyond Petroleum,” and began a “rebranding” effort to depict itself as a public-spirited, environmentally sensitive, green energy enterprise, the very model of 21st century corporate responsibility.



It’s going to take more than a name change and a clever ad campaign to erase the image of oil spreading across the Gulf Coast from BP’s offshore rig, and dead wildlife washing up onto beaches. Even as the company magnanimously agreed to cover the costs of cleaning up the mammoth spill, BP on Monday was still insisting that it wasn’t at fault for the accident that caused it—instead blaming the offshore drilling contractor that operated the rig. So much for corporate accountability.



Before the Deepwater Horizon disaster, BP’s green image was nothing more than a scam. While making miniscule investments in things like solar power, biofuels, and carbon fuel cells that backed its PR claims, BP continued to work relentlessly to expand its oil and gas operations. In the last decade, as the world’s second largest producer of fossil fuels, the company drilled (and spilled) vast quantities of oil and gas on Alaska’s North Slope and in the North Sea. It positioned itself to rip up Canada’s tar sands to extract its dirty oil, and grabbed a 50 percent interest in Iraq’s rich Rumaila oil field. BP boasted the highest number of explosions and other accidents at its US refineries (several of them deadly), and made the Multinational Monitor’s 10 Worst Companies lists in 2000 and 2005, based on its environmental and human rights record.



Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 16:43:34
A bit more from the same story:



¡öIn 2004, BP engaged in a "massive manipulatio" of the US propane market. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission ordered the company to pay $303 million in criminal penalties and restitution to victims of its trading abuses.



¡öIn 2005, a devastating explosion and fire at a BP refinery in Texas BP killed 15 workers and injured 170 others. In 2007, BP was fined $50 million for environmental damage caused by the refinery blast. In 2009, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration levied an additional fine of $87 million fine¨Cthe largest in OSHA's history¨Cfor the company¡¯s "failure to correct potential hazards faced by employees."



¡öIn 2006, more than 260,000 gallons of crude poured onto the Arctic tundra from a BP pipeline near Prudhoe Bay¡ªthe worst onshore spill in Alaskan history. Whistleblowers had already revealed that BP ignored warnings about leaking and corroded pipelines and had tried to cover up earlier, smaller spills, and Congressional investigations found that negligence and cost-cutting were factors in the 2006 disaster. BP was fined more than $20 million.



¡öIn 2007, the U.S. Justice Department announced a fine of $303 million against BP for "massive manipulation" of energy markets in 2004.



¡öAlso in October 2007, the U.S. Minerals Management Service fined BP for a series of violations related to a near-blowout at an offshore rig in 2002. The violations included inadequate training of BP workers in "well control."

Comment by livingonli on 05/04/2010 16:57:25
BP should get the corporate death penalty.

Comment by Al from WV on 05/04/2010 17:39:20
jaywujing123 and VawVuctitalet appear to be spammers over on the boards. Thought someone with delete powers would like to know.

Comment by wickedpam on 05/04/2010 17:48:26
Hey Al!



Good to see ya! How's it going?

Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 18:15:23
Crap.



Thanks, Al. I'm stuck at work right now...I am unable to deal with it.



Raine - Bob - a little help?





Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 19:28:20
<-- BUNNY!



Comment by TriSec on 05/04/2010 20:26:48
A wee bit of thunder just South of here. Might be dodging the raindrops whilst running for the train.



And I have a committee meeting tonight...last one of the season! (Scouts is done in 2 weeks!)



But, in keeping with my tenure, we haven't made it through the season without a major crisis. Fitzgerald School won't be chartering us again next year. 50 years down the tubes.







Comment by Raine on 05/04/2010 20:51:35
Tri & Trojan -- Incoming !!

Comment by livingonli on 05/04/2010 21:44:01
It was just raining here. I was driving home from my endocrinologist in it.

Comment by BobR on 05/04/2010 21:46:06
Quote by TriSec:

Crap.



Thanks, Al. I'm stuck at work right now...I am unable to deal with it.



Raine - Bob - a little help?





handled.

Comment by BobR on 05/04/2010 21:53:22
Quote by Al from WV:

jaywujing123 and VawVuctitalet appear to be spammers over on the boards. Thought someone with delete powers would like to know.


Thanks for the heads-up.

Comment by trojanrabbit on 05/04/2010 23:23:56
Quote by Raine:

Tri & Trojan -- Incoming !!




My wife was going to watch my nephew's track meet, but it got rained out.



We were at the vet's when the 2nd wave hit. Lucky's eye was closed up last night and even though he looked a bit better this morning, we knew that we wouldn't have a chance to get him to the vet if it got worse all of a sudden. Turns out he has a herpes virus probably all along and this was a particularly bad outbreak. So the poor little guy has the cone on his head and we get to put antibiotics in his eye 3 times a day for a week.



Boy is he pissed right now.



ETA: Cleo has been staring at him from a distance ever since he got home. She must be scared of the cone.

Comment by Raine on 05/05/2010 02:25:12
aww... pobre Lucky!