Stopping the War Machine: Military
Recruiters Must Be Confronted
by Ron Kovic
28 May 2008
As
a former United States Marine Corps sergeant who was shot and
paralyzed from my mid-chest down during my second tour of duty in
Vietnam on Jan. 20, 1968, I am sending my complete support and
admiration to all those now involved in the courageous struggle to
stop military recruitment in Berkeley and across the country.
Not since the Vietnam War protests of
the late 1960s has there been a cause more just than the one you are
now engaged in. Who knows better the deep immorality and deception
of military recruiters than those of us who, decades ago, entered
those same recruiting offices with our fathers, believing in our
hearts that we were being told the truth — only to discover later we
had been deceived and terribly betrayed? Many of us paid for that
deceit with our lives, years of suffering and bodies and minds that
were never the same again. If only someone had warned us, if only
someone had had the courage to speak out against the madness that we
were being led into, if only someone could have protected us from
the recruiters whose only wish was to make their quota, send us to
boot camp and hide from us the dark secret of the nightmare which
awaited us all.
Over the past five years, I have
watched in horror the mirror image of another Vietnam unfolding in
Iraq. So many similarities, so many things said that remind me of
that war 30 years ago which left me paralyzed and confined to a
wheelchair for life. Refusing to learn from the lessons of Vietnam,
our government continues to pursue a policy of deception,
distortion, manipulation and denial, doing everything it can to hide
from the American people their true intentions and agenda in Iraq.
As we pass the fifth anniversary of the start of this tragic and
senseless war, I cannot help but think of the young men and women
who have been wounded, nearly 30,000, flooding Walter Reed,
Bethesda, Brooke Army Medical Center and veterans hospitals all
across our country. Paraplegics, amputees, burn victims, the
blinded, shocked and stunned, brain-damaged and psychologically
stressed, a whole new generation of severely maimed men and women
who were not even born when I came home wounded to the Bronx
Veterans Hospital in New York in 1968.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which afflicted so many of us
after Vietnam, is just now beginning to appear among soldiers
recently returned from the current war. For some the agony and
suffering, the sleepless nights, anxiety attacks and awful bouts of
insomnia, alienation, anger and rage will last for decades — if not
their whole lives. They will be trapped in a permanent nightmare of
that war, of killing another man, a child, watching a friend die …
fighting against an enemy that can never be seen, while at any
moment someone, a child, a woman, an old man — anyone — might kill
them.
These traumas return home with us and we carry them, sometimes
hidden, for agonizing decades. They deeply impact our daily lives,
and the lives closest to us. To kill another human being, to take
another life out of this world with one pull of a trigger, is
something that never leaves you. It is as if a part of you dies with
that person. If you choose to keep on living, there may be a
healing, and even hope and happiness again, but that scar and memory
and sorrow will be with you forever. Why did the recruiters never
mention these things? This was never in the slick pamphlets they
gave us.
Some of these veterans are showing up at homeless shelters around
our country, while others have begun to courageously speak out
against the senselessness and insanity of this war and to demand
answers from the leaders who sent them there. During the 2004
Democratic National Convention, returning soldiers formed a group
called Iraq Veterans Against the War, just as we had marched in
Miami in August of 1972 as Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Still
others have refused deployment to Iraq, gone to Canada and begun
resisting this immoral and illegal war. Like many other Americans, I
have seen them on television or at the local veterans hospitals, but
for the most part, they remain hidden like the flag-draped caskets
of our dead returned to Dover Air Force Base in the dark of night,
as this administration continues to pursue a policy of censorship,
tightly controlling the images coming out of that war and rarely
allowing the human cost of its policy to be seen.
Many of us promised ourselves long
ago that we would never allow what happened to us in Vietnam to
happen again. We had an obligation, a responsibility, as citizens,
as Americans, as human beings, to raise our voices in protest. We
could never forget the hospitals, the intensive-care wards, the
wounded all around us fighting for their lives, those long and
painful years after we came home, those lonely nights. There were
lives to save on both sides, young men and women who would be
disfigured and maimed, mothers and fathers who would lose their sons
and daughters, wives and other loved ones who would suffer for
decades to come if we did not do everything we could to stop the
momentum of this madness.
Mario Savio once said, “There’s a
time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you
so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively
take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon
the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got
to make it stop! And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run
it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free the machine
will be prevented from working at all.”
It is time to stop the war machine.
It is time for bold and daring action on the part of us all.
Precious lives are at stake, both American and Iraqi, and military
recruiters must be confronted at every turn, in every high school,
every campus, every recruiting office, on every street corner, in
every town and city across America. In no uncertain terms we must
make it clear to them that by their actions they represent a threat
to our community, to our children and all that we cherish. We must
explain to them that condemning our young men and women to their
death, setting them up to be horribly maimed, and psychologically
damaged in a senseless and immoral war, is wrong and unpatriotic and
will not be tolerated by Berkeley — or, for that matter, any town or
city in the United States.
The days of deceiving, manipulating and victimizing our young people
are over. We have had enough, and I strongly encourage all of you to
use every means of creative, nonviolent civil disobedience to stop
military recruitment all across our country. I stand with you in
this important and courageous fight, and I am confident your actions
in the days ahead will inspire countless others across our country
to do everything they can to end this deeply immoral and illegal
war.
(Note: This statement
represents portions of several essays and writings I have done over
the past five years.-R.K.)
Paralyzed from the chest down
by Vietnam War wounds, and confined to a wheelchair for almost 40
years, Ron Kovic stands as a symbol of the brutality of war. He also
exemplifies a man’s ability to transform such tragedy into a
lifelong pursuit of peace—for himself and his country.
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