Where Will They Get the Troops?
Preparing Undeployables for the Afghan Front
As the Obama administration debates whether to send tens of thousands of extra troops to Afghanistan, an already overstretched military is increasingly struggling to meet its deployment numbers. Surprisingly, one place it seems to be targeting is military personnel who go absent without leave (AWOL) and then are caught or turn themselves in.
Hidden behind the gates of military bases across the U.S., troops facing AWOL and desertion charges regularly find themselves in the hands of a military that metes out informal, open-ended punishments by forcing them to wait months -- sometimes more than a year -- to face military justice. In the meantime, some of these soldiers are offered a free pass out of this legal limbo as long as they agree to deploy to Afghanistan or Iraq -- even if they have been diagnosed with severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
In August 2008 at TomDispatch.com, we reported on the deplorable conditions at the 82nd Replacement Barracks at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. There, more than 50 members of Echo Platoon of the 82nd Airborne Division's 82nd Replacement Detachment were being held while awaiting AWOL and desertion charges. Investigations launched since then -- in part in response to our article -- have revealed that the plight of members of Echo Platoon is not an isolated one. It is, in fact, disturbingly commonplace on other bases throughout the United States. And it is from these "holdover units," filled with disgruntled soldiers who have gone AWOL, many of whom are struggling with PTSD from previous deployments in war zones, that the military is hoping to help meet its manpower needs for Afghanistan.
Nightmare in Echo Platoon
On August 16th, determined to put an end to unbearable mental and psychological pain, Private Timothy Rich, while on 24-hour suicide watch, attempted to jump to his death from the roof of Echo Platoon's barracks (where he had been held since being arrested for going AWOL). Prior to his suicide attempt, Rich had been offered amnesty by the military in exchange for agreeing to deploy to Afghanistan or Iraq.
He had already been through a hellish year awaiting a discharge and treatment for mental health problems. "I want to leave here very bad," he explained. "For four months they have been telling me that I'll get out next week. I didn't see an end to it, so I figured I'd try and end it myself."
He fell three stories, bouncing off a tree, before hitting the ground and cracking his spine. The military gave him a back brace, psychotropic drugs, and put him on a renewed, 24-hour suicide watch.
While he has recently been discharged from the military, Rich was not atypical of the soldiers of Echo Platoon, some forced to wait a year or more in legal limbo -- in dilapidated buildings under the authority of abusive commanders -- for legal proceedings to begin, and many struggling with mental illness or PTSD from previous deployments. As Specialist Dustin Stevens told us last August: "[It's] horrible here. We are treated like animals. Some of us are going crazy, some are sick. There are people here who should be in mental hospitals. And the way I see it, I did nothing wrong."
Shortly after our story was published, Stevens told us that at least half a dozen soldiers in the platoon, including him, were suddenly given trial dates. Although he was likely to be found guilty and face punishment, Stevens claimed to be "relieved" to have an end in sight. Soon after, according to Echo Platoon informants, their barracks were condemned as a result of a military investigation of the site and, on October 19th, the platoon itself was disbanded.
Recently, due possibly to the attention his story drew to the mistreatment and indefinite detention soldiers were facing in Echo Platoon, Stevens was informed by the military he would be "chaptered out" -- in other words, given an administrative discharge from the Army -- and will not be forced to serve formal prison time.
James Branum, Stevens' civilian lawyer, as well as the legal adviser to the G.I. Rights Hotline of Oklahoma and co-chair of the Military Law Task Force (MLTF), summed developments up this way: "After repeated complaints and congressional inquiry, Echo Platoon was shut down. The whole place was shut down. Everyone was scattered to other units. If your old unit still exists, they are sending you to your old unit. We know that at least one of the NCOs [non-commissioned officers] in charge of Echo Platoon was fired. I think this is a positive thing."
Echoes of Echo
The troubling state of affairs in Echo Platoon may only have been the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Army holdover units. Evidence suggests that soldiers being held on other bases in the United States for AWOL and desertion face similar apathy or intentional neglect - and that they, too, are often left with the choice between living in legal limbo or agreeing to be sent to a war zone.
Scott Wildman, a former Army Specialist, went AWOL in 2007 when he was unable to receive adequate help for severe PTSD sustained after a 15-month deployment to Iraq. In February 2009, he finally turned himself in at Fort Lewis in Washington State, only to find himself lost in a labyrinthine bureaucracy. For the first four months, he was not allowed to leave a confined area and was forbidden even to walk around by himself.
Here's
how he describes his experience: "I was flipping out. My wife had left
me while I was over there. I hadn't seen my kids in a couple years. I
came home and tried to get help. At Fort Lewis, they do not care about
you. I had been diagnosed by civilian and military doctors with severe
depression, PTSD, and severe anxiety. When you are at the unit, they
make fun of you. They crack PTSD jokes. They all have it too, but
they're too cool."
During the eight months he has been held at Fort Lewis, Wildman claims he has suffered verbal abuse and substandard mental healthcare. "The command treated me like dirt. My commander ignored me for the first couple months until my roommate jumped me. They'll make sure you're in the room and call you a 'bunch of PTSD pussies.'"
Four weeks ago, Wildman was informed that he would be court-martialed, but was not given a trial date. Feeling he had no other choice, he went AWOL again and remains so today.
"I'd been going to see some military counselors, but we weren't making progress on the real problem.... They give us classes on calm and peacefulness, but they are right near the shooting ranges. There's gunfire and explosions all around, people being screamed at all the time because it's infantry. It's not a good place for someone with [mental health] issues."
At one point, despite a confidentiality protocol that should have prevented it, Wildman's commanders went through his medical evaluations and found out that he had been involved in the accidental killing of two little girls in Iraq. They proceeded to needle him by threatening to write him up for war crimes.
Explaining why he once again went AWOL, Wildman says, "I didn't know what was going to happen next. I had to remove myself from that situation."
"Examples of how the military is treating soldiers, like the case of Wildman, are common," comments Kathleen Gilberd, co-chair of the MLTF. She also points out that the Army, stretched thin by years of multiple deployments to two war zones, has taken to downplaying potentially severe medical conditions to keep soldiers eligible for service overseas. It is commonplace, she reports, for formerly AWOL soldiers to be "bribed" with offers of having all charges, or potential charges, dropped, as long as they accept deployment to Iraq or Afghanistan.
"A lot of folks who are under-diagnosed or misdiagnosed are being deployed second and third times," she adds. "Barrier mechanisms that should prevent this from happening are being routinely ignored... If someone is on psychotropic medication or is diagnosed with a fresh psychiatric condition, there should be a 90-day observation period and delay, under DOD [Department of Defense] policy."
Remarkably, that sometimes-ignored 90-day hold period for military personnel on psychotropic medications does not always apply to soldiers who are diagnosed with traumatic brain injury (TBI) of a sort commonly caused by roadside bombs. According to an Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center analysis, reported in the Denver Post in August 2008, more than "43,000 service members -- two-thirds of them in the Army or Army Reserve -- were classified as nondeployable for medical reasons three months before they deployed" to Iraq. The process, if anything, only seems to be accelerating when it comes to Afghanistan.
Deploying the Undeployables
Not all soldiers go AWOL in order to save their minds and bodies. Some are trying to save their families. One soldier held in Bravo Platoon, a holdover unit of the 3rd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs (who did not want his name made public) disclosed that, having returned from service in Iraq, he was told he would soon be redeployed there. Because his mother was ill, he refused and was threatened with a court martial.
"When I turned myself in, I submitted a binder with letters from my mom's doctors and state officials that made clear that I needed to be home to take care of my mother. At that time, they had me on restriction and lockdown 24/7 to keep me from leaving again. Later they punished me. I was assigned extra duty and received a rank reduction from E3 to a private. I was treated like crap."
He and the other soldiers in his holdover platoon were subjected to verbal abuse and made to do menial jobs. He claimed that he was threatened daily with being sent to the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, the military's maximum security correctional facility -- and then was urged to agree to go back to Iraq instead. It made no difference that he had "no-go" orders from doctors at Fort Carson exempting him from overseas deployment.
His commander promised him a clean slate if he would redeploy to Iraq, insisting that the only alternative was a court-martial. Despite a regimen of humiliation, he stood his ground and was finally discharged for family hardship in September 2008. There were at least 11 other soldiers then in Bravo Platoon. Like their counterparts in Echo, most were told that their records would be wiped clean once they agreed to redeploy. The alternative was a non-judicial punishment, followed by a court-martial some months down the line.
As he tells it, Sergeant Heath Carter, originally based at Fort Polk, Louisiana, found himself torn between pressing family needs and an indifferent military command. On returning from the invasion of Iraq, he discovered his daughter living in what he believed to be an unsafe environment. Heath and his new wife started consulting attorneys in order to secure custody of the child. Precisely during this time, the military began changing Carter's duty station. He was moved from Fort Polk to Fort Huachuca, Arizona, then on to Fort Stewart, Georgia, reducing his chances of gaining custody.
Convinced that this was a crucial matter for his daughter, he requested compassionate reassignment to Fort Leavenworth, Missouri, about two hours away from her. His appeals to the military command, to his chaplain, even to his congressman failed. In May 2007, having run out of options, he went AWOL from Fort Stewart, heading home to fight for custody, which he won.
This January 25th, however, he was arrested at his home by Military Police, who flew him back to Fort Stewart where he has been awaiting charges for the past eight months. Being a sergeant, he is in a regular unit, not a holdover one. Initially, his commander assured him he would be sent home within a month and a half. Several months later, the same commander decided to court-martial him.
Carter feels frustrated. "If they had done that in the beginning, I would have been home by now. It's taken this long for them to decide. Now I have to wait for the court-martial. If we had known it would take this long, my family could have moved down here. Every time I ask when I'll have a trial, they say it's only going to be another two weeks. I get the feeling they're lying. They've messed with my pay. They're trying to push me to do something wrong."
His ordeal has forced Carter to reflect on America's wars. Once, he admits, he was proud of his mission in Iraq. Now, he sees things differently. "I don't think there is any reason for us to be there except for oil."
His wife, who witnessed her husband's callous treatment, says, "He's been there [Iraq], done that, and seen horrible, terrible things, so of course he doesn't want to go back."
While the Obama administration decides how many thousands of troops to send to Afghanistan, service men and women are already facing repeated deployments, oftentimes while having already been diagnosed with medical conditions that should render them unfit for deployment.
Nothing has changed for these beleaguered troops, except the venue of their maltreatment and the desperation with which the military is now struggling to make the necessary deployment numbers as it continues to fight two endless wars.
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29 Comments so far
Show AllI have a couple of ideas where they can get fresh meat from but, of course, the powers that be would never draw from these [cest]pools:
1. Congresshores and their offspring;
2. Churches & synagogues (leave the mosques alone!);
3. The Republican Party; and
3. Yahoo Answers.
That ought to give 'em enough to invade, conquer, pillage, mame, massacre and destroy for a while.
Just a few weeks ago there were articles in the news saying that the military for the first time in years had met its full quota of recruits. It was because of the economy and unemployment, of course. And as the economic plight of ordinary Americans appears that it will continue unabated, I do not think that finding more troops will be a problem. Tragic.
Tom Engelhardt provides an important foreword for the Tom Dispatch copy of this article by Dahr Jamail and Sarah Lazare.
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175136/jamail_and_lazare_who_will_be_sent_to_afghanistan_
Edit: This above url was automatically split over two lines, for it was posted on a single line. However, I got the link because of seeing the article was also posted at GlobalResearch.ca, which provided a link to the TD homepage, where the article (just minutes ago) was the first one to appear. People not wanting to copy and paste the split url, above, can just go to the TD homepage.
The troops will come from the current economic model in which wealth rises to the top leaving lots of under-educated, no other options but jail or military folks signing up to fight for their country. Wave a flag and shed a tear!!
Have no fear, the captains of the Wall Street/Military Industrial Complex/Homeland Security industry know full well how to guide the ship to where they want it. Plus, they own the spineless selected officials in Washington, DC. They will have all they troops they need if they so desire.
In an all volunteer army, PTSD is a self inflicted wound.
Its like volunteering to be a prostitute, then balking because you might have to have sex with strangers.
Where Will They Get the Troops?
The Great Republican/Democrat Wet Dream is to bring back the draft. They won't do it because it is tantamount to political suicide. However, they want the draft back so badly they can taste it and smell it. Der Fuhrer Obama could invade and occupy any nation he wants if he had conscription. BTW - when Der Fuhrer showed up at Dover recently to have his picture taken with a military casket, looking like one of those dull, crummy statues you see in a city park of some long forgotten crooked politician, that was the unmistakable signal for big time escalation in Afghanistan.
If a universal draft was indeed instituted, I believe the imperial wars would end very quickly. Right now we have an indirect draft for unemployed people, poor people and people of color. No one cares when poor folks die. When the sons of the wealthy start to come back in body bags, the tune will change very quickly.
A poster below's knee jerk reaction is that I am advocating escalation, however he did not read my post fully - in a twisted way the draft would bring about the imperial wars. It might even bring about massive civil disobedience.
you are advocating violation of the ban on involuntary servitude supposedly enshrined in that "goddamn piece of paper."
although you are correct about the de facto "draft" due to low employment, these folk still have a choice.
Yes they do have a choice: in many cases they have a choice of: Prison, Unemployment, or the Military.
No worries though, a draft will not be happening. The current arrangement of having a huge disproportionate number of poor whites, poor blacks, and latinos as imperial cannon fodder suits the Oligarchy just fine. It fits perfectly with the new model of social apartheid economics.
The answer to that question is two simple words: RISING UNEMPLOYMENT !
This is sad. As a country, we should be spending money on universal healthcare, education, and improving unsustainable lifestyle and farming practices here. Instead, what we get is a government led by the nose-ring by big coroporations into endless wars. If those defense industry profiteers could literally grind up people - whether they be our troops or the millions of innocents abroad who are in our line of fire - in exchange for money, they would.
Oh wait. They are.
If they deploy more PTSD cases, they'll get more problems than being short a few personnel.
But that cannot possibly have occurred to me first; command is apparently willing to endure the results to get more nominal boots on the ground.
REAL NEWS recently aired an interview with Ellsberg in which E says that brass likely knows the war is botched and couldn't be won with a half-million troops, but stumbles on for nuances of in-house politics, hoping it falls apart on someone else's watch.
Once those UI benefits run out and Unemployment reaches some 25 percent. Once all the Food banks shelves are emptied and State Governments start cutting Food Stamps and Welfare payments to balance their budgets.
You will have people begging to get into the Military.
GwNorth, it is already happening. I am sorry that the USA is filled with a cornfed electorate while the rest of who are above it are like raisins in a muffin. I just hope your country Canada isn't next in line.
Why do you think the administration is NOT setting up WPA-like programs?
Some say that the lack of jobs is a not-quite-so-subtle intentional ploy to push any young person wanting work to join the military.
What I do think is that if a draft had existed in 2000 and after, the Bushcos would NOT have dared to even think about starting any foreign wars.
But I could be wrong !
Re-instate the draft for everyone, not just the poorer classes. Once the children of the wealthy are drafted, we will see a completely different attitude.
These war-mongering vampires will fight to the last drop of your blood; when it is the blood of their family, somehow the story changes.
Of course this will not happen, the record unemployment rates will fill the ranks with new cannon fodder. As well as the war profiteers and mercenaries will fill the rest fo the gap. When it comes to imperial agression, the budget is unlimited.
"Re-instate the draft for everyone"
and bring back slavery while you're at it.
VDB
Having been a victim of the military draft in the 60s and as a consequence having ended up in Vietnam, I have to agree that it was an injustice. I think it would be a better idea if our politicians such as Charles Rangel, who is a proponent of the draft, would concentrate less upon bringing back the draft and instead have both parties [or at least the Democrats] focusing their efforts on cutting off the funds for those idiotic and most unnecessary occupations.
Errol-
From previous postings, I'm aware of your history and always read your comments with respect. My choice on the draft was to leave the country, friends, family. We are both veterans, but with different scars.
Peace and solidarity.
Think outside the box for a moment there quickdraw. Re-read my post again and think agbout it before you respond emotionally. Put it in context and think about it for a while.
I agree with the rest of your statement, but find even a facetious suggestion to re-instate the draft tasteless. Where were you in the 60's?
Would you agree that socialism does not entail submission of the individual to the state, but rather state service to the individual?
ps. I live outside the box.
As the article states, soldiers are finally coming to their senses by going AWOL and deserting from their units. The hope is that more of them will come to the realization of former Marine Dan Felushko who deserted from his unit in 2003. As he said in the book Desertion and the American Soldier: 1776-2006 by Robert Fantina:
"I did not want 'Died, deluded in Iraq' over my gravestone."
The same thing, of course, should also apply to those soldiers currently serving the war machine in Afghanistan.
All this begs the question of why this [alleged] antiwar president is not saluting and praising these soldiers instead of the ones who are blindly obeying, like robots, the orders that they are given by the the military, which is to aid and to take part in the occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Soldiers-resist the American empire.
Simple. More troops? More dupes!
Moveon.org should immediately issue a statement asking their members to turn over their eligible children to the military and they should also run ads on television embarrassing other Ardent Obama Supporters who have yet to encourage their sons and daughters to join. It's time for the elitists who are willing to sacrifice other people's children in order to appear PC in their support for the Man of Change to put up or shut up.
of course, unemployment is greatly helping the military get their cannon fodder
The might borrow them from China as they have the money.
Where Will They Get the Troops?
From the desperate of the third world and of course there are always Blackwater type mercenaries @ $100,000/year. (No that's not what they make, that's what Blackwater makes off of them)
Poet
Yep, imperial mercenaries. Funds for imperial adventures are unlimited.