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chefmike
02-23-2007, 05:00 AM
Support Our Veterans


In one of the great ironies of American politics, it's Democrats--John Murtha, Nancy Pelosi, and Ike Skelton--who demand that the Bush Administration provide our troops with training and equipment before they go into battle and guarantee adequate veterans' services when they return. Given that Republicans have carefully sought to build up support among military families, it comes as a shock that the White House has not kept its commitments to veterans.

On November 17, 2005, Congressman Murtha denounced the occupation of Iraq. He stated: "our military is suffering." Murtha spoke of visiting wounded troops at Bethesda and Walter Reed medical centers and reported that our armed forces were not receiving proper care when they returned to the United States.

To date there have been more than 3100 US military deaths in Iraq and more than 32,000 of our troops have been wounded. (There have been at least 56,000 Iraqi casualties although some counts are much higher.) In January 2006, Economists Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes estimated that the final cost of the Iraq war would range from $750 to $1269 Billion. Of this amount, costs associated with veterans' injuries and payments ranged from $91 to $214 Billion.

In December, after visiting wounded veterans at Walter Reed hospital, President Bush remarked : "We owe them all we can give them -- not only for when they're in harm's way, but when they come home to help them adjust if they have wounds, or help them adjust after their time in service." Regrettably, the actions of the Administration belie Bush's words. The Veterans Administration is swamped by the needs of their constituents: next year, they expect to treat 263,000 Iraq and Afghanistan veterans three times what they projected. Many of the Iraq veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and the VA is unable to provide the necessary mental health services. A recent report indicated: "Veterans have fewer visits with mental health professionals, on average, than they did before. Between 1995 and the first half of fiscal 2006, for example, general psychiatry visits for those in the mental health system dropped, according to VA data." Nonetheless, President Bush's most recent budget "assumes cuts to funding for veterans' health care two years from now."

February 18th, the Washington Post reported that the Iraq War transformed Walter Reed Army Medical Center into" a holding ground for physically and psychologically damaged outpatients." The article depicted harrowing conditions at the hospital: confused, disabled veterans who do not received proper treatment because they are left to wander around the huge campus on their own. And as bad as these circumstances are, they will get worse: "The Pentagon has announced plans to close Walter Reed by 2011."

While there are multiple reasons for the deterioration of veteran's facilities, two stand out: wounds--many caused by deadly roadside bombs, "improvised explosive devices"--are more severe for Iraq casualties and many return severe psychological problems. According to a CBS News report "Thirty-five percent of Iraq veterans received mental health care during their first year home." Another article reported "an assessment of more than 220,000 military personnel returning from Iraq published in the April Journal of the American Medical Association found that nearly one in five has significant mental health problems. Repeated tours of duty increase the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder by 50 percent." DOD estimates that between 15 and 29 percent of Iraq veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.

Given the scope of these problems, why hasn't the White House and DOD acknowledged the extent of the difficulties being experienced by America's veterans? Part of the answer undoubtedly stems from the Administration's reluctance to admit that the war has not been going well: the White House has prohibited pictures of coffins returning from Iraq and told the Department of Veteran's Affairs to not give out names of the wounded. Of course, this is an Administration that tried to get by with a "lean and mean" invasion and occupation: they didn't send enough troops to begin with and consistently argued--via Donald Rumsfeld--that America could get away with doing everything "on the cheap;" as a result, every aspect of the operation has been under funded--except for corporate outsourcing. Finally, George Bush is a stalwart conservative: he doesn't believe in psychological counseling and feels most forms of social services foster "a culture of victimization." His unspoken advice to most of our returning injured is "suck it up, soldier."

As a result of these outrages, America's active and retired military personnel are turning to Democrats for support. On February 21st, Democratic Senators Obama and McCaskill cosponsored legislation "to improve the lives of recovering veterans at Walter Reed" medical center. While only a first step, it's an indication that Democrats intent to ensure that our veterans are supported.

http://smirkingchimp.com/thread/5669

chefmike
02-23-2007, 06:13 AM
And who was one of the biggest donors?

None other than Rosie O'Donnell...Even Imus(who was a major fundraiser, as always) and Bo Dietl were raving about her contribution to this project...

And it's a national disgrace that this much needed facility had to be funded this way...

But Halliburton is gonna be paid before our warriors and vets, as long as the chickenhawks still roost in the whitehouse.

But not to worry...their days are numbered...

600,000 donors help vets get rehab center

January 30, 2007


SAN ANTONIO – Some limped gingerly, some rode in wheelchairs as they made their way into the tent. They had missing arms and legs, faces with no ears or with rebuilt noses, bones rebuilt with steel, shrapnel wounds still visible.

They are the faces of war and its cruel costs, the "wounded warriors" as they were called Monday, and they were the guests of honor at the dedication of a $40 million rehabilitation center built in San Antonio just for them.

One of those soldiers is Spc. Lucas Schmitz, a 22-year-old college student from rural Minnesota, whose right leg was blown off by a bomb in Iraq in July.


"The center will give me the opportunity to adapt," said Schmitz, a member of the Minnesota National Guard. "I'm never going to be the same, and I won't be able to do things exactly like I used to. But I can do it my own way."

Three thousand people braved chilly weather for the two-hour dedication of the Center for the Intrepid, a rehabilitation center for the severely wounded that is touted as unrivaled in the United States.

The center is next door to Brooke Army Medical Center, one of the Army's two primary hospitals for the critically wounded.

Paid for by the donations of 600,000 Americans, the center was the brainchild of Arnold Fisher, a wealthy New York developer whose family is better known for the Fisher Houses for military families.

As of Monday, the 65,000-square-foot, four-story building belongs to the Army.

Fisher, who also began the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund to help wounded troops financially, said the American people are uniquely generous when presented with a need.

"Why wait for the government to do what we can do in half the time at half the cost and twice the quality?" Fisher said.

Hundreds of those who supported the project attended the ceremony, including Rosie O'Donnell, Michelle Pfeiffer and Pfeiffer's husband, David Kelley.

John Mellencamp sang two of his tunes, "Little Pink Houses" and "This is Our Country."

And dozens of government officials were present – U.S. Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and John McCain; Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England; Veterans Affairs Secretary Jim Nicholson; the Marine Corps commandant, Gen. James Conway; and numerous other flag officers.

But the day's focus was on the wounded, who occupied prime spots on the dais and in the front rows.

The center, it was said, was "not a memorial but a monument" to their dedication and sacrifice.

Marine Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke directly to the wounded.

People will say that "he lost an arm, he lost a limb, she lost her sight," Pace told them.

"I object," he said. "You gave your arm. You gave a leg. You gave your sight, as a gift to your nation."

Service members said they can't wait to use the facility.

They said the much smaller therapy gyms in Brooke are not challenging enough, and they are too crowded.


CONTINUED: 1 | 2 NEXT PAGE

article-

http://www.spokesmanreview.com/local/story.asp?ID=171757

chefmike
02-24-2007, 05:56 AM
Walter Reed: Is The Worst Yet to Come?

Severely wounded Iraq veterans struggling to find their rooms, get appointments, or get their paperwork to the right offices. Families unable to communicate with doctors or find housing near the hospital. Mold, rodents and cockroaches in patients' rooms. Hopefully, you have heard about this story by now.

At Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the premier Army hospital in the country, wounded Iraq and Afghanistan veterans were facing inexcusable conditions.

The Army and the Department of Defense saw no need to fix these problems until they were embarrassed by a series of reports in the Washington Post. (Learn more about the issue, and hear IAVA's response to the Walter Reed scandal on NBC Nightly News or Hardball.)

Luckily, some members of Congress are taking the lead on this issue. Senators McCaskill and Obama have proposed legislation to improve the ratio of caseworkers to recovering veterans and establish timelines for repairing substandard facilities. We hope we can count on all other lawmakers to support this bill.

But problems at Walter Reed are just the tip of the iceberg. When these same veterans leave Walter Reed and return to their local clinics and hospitals, they will be entering the chronically underfunded and understaffed Veterans Affairs system -- where these very same veterans will again face the long wait times, aging facilities, and inadequate staffing.

The VA is doing the best they can with the funding they've received. But unfortunately, just as the Bush Admininstration has hedged about the situation at Walter Reed (see Tony Snow's pathetic response to the fiasco), they've also passed the buck on VA funding. Their new budget plan touts an increase in VA funding for 2008. But check the fine print. In 2009 and 2010, just as hundreds of thousands of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans will be first be seeking VA care, the President's budget actually cuts veterans' health care funding. Tell me that doesn't impact the morale of our people on the front lines.

So while troops at Walter Reed can probably look forward to fewer mice and more caseworkers - they should expect more of the same neglect and delays once they leave DC and arrive at the local VA. The worst stories may be yet to come. The real question is, without the cameras and investigative reporters around, will politicians in Washington continue to show real support for these wounded troops?



Paul Rieckhoff is a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom and the Executive Director and Founder of IAVA (Iraq & Afghanistan Veterans of America), the country's first and largest Iraq Veterans group. IAVA is a non-partisan, non-profit organization headquartered in New York City.

article and links/footnotes-

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-rieckhoff/walter-reed-is-the-worst_b_41976.html

chefmike
02-26-2007, 12:25 AM
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