2003 American troops killed in Afghanistan, that is nothing to be proud of. We are proud of these brave men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice for us, and morn and pray for their families and friends who are so devastated by the loss of someone they love. I have no idea of the depth of grief, of the anger, of the pain and heartbreak they have and are experiencing. I do know it is time for us to get out of Afghanistan before we loose too many others for a nation that is so corrupt and so untrustworthy as an ally. Nothing in or about Afghanistan can justify the death of another American. That country, with it's two-faced, back-stabbing, corrupt leadership will lead their people on the path to Hell whether we leave now or at the the end of 2014. Our troops are to precious to be sacrificed for the profit margins of the American military-industrial complex and the profits of any American company that decides to risk doing business in Afghanistan. It is time for Pres Obama and Congress to bring our troops home now!
They have often come in the form of a bright flash, a deafening
thunderclap and a concussive blast wave that leaves the survivors dazed
or unconscious and the wounded and dead sprawled in the wreckage caused
by a roadside bomb, or Improvised Explosive Device, the main cause of
American casualties in Afghanistan.
But whether caused by IED, or rocket-propelled grenade, or automatic
rifle fire, the casualties are mounting toward a grim milestone.
According to a count by the Associated Press, two thousand Americans
have given their lives in Afghanistan during a war that has lasted
almost 11 years.
The Pentagon announced the latest casualty Sunday: Sgt. 1st Class
Riley G. Stephens, a 39-year-old from Tolar, in north central Texas.
Assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group out of Fort
Bragg, N.C., he was killed by enemy small arms fire, the Pentagon said.
American battle casualties have mounted steadily despite a frenetic,
decade-long effort by the Pentagon to defeat or defend against the
deadly IEDs, often primitive devices made of homemade explosives buried
in a plastic bucket, wired to detonation cord with two cast-off
flashlight batteries.
Just over 40 percent of American battle casualties in Afghanistan have been caused by IEDs, according to a count by the Brookings Institution.
Until recently, the Defense Department had routinely published similar
data on the causes of battlefield casualties, but the data was taken off
its website because of its sensitive nature, an official told The
Huffington Post.
While the official Defense Department count of American deaths in
Afghanistan, currently at 1,657, lags behind the AP count, both vastly
understate the tragedy and the true human cost of war.
American battle casualties, including dead and wounded, have mounted
to 55,216 since the United States launched a war in Afghanistan 11 years
ago and then initiated eight years of deadly fighting in Iraq by
invading in 2003.
The roster of American wounded -- over 17,000 in Afghanistan and
32,000 in Iraq -- include some 17,000 young Americans with multiple
severe wounds. Through July 2012, the Defense Department recorded 1,655
amputations due to battle injuries, acording to data drawn up for The
Huffington Post by the U.S. Army Surgeon General. The wounds include
those with disabling genital wounds.
But the carnage spreads far beyond physical wounds. According to the Armed Forces Health Survillance Center,
3,299 American troops who served in Iraq or Afghanistan have been diagnosed with Traumatic Brain Injury
since 2003. That data almost certainly understates the number suffering
from mild, moderate or severe brain injury because the military didn't
begin testing for TBI on the battlefield until 2007. Even now, precise
diagnosis of TBI is not possible, according to the Defense Department's senior TBI specialist.
In cold cash, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have cost American taxpayers $1.4 trillion. But that's only a down payment, according to the Congressional Budget Office,
which estimates that the cost of health care for Iraq and Afghanistan
war veterans will reach between $40 billion and $55 billion.
Other demands for education, housing and pension benefits will drive
the Department of Veterans Affairs' long-term costs into the trillions
of dollars, some officials believe.
But any measure of the war's dead, including some 20,000 Afghan
civilians and perhaps 100,000 Iraqi civilians, will necessarily fall far
short of the true cost of young lives cut off, of grieving families, of
children without a parent.
Nor can the burden on the survivors, the 2.5 million Americans who
served in Iraq or Afghanistan, be properly weighed. Even senior
officials at the Pentagon and the VA say privately they cannot
accurately describe what life will be like for the severely wounded and
their families, who face decades of complex medical care and uncertain
rehabilitation.
While the technology of prosthetic limbs has advanced dramatically
since 2001, the long-term effects of living with artificial limbs is not
known. Nor are the long-term physical and emotional costs of those who have suffered deep burns in IED explosions and are living with extensive and often painful scarring.
Even less is known about the long-term effects of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury. Recent studies have suggested
that some forms of TBI may subject the wounded to a greater likelihood
of degenerative brain disease later in life. But few long-term studies
have been completed and the Obama administration recently announced a
$100 million boost in research on military brain injury.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/30/casualties-afghanistan-war_n_1927691.html?utm_hp_ref=daily-brief?utm_source=DailyBrief&utm_campaign=100112&utm_medium=email&utm_content=NewsEntry&utm_term=Daily%20Brief
No comments:
Post a Comment