The Cost Of War: Frequently asked questions that shouldn't be.

in #thecostofwar7 years ago

"How many people did you kill?"

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Aside from being very distasteful to ask, it is insulting. I will start with mentioning that in two services and 12 years I never killed anyone. I know many that have and the only time they talk about it is when it is on their terms. This is NOT the only struggle of veterans. The idea that it is some validation is outrageous. We are not Hollywood actors.

Late summer of 2010, my friend and I were having a smoke at morning prayer time (this is denoted by the singing every morning before the sun rises). We were standing outside of Al Faw palace in Baghdad and the call to prayer began playing all over. After completion, there was only a moment of silence before a shock from a massive explosion hit. Every cell in my body felt it. A massive plume of smoke began to rise that you could only see because the light from the city (still dark at this time) could not pass through the opaque smoke. I was trying to keep my calm about watching the moment that I suspected was the last for many. I broke the silence to my friend, but all I could say was "how many do you think just got it?". Drew is a much better man than I am and corrected me and let me know that it was messed up to take something like this so lightly. We stayed awkwardly silent after that.

The truth is I hadn't taken it lightly, I just didn't know how to react. It turned out to be a vehicle borne improvised explosive device that was used, the death count was staggering with 3 times that amount in severe injuries. I watched in direct line of sight, the last moments of many lives and although not the worst thing I have seen, it was an experience that deeply affected me. My reaction cannot be justified, how could I have been so careless with life? I have a mind for numbers and remember them very well, so naturally I started doing the math in my head, figuring out just how many lives were affected by the blast. 60+ dead, 120 parents that lost a child, 240 grandparents that lost a grandchild, countless children that lost a parent, wives, husbands, cousins, aunts, uncles, friends, all lost someone in that blast. I finally had perspective on the effects of people being mass murdered before my eyes.

My point in telling the story is to present the point that experiences vary, and they are hard to explain to people at times. There is nothing wrong with asking questions, but be kind, our experiences are difficult. Some much more difficult than others, and its not a contest to see who had it worse. We were sent into bad circumstances, we survived those circumstances. To be asked such a thoughtless question "so how many people did you kill?", it trivializes much of the struggle and it is not appropriate, especially to those that have had the misfortune of taking life.

I once demonstrated this to a middle aged woman that asked slightly differently, "how many people did you see die?", this question was more personal because I hadn't killed anyone, but I have seen many die. She did it smugly as if anything I would say was entertainment for her, and it was in front of several other people at a social gathering. There was a silence for a moment, and then the rage inside me that she would carelessly ask this question peaked and I replied with a question "how many times has your husband f$%ked you in the @$S?". Her husband was sitting next to her was noticeably embarrassed and she was trying to get angry and I think it set in just how inappropriate the question was. Clearly, I left shortly after.

I am not advocating for my reaction and I wish I had handled it differently. I do think there is some value in the reaction because none of us would question that carelessly asking a woman about her sex life with her husband sitting next to her with other people around, is extremely rude and inappropriate. Perhaps, people will learn that this too is something that is inappropriate in social circles unless it is brought up by the primary source, the veteran.

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Some people think that war is just entertaiment. They live in their own bubble were everything is perceived like entertainment. To them war, poverty, unjustice and so many other things are just some funny rumor they heard. I appreciate your honesty. You replied to her question perfectly.

Fortunately, this entire experience made me come to grips with violence on behalf of the state and I am trying to display that there is a cost that people are out of touch with. That cost needs to be the first consideration going into a fight, not a blind terrorist hunt at any cost of life as long as it can be funded.

How many Us soldiers and Iraqis died after 9/11, all because of lie that Iraq had weapons of mass desruction. Elite and their puppets politicians are piece of shit that don't care about consequences of war. They won't go to that war, they will be sunning on beach and making press conferences on how they love troops. They don't care about soldiers during the war and specialy after the war. But you know that better then me.

Had to google that phrase. It says impassioned rant. I know what is rant, but it wasn't impassionated at all. I said it with my heart and passion.

Not how I meant it. I was agreeing completely. I suppose language changes it's meaning in different places. I would actually say this in person and it would be meant to affirm that I am feeling what you're saying and find no fault in it. Sorry for the confusion.

It's my bad. I googled word impassionated, it means with passion. Sorry, I thought it meant opposite with no passion :)

Wow. Nice post. Some of the apathy towards the body count I think has to do with that "Hero" fixation that a lot of patriotic people have. They are still under the impression that the USA is on Gods side, so can do no wrong. They are in love with the narrative that we "defended" our country, and the US service members who where killed or injured romantically gave their lives or health out of the love of freedom and the American Dream.
The on ground reality of course is far different. Many of us committed murder and atrocities in frustration, hatred and anger, while our buddy's were killed because the population had similar attitudes towards us. The USA was never in any danger from Iraq, and the people of Iraq didn't want us there. Never been to Afghanistan, but its probably the same story over there.

It isn't just our death count, there are over a million people that have been killed as a result of the war. Thats too much to justify.

Agreed, and if you count Syria, which happened as a direct result of our actions in Iraq, the death toll is still growing.

War is terrible for everyone involved. Thanks for the article.

Thank you for taking time to read it. I hope it is at least something for you to consider, as there are so many veterans that lose their battle every day and end their own lives. We have become symptom to a sickness in the world. I am hoping that people realize that we can cure that sickness and the symptoms will fade in time.

War is an event that I wish has never happened, could stop happening and then never happen again. I'm sorry people haven't got the common sense to have not asked such inappropriate stupid questions. Thanks for a great post, perhaps by sharing this someone will learn. Wishing you the very best.

Thanks, this was the second Cost of War I have done and they will continue to progress.

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