Category Archives: Troops

The civil-military divide

The daily devotes much of its front page today to a PTSD story about soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. It is pitched as a benign, help-them-out article, but with the underlying aren’t-you-glad-you-didn’t-join subtext that furthers the civil-military divide explored in this piece by military historian Robert Kaplan who notes:

"I cannot remember how many times a soldier or marine told me that we don’t want to be pitied as victims, but respected as fighters. That respect is not abundant…"

Indeed, it is almost nonexistent among the political and academic elites with whom most journalists identify. So far, Kaplan says, it hasn’t damaged the American military, but he wonders how long it can go on without doing so. He concludes: "…one thing is certain: We’re fated to find out."

The gratitude campaign

A very cool idea for the troops. A gesture that’s easy to remember. Easy to do. And hard to forget.

UPDATE: A friend likes this one but also suggests others: "The sign language gesture is good to know about and it’s quite nice.  I use several other better known gestures at airports and on the street, a quick salute, or flash the ‘A-OK’ sign with the thumb and index finger, or quietly clap my hands (as in applause). Those all work great to get the message across.  There are others when you stop and think about it such as the gals could blow them a kiss. That could keep a guy awake on night guard duty in Iraq remembering that."

MORE: Active-duty commenters at Op-For weigh in. They say they remember every one. 

Don’t Ask, Don’t Complain

Twenty-eight retired generals and admirals signed a letter to Congress today asking for repeal of the "Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell" law in order to allow gays to serve openly in the military:

"The former officers offer data showing that 65,000 gays and lesbians now serve in the U.S. armed forces, and that there are more than one million gay veterans. ‘They have served our nation honorably,’ the letter states."

The law in question was something of a milestone when it was enacted fourteen years ago. It was a kind of half-a-loaf. But it’s past time to make it a whole loaf. The existing sexual harrassment rules will work for gays, too.

Got a used cell phone?

Want to help a troop in Iraq or Afghanistan call home? Here’s where to send your old phone to aid the call–by a superior service originated by a Massachusettes 13-year-old and her 12-year-old brother.

Incendiary prose

For my money, Norman Mailer’s famous World War II war novel "The Naked and the Dead" just plain stunk. I’m sorry I ever read it. I never read it a second time. I only remember the fashionable cynicism, and the probability that the author never saw combat or had any idea what it was like. Comes this essay reminding me, not only that Mailer’s book was perhaps the first popular literary assault on American military heroism, but that we have the pugnacious little squirt to thank for much more, including the rap generation and the media’s persistent glorification of violence.

The real Ms America

femaleC130gunner.jpg

An HH-60 Pave Hawk .50-caliber gunner, of course. More on Vanessa here.

National Confederate Soldiers Home

It began today, in 1884, in a seven-room house on sixteen acres at 1600 West Sixth Street in Austin. Five years later its backers were soliciting money from Union veterans to run it for the remaining 34 of the 113 veterans that had since occupied the house and an adjoining tent. The state took it over in 1891 and expanded it to twenty-six acres to include a hospital and cottages. Along the way it also housed impoverished veterans of the Spanish-American War and World War I. The last Confederate there died in 1954, age 108. The home was effectively closed in 1963.