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           |  | Beating of War Drums
 
 Paul Balles
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 10, 2012  
 Either war is obsolete or men are. --Buckminster Fuller
 Some of 
	the important news gets reported quickly and is then forgotten just as 
	hurriedly. The following, from CBS Chicago, reported on May 10, 2012, 
	provides an example of an under-reported event:
 
 “A handful of 
	soldiers gathered Thursday morning at Vietnam Veterans Memorial Park on the 
	Chicago River, to announce their opposition to NATO, and announce that 
	they’re giving back their service medals on Sunday, at the start of the NATO 
	summit.”
 
 One such veteran, former Army Ranger Graham Clumpner, spoke 
	to CBS of his disenchantment:
 
 “I wanted so badly to believe in the 
	idea of America. I wanted to believe that every war we ever fought, we won; 
	that we were always just; that we were always doing the right thing, and 
	trying to help, and save, and protect,” said Clumpner, who was deployed 
	twice to Afghanistan. “And I bought into it hook, line, and sinker.”
 
 Clumpner came to the realization that haunts many veterans during or after 
	their stints on the battlefields. Jose Narosky tagged the realization made 
	by many, reporting that “In war, there are no unwounded soldiers.”
 
 Why do our men in uniform start out believing that they’re “always doing the 
	right thing, and trying to help, and save, and protect” and end up feeling 
	deceived and disheartened.
 
 The Greek philosopher Aristotle captured 
	a mantra that once had merit but later became an empty slogan: “We make war 
	that we may live in peace.”
 
 The truth is closer to what Benjamin 
	Franklin believed, that “there never was a good war or a bad peace.”
 
 Our wars are no longer simply body-counts of our warriors killed or injured 
	on the battlefield.  We now must deal with what has come to be known as 
	“Post-traumatic stress disorder” (PTSD) and with suicides.
 
 Chaplain 
	Mark Worrell noted that “This year, 2012, there have been more suicides in 
	the Army than combat deaths,"
 
 Reported Jamie Crawford: “To 
	date, the Army has confirmed 120 suicides for both active and non-active 
	duty soldiers in 2012 with 67 other deaths suspected as suicides, but still 
	under investigation. Twenty-five of those were attributed to soldiers who 
	did not have any previous deployments. The Army reported 242 suicides in 
	2009, 305 in 2010 and 283 in 2011.”
 
 Comments Gen. Lloyd J. Austin 
	III, Vice Chief of Staff of the Army, “Suicide is the toughest enemy I have 
	faced in my 37 years in the Army"
 
 Adds Chaplin Worrell “The Army 
	has been struggling to deal with the suicide problem since numbers began 
	rising in 2004. This year, the average is nearly one soldier suicide a day.”
 
 Nermeen Shaikh of Democracy Now notes that “The reasons for the 
	increase in suicides are not fully understood. Among explanations, studies 
	have pointed to combat exposure, post-traumatic stress, misuse of 
	prescription medications, and personal financial problems.”
 
 Explains Dr. Alex Liungerman, “People who’ve survived suicide attempts have 
	reported wanting not so much to die as to stop living, a strange dichotomy 
	but a valid one nevertheless... Pain mixed with guilt, anger, and regret 
	makes for a bitter drink.”
 
 Adds Dr. Charles Raison, “When a person 
	is depressed, the entire world is disturbed and distressed, so there is 
	nowhere to escape. And it is this fact that makes suicide so seductive, 
	because it seems to offer the one available escape option.”
 
 Observed Arthur Koestler, “The most persistent sound which reverberates 
	through men's history is the beating of war drums.”
 
 The best way to 
	end military suicides is to silence the drums of American military 
	adventurism.
   
 
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