The below op-ed appeared on 11/11/2010 on The Hill congressional blog.
By Sarah Edkins
Honor the warrior, not the war.
That’s Iraq Veterans Against the War’s message this Veterans Day, as thousands of our country’s service men and women suffer in silence in hospital beds, homeless shelters, and even combat zones from the debilitating effects of Post‐Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), and Military Sexual Trauma (MST). Today, as many as fifty percent of our nation’s service members who have served deployments to Iraq or Afghanistan experience PTSD, and twelve‐to‐seventeen percent are using some kind of psychiatric drug in combat zones. Despite repeated statements by government officials regarding their concern for these silent illnesses, hoards of traumatized troops are deployed or denied appropriate medical care every day.
U.S. Army Specialist Jeff Hanks is a perfect example. After serving two tours of duty—one in Iraq and one in Afghanistan—Hanks returned home to Kentucky on leave in September and found his life turned upside down. He experienced extreme discomfort in large crowds, panic attacks, detachment from his family, and difficulty controlling his anger. Hanks sought medical help on two military bases and was scheduled for a TBI screening when his commanding officers sent down the order for deployment; they had called the Fort Campbell medical center and requested immediate clearance for Jeff. He had no other choice but to leave the base and has been AWOL since October 7.
Today, with the help of IVAW, GI rights counselors, civilian doctors, and a cohort of civilian supporters, Jeff Hanks will turn himself in to the authorities at Fort Campbell, where he faces potential legal repercussions. Before his official return to the base, Hanks will give a press conference outside Fort Campbell as part of IVAW’s Operation Recovery campaign to speak out about the U.S. Military’s abuses of the right to heal. “Now they just want to get rid of me,” Hanks told IVAW in a phone call this week. “But I’m not going anywhere. I may not be in uniform, but I’m not going to shut up. At this point, I want to help other soldiers like me.”
So this Veterans Day, while you watch city‐wide parades of soldiers, marines, sailors, airmen, and nurses, think of those like Jeff Hanks who have served our country faithfully and now need the help and supports they were promised. I, for one, cannot think of any better way to honor our nation’s service men and women than returning their right to heal.