A few months ago, I found a Web site loaded with pictures and videos from Iraq, the sort that usually aren’t seen on the news. I watched insurgent snipers shoot American soldiers and car bombs disintegrate markets, accompanied by tinny music and loud, rhythmic chanting, the soundtrack of the propaganda campaigns. Video cameras focused on empty stretches of road, building anticipation. Humvees rolled into view and the explosions brought mushroom clouds of dirt and smoke and chunks of metal spinning through the air. Other videos and pictures showed insurgents shot dead while planting roadside bombs or killed in firefights and the remains of suicide bombers, people how they’re not meant to be seen, no longer whole. The images sickened me, but their familiarity pulled me in, giving comfort, and I couldn’t stop. I clicked through more frames, hungry for it. This must be what a shot of dope feels like after a long stretch of sobriety. Soothing and nauseating and colored by everything that has come before. My body tingled and my stomach ached, hollow. I stood on weak legs and walked into the kitchen to make dinner. I sliced half an onion before putting the knife down and watching […]
Thursday, January 17th, 2013
I Miss Iraq. I Miss My Gun. I Miss My War.
Author: BRIAN MOCKENHAUPT
Source: Esquire
Publication Date: June 26, 2007, 3:51 PM
Link: I Miss Iraq. I Miss My Gun. I Miss My War.
Source: Esquire
Publication Date: June 26, 2007, 3:51 PM
Link: I Miss Iraq. I Miss My Gun. I Miss My War.
Stephan: This is a searingly honest account. It's hard to get through, but I encourage you to do so. We are putting tens of thousands of men and women through this experience -- in the service of what exactly? And these people, and their families, about one per cent of our population, are going to have a huge impact on our future. Just as the Viet Nam War, both vets, like Sen. Kerry, those marked by working the system to stay out, Dick Cheney; as well as the dead, the maimed physically and psychologically, and their families, have affected the present day. We will be shaped for two generations at least by these wars.