-Caveat Lector-

Who cares?
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Posted: December 31, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2002 David H. Hackworth

Sure, "First Human Clone" and "Lott Heads KKK" get max ink. That's what
sells papers, pumps ratings and keeps the conglomerate cash registers
ringing.

But doesn't our media have a moral responsibility to inform the public
about potentially serious disasters just a sand dune away?

Except for last month's all-too-brief CNN report, followed by an equally
brief Associated Press release, apparently not.

We're only weeks away from sending our troops into the poisonous caldron of
Desert Storm II, where casualties could be as catastrophic as the last time
our soldiers stood tall in that unforgiving desert and suffered at least
160,000 disabled and dying WIA (Wounded in Action) and 10,000 KIABGN
(Killed in Action by Government Neglect).

But the injuries were for the most part self-inflicted, caused by U.S.
military incompetence rather than the sort of horror-filled missiles and
shells our soldiers might well run into this time around if and when we
find Saddam's doomsday weapons the hard way.

Concerned members of outfits such as Soldiers For The Truth and the
National Gulf War Resource Center have done everything but torch themselves
into crispy critters to get this story front and center.

SFTT's Robert McMahon has contacted almost every major news outlet in
America, pleading for coverage. "Maybe some parents and spouses would like
to know that Iraq's Republican Guard won't be the most insidious enemy
their loved ones will be facing," he wrote.

The "insidious enemy" McMahon refers to is in part the Iraqi battlefield
itself, a death pit of spent radiation and bio-chem weaponry served up with
a lethal cocktail of local bugs, deadly fumes and poisons that still
haven't been fully identified after a decade of medical research. And then
there's the enemy within, the far-from-adequate bio-chem protection and
detection gear earmarked for our grunts.

According to a Pentagon report, about 130,000 troops who were downwind when
U.S. Army engineers destroyed a weapons depot were exposed to low levels of
sarin. Now epidemiologist Dr. Robert Haley has published a footlocker full
of studies suggesting there might actually be 200,000 Gulf War vets with
illnesses linked to brain damage resulting from exposure to sarin-like
toxins. And many vets and scientists believe other sarin exposures occurred
in January 1991 when allied bombs destroyed Iraqi ammo dumps. A recent U.S.
General Accounting Office report states "serious problems still persist"
regarding the protective masks, suits and detection gear. And a December
2002 Army report states that more than half of its protective masks and
nearly all of its chemical-weapons alarms are either "completely broken or
not fully operational."

A Pentagon spokeswoman has counterattacked, insisting "the Pentagon has
substantially improved individual protective garments, gas masks and
chemical detectors since the Gulf War."

But a line sergeant I'd trust with my life says, "The only improvement I've
seen since the Gulf War is now that we have the M-40 Protective Mask
instead of the M-17A1, we can change our filters without committing
suicide."

Why won't the media or Congress touch this story when we could be only
weeks away from destroying the lives of another generation of American
heroes? Is it the prevailing attitude that war is a nasty business, but our
all-volunteer force signed up for it? Or is it just that no one who could
make a difference cares about blue-collar bio-chem fodder mainly from
metropolitan slums or small-town America?

Maybe the media are displaying such a total lack of interest in whether our
GI Joes and Janes will make it through Saddam's nightmare simply because
most haven't served and can't identify with a fighting force made up of
kids who come from poor families with nada political pull in an America
that's fast becoming too much like England, circa 1600 - a land of serfs
and the privileged who sit above the salt. Kids who are primarily from the
wrong side of the railroad tracks where the used pickup trucks are parked,
who didn't go to Yale, Stanford or the other elite schools in between. The
same kids who've filled body bags and been screwed over by Veterans Affairs
since the Greatest Generation members were given their due during and after
World War II.

And nothing's going to change until the draft calls up each and every one
of America's boys and girls to defend Old Glory.

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