Several weeks ago I watched a wonderful Bill Moyers interview on PBS with Oliver Stone, noted filmmaker and Vietnam veteran. The whole interview was great, but a figure Moyers used at the beginning was just stunning -- for the implications it has for soldiers with PTSD and their families.
Moyers said:
"...I read a report based on military records which revealed that from 2003 to 2008 some 43,000 troops had been sent to Iraq and Afghanistan despite having been classified as "non-deployable" for medical reasons. In plain English, they weren't healthy enough to go, but were sent, anyway."
Yowser. It's hard to imagine a circumstance in which being considered unfit to serve for medical reasons, and being deployed anyway, improves your situation. It sounds like all it would do is reinforce the difficulties you were already having, or pile more trauma on top of the pre-existing trauma.
Additionally, troops who have fought in Iraq, when they're deployed next to Afghanistan, find that to be a completely different experience. So Afghanistan for them isn't "more of the same," it's new and different, with all the challenges that implies.
(See news report from November 29, 2009, entitled "Afghanistan, Iraq: Different Wars -- U.S. Soldiers: Afghanistan War Dramatically More Difficult, Challenging Than Iraq," linked here.)
Editor's Note: For the link to Bill Moyer's Journal and his excellent interview with Oliver Stone, shown on December 4, 2009, click here.)