![]() |
||
|
|
by
Sun Aug 20, 2006 at 06:34:22 AM EST I learned early that war forms its own culture. The rush of battle is a potent and often lethal addiction, for war is a drug, one I ingested for many years. It is peddled by mythmakers - historians, war correspondents, filmmakers, novelists, and the state...War exposes the capacity for evil that lurks not far below the surface within all of us. And this is why for many war is so hard to discuss once it is over. - Chris Hedges, veteran war correspondent and author of War Is a Force That Give Us Meaning
We sent our nation's finest young men and women over there, so we won't have to fight them over here. They promise us nothing will touch us. As if we can be insulated from war and everything that flows from it. As if our troops will come back undamaged and whole after their third, fourth, fifth deployments to hell and back. They lied. The war has reached our shores. The vessels of war are those service men and women who return to us broken, beaten, and hypervigilant. Sooner or later, even the best and brightest if pushed long and hard enough arrive at their breaking point. commentary :: :: :: buzz-it!
Two marines break into Va. Beach home, terrorize residents
That was the headline this past week in Virginia Beach, VA. A tragedy on so many levels, a most horrible crime:
Two marines currently stationed and undergoing counterintelligence training at Dam Neck, broke into a Virginia Beach couple's home and severely beat the husband. The woman had managed to rush upstairs as the two men, Sgt. Jerome Fenner and Sgt. Shawn Gianforte, smashed up her home and assaulted her husband. The two Marines had apparently been drinking all night, and chose a house at random.
Fortunately, police arrived on the scene at 2:35 with a tactical team, stormed the house, and found Gianforte still on top of the husband. Fenner (who is actually a counter and human intel instructor at the Dam Neck Training Center, Gianforte a student -- perhaps his) fled the scene but later was apprehended.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Had this been the end of the story, it would be heartbreaking. Just another combat PTSD-related OEF/OIF returning veteran incident to add to the others in the PTSD Timeline. But it's not the end. It's just the beginning...
Sgt. Shawn Gianforte, 29, really has an incredible story to tell. One that shouldn't have ended in that Virginia Beach house late Wednesday night. Details are few as far as what happened that night. Gianforte appeared in court on Thursday and Sgt. Jerome Fenner, 28, appeared on Friday. I wasn't able to learn of Fenner's combat status; but, Gianforte is an Iraq veteran who's served at least two tours with distinction.
Vigilance Pays Where Complacency Kills
The 1-8 deployed to Iraq in June 2004. Before getting their Fallujah orders, they were assigned to Anbar Province where they protected Haditha Dam, which churned out 1/5 of the country's electricity, and kept the roads safe and clear for military and civilian vehicles. From the Washington Post:
The holes gouged from the pavement were a reminder, as if one were necessary, of the danger to Bravo Company as it rolled through the shimmering heat. When Lt. Noble was later wounded in the battle for Fallujah, Gianforte would be the first at his side. But right now IED's (improvised explosive devices) are their biggest danger. A small quote by Gianforte is found near the bottom of the article:
On a recent morning, men from Noble's company kneeled around him as they planned the day's patrol. They already were sweating in the fierce midmorning sun. In the open-top Humvees, they got hotter and dirtier. ...
Operation Phantom Fury, or al-Fajr (Dawn) began November 7, 2004. Gianforte was one of the Marines interviewed by author Gary Livingston for his book, Fallujah, With Honor. He served as a machine gun section leader for the Fire Support Team (FiST) in Bravo Company's Weapons Platoon as they entered that city on the Euphrates. He shared some experiences:
He also remembered the intensity of the battle. While the entire battalion used only 1,300 to 1,500 rounds of artillery, their FiST used 1,000 to 1,200 supporting B Company. They'd answered 30-35 calls for help. Quite an achievement, indeed. I haven't been able to confirm later deployments past the first two for Gianforte. He may very well have gone back again before returning stateside to begin the Dam Neck training in counter and human intel he was enrolled in presently. I did find an account of Gianforte's arrival home last year. His family and community gathered at the local American Legion and celebrated their hero's safe return. We learn more about Gianforte's personal life:
A 1994 graduate of Caledonia-Mumford High School, the Sergeant says as a young boy he was influenced by the popular action figure, G.I. Joe, and wanted to be just like him. He married his high school sweetheart, Lisa O'Hearn Gianforte, and enlisted in the United States Marine Corps directly after graduation. His first tour of duty came in 1996 when he was deployed to Okinawa, Japan and then to Guam where he was part of a humanitarian effort assisting Kurdish refugees from Iraq. ... My heart can't help but go out to this family, as it does to the couple that became victims to the obvious drunken and manic rage of Gianforte and Fenner. Tell me again how PTSD doesn't effect us all?
Please keep them all in your thoughts today...
Not all of them have reached their breaking point. But the stress of their experience courses through their veins as they seek to find a way to co-exist among us again. We must advocate to:
* Properly and fully fund the Veterans Administration.
The Breaking of a Marine | 12 comments (12 topical, 0 hidden)
The Breaking of a Marine | 12 comments (12 topical, 0 hidden)
|
Support ePluribus Media -- Support Citizen Powered Journalism! recent commentaries
front page
Tuesday November 27th
Monday November 26th
|