‘They can’t train you for the reality of Iraq. You can’t have a mass grave with dogs eating the people in it’

At the same time that Kevin Benderman’s unit was called up for a second tour in Iraq with the Third Infantry Division, two soldiers tried to kill themselves and another had a relative shoot him in the leg. Seventeen went awol or ran off to Canada, and Sergeant Benderman, whose family has sent a son to every war since the American revolution, defied his genes and nine years of military training and followed his conscience.

As the division packed its gear to leave Fort Stewart, Sgt Benderman applied for a discharge as a conscientious objector – an act seen as a betrayal by many in a military unit considered the heart of the US army, the “Walking Pride of Uncle Sam”.

Two years ago today, the columns of the Third ID roared up from the Kuwaiti desert for the push towards Baghdad. When the city fell, the Marines controlled the neighbourhoods on the east side of the Tigris and the Third ID had the west. It was, according to the army command, an occasion for pride.

Some of the men and women who were there remain unconvinced. Like Sgt Benderman, who served six months in Iraq at the start of the war, they were scarred by their experience, and angry at being called again to combat so soon.

They may not be part of any organised anti-war movement, but the conscientious objectors, runaways, and other irregular protesters suggest that, two years on, the war is taking a heavy toll. “They can’t train you for the reality. You can’t have a mass grave with dogs eating the people in it,” Sgt Benderman told the Guardian. “It’s not like practising for a football game, or cramming for a test in college. You can go out there and train, but until you actually experience war first hand you don’t know what it’s like.”
Full Article: guardian.co.uk

Leave a Reply

*
To prove that you're not a bot, enter this code
Anti-Spam Image