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Hackworth: Soldiers Beware


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For those who don't know who Col. Hackworth is, you may need to read this to understand  his qualifications and decorations.

 

Col. David H. Hackworth

WorldNetDaily Columnist

 

One of America's most decorated soldiers, Col. David Hackworth is the consummate speaker on almost any topic related to the military. Subjects such as the Balkans debacle, national security, military preparedness, gays in the military and women in combat are all dissected within the all-important context of history.

 

Hackworth's military career as a sailor, soldier and a military correspondent spanned nearly a dozen wars and conflicts, from the end of World War II to the recent meltdown in ex-Yugoslavia. Col. Hackworth enlisted in the service at the age of 14, and in his 26 years in the U.S. Army he spent over seven years in combat theatres. Author of the international bestseller "About Face" and "The Vietnam Primer and Brave Men," Col. Hackworth's most recent book is "Hazardous Duty."

 

In 1971, as the Army's youngest colonel, he was the only senior officer to speak out on national television against the Vietnam War in which he served five years.

 

A nationally syndicated columnist for King Features, Col. Hackworth has also been a contributing editor for Newsweek magazine.

 

Although he earned eight Purple Hearts and over 100 U.S. or foreign decorations, Hack considers receiving the Combat Infantryman Badge and the United Nations Medal for Peace for his anti-nuclear work in Australia to be his "highest awards."

 

Audiences around the nation have been inspired by Col. Hackworth's words for over two decades and he continues to give as many as 20 speeches a year.

 

 

 

His Editorial

 

 

Hackworth: Soldiers Beware

 

About the Author

 

<http://www.military.com/Resources/pics/hackworth1.jpg>

Columnist and former soldier David H. Hackworth is the author of The Price of Honor, and contributes weekly commentary to DefenseWatch. For more information, visit Colonel Hackworth's homepage or the DefenseWatch Website. Sign up for the free weekly Defending America column at his Website, or send mail to P.O. Box 11179, Greenwich, CT 06831.

 

Have an opinion about this column? Sound off in the Hackworth Discussion Board.

 

Browse the Hackworth Archives

 

 

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Global Hot Spot: Iraq

 

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Gulf War Syndrome

 

January 29, 2003

 

In his State of the Union address , President Bush gave yet another strong warning to Iraq, while Axis of Evil member North Korea continued threatening the objects of its dissatisfaction as well. But on Feb. 12, an army of scarred and ornery warriors will once again be walking the walk instead of talking the talk, invading this nation's capital for real. And they won't be Saddam's thugs or Kim's crazies - but true-grit American heroes protesting the raw deal they've gotten from dishonest politicians with short and shifty memories.

 

Barely a month before Bush's Missiles of March will more than likely thump Iraq, thousands of World War II and Korean War vets -- all more than 70 years of age -- will travel by train, bus, plane, car, horseback, wheelchair and shoe leather to stand tall together in front of the U.S. Supreme Court while they tell the nation how the capital gang has hung them out to die on promised lifetime health benefits for retired vets.

 

Their skipper -- leading the class-action lawsuit -- is Medal of Honor recipient turned Florida lawyer Col. George Day, now flying with a briefcase full of hard facts instead of the Air Force jet fighter he piloted over Vietnam . Although the feisty three-war vet has been battling this case for years, only now, after much shameful government double-talk, backpedaling and welshing, is the case finally going before the highest court of our land.

 

Their story is as old as war and peace: how promises were conveniently forgotten or baldly broken; how the Justice Department has cynically used stonewalling and other slippery delaying tactics, knowing full well that these senior citizens are dying daily -- which statistics show will save the feds big bucks if and when the liars lose.

 

Bush clearly stated during his campaign for the presidency and again after his boots hit the Oval Office that the nation must keep faith with our vets and that vows made by our government must be honored. But despite all the polished political words, the promised medical support is still AWOL.

 

Navy vet Jerry Bell says: "This is our last chance to show how we feel about being betrayed. When warriors are treated in such a shameful manner, both the fabric of our country and its military institution are in question."

 

Billboards around Washington are delivering that same message with the hard thud of a 155-mm. barrage: "WWII/KOREA RETIREES FIGHT TO RECOVER STOLEN MEDICAL CARE. 'COURT SAYS THEFT IS OK.' WHO IS RIGHT, WARRIORS OR GOVT?"

 

Despite George Washington 's wise warning - "The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation" - American vets from our Civil War to Desert Storm have been consistently treated like orphans.

 

Most recently, more than 161,000 Desert Storm vets have been disabled, and almost 10,000 have died from Gulf War Illness . During the near-decade they spent pleading for help, in pain and dying, their ingrate government kept insisting that their wounds - now proven to be caused by U.S.-destroyed Iraqi chemical munitions and an assortment of other killer cocktails such as oil-fire fumes, untested inoculations and local bugs that they weren't protected against - were "all in their heads."

 

Now Bush and his war hawks -- who almost to a man dodged service in the Vietnam War, just like the majority of our members of Congress -- are again sending warriors to employ the military solution in the Gulf at even greater risk, since the Pentagon has just admitted the bio/chem suits our attacking troops will wear are good only for bunker duty.

 

There's already a buzz of putting plans in place for bulldozers to mass-bury our sons and daughters who fall from germs. Not that this scenario would trouble the dedicated folks in Veterans Affairs. You know, no messy claims or protesters to worry about down the track.

 

Consider the pattern of betrayal: We rebuild Afghanistan but don't take care of our heroes, or spend the bucks on the right bio/chem suits to protect our troops.

 

It seems that the motto, "Lest We Forget," is no longer the American way. Now it's "Use 'em, abuse 'em and lose 'em."

 

 

 

 

Between what he has said and what Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf has said, recently.  I thought this would be interesting to read now and see what comes to fruition, later.

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