In the movies or on TV, war too often is a glamorous affair. The soldiers are bathed in patriotism and comradeship. They fight for a noble cause and we cheer on their heroic and/or altruistic feats.
In this same vein, TV programs like CSI have glorified the work of criminalists who utilize forensic science to catch the "bad guys." Each week we watch the characters we've come to admire solve complex crimes in less than one hour's time.
In this week's column at Truthdig, Chris Hedges loosely brings these two themes together to expose the underbelly of war. It is anything but a pretty picture!
In this same vein, TV programs like CSI have glorified the work of criminalists who utilize forensic science to catch the "bad guys." Each week we watch the characters we've come to admire solve complex crimes in less than one hour's time.
In this week's column at Truthdig, Chris Hedges loosely brings these two themes together to expose the underbelly of war. It is anything but a pretty picture!
Jess Goodell enlisted in the Marines immediately after she graduated from high school in 2001. She volunteered three years later to serve in the Marine Corps’ first officially declared Mortuary Affairs unit, at Camp Al Taqaddum in Iraq. Her job, for eight months, was to collect and catalog the bodies and personal effects of dead Marines. She put the remains of young Marines in body bags and placed the bags in metal boxes. Before being shipped to Dover Air Force Base, the boxes were stored, often for days, in a refrigerated unit known as a “reefer.”. The work she did was called “processing.”
“We went through everything,” she said when I reached her by phone in Buffalo, N.Y., where she is about to become a student in a Ph.D. program in counseling at the University of Buffalo. “We would get everything that the body had on it when the Marine died. Everyone had a copy of The Rules of Engagement in their left breast pocket. You found notes that people had written to each other. You found lists. Lists were common, the things they wanted to do when they got home or food they wanted to eat. The most difficult was pictures. Everyone had a picture of their wife or their kids or their family. And then you had the younger kids who might be 18 years old and they had prom pictures or pictures next to what I imagine were their first cars. Everyone had a spoon in their flak jacket. There were pens and trash and wrappers and MRE food. All of it would get sent back [to the Marines’ homes].”
“We all had the idea that at any point this could be us on the table,” she said. “I think Marines thought that we went over there to die. And so people wrote letters saying ‘If I die I want you to know I love you.’ ‘I want my car to go to my younger brother.’ Things like that. They carried those letters on their bodies. We had a Marine that we processed and going through his wallet he had a picture of a sonogram of a fetus his wife had sent him. And a lot of Marines had tattooed their vital information under an arm pit. It was called a meat tag...” READ MORE
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