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Sunday, May 21, 2006

Some Iraq war vets go homeless after return to US


Fri May 19, 2006 2:44 PM ET
By Daniel Trotta

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The nightmare of Iraq was bad enough for Vanessa Gamboa. Unprepared for combat beyond her basic training, the supply specialist soon found herself in a firefight, commanding a handful of clerks.
"They promoted me to sergeant. I knew my job but I didn't know anything about combat. So I'm responsible for all these people and I don't know what to tell them but to duck," Gamboa said.
The battle, on a supply delivery run, ended without casualties, and it did little to steel Gamboa for what awaited her back home in Brooklyn.
When the single mother was discharged in April, after her second tour in Iraq, she was 24 and had little money and no place to live. She slept in her son's day-care center. Gamboa is part of a small but growing trend among U.S. veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars -- homelessness.
On any given night the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) helps 200 to 250 of them, and more go uncounted. They are among nearly 200,000 homeless veterans in America, largely from the Vietnam War.
Advocates say the number of homeless veterans is certain to grow, just as it did in the years following the Vietnam and Gulf wars, as a consequence of the stresses of war and inadequate job training.
Homeless veterans have remained in the shadows of the national debate about Iraq, although the issue may gain traction from the film "When I Came Home," which won an award this month for best New York-made documentary at the city's Tribeca Film Festival. The documentary tells the story of Iraq war veteran Herold Noel as he lived in his car. It will get a screening in June at the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
U.S. Rep. Bob Filner, a California Democrat, calls it a "national disgrace" that homelessness among veterans has not been solved and held an informal hearing on Thursday to highlight the issue.
"We've seen the same thing with Agent Orange and Gulf War syndrome," Filner said of ailments from prior wars. "The bureaucracy is denying that there's anything wrong. First it's deny, deny, deny. Then they admit it's a small problem. And later they admit it's a widespread problem.
"We're not talking about a lot of money (to solve the problem) compared with overall spending on the war in Iraq. We're spending a billion dollars every two and a half days," he told Reuters.
DISCHARGED AND FORGOTTEN
One theme of the documentary is that veterans who risked their lives in war are too easily discarded by society once they are out of the military. The film shows Noel being denied housing by New York City's housing agency.
Gamboa had a similar experience.
"They put me in this roach-infested hotel. I was there for 10 days," Gamboa said. "Then they said I wasn't eligible to stay in a shelter because I could stay with my sister, who lives in a studio apartment with her husband. And I haven't spoken to her in six years."
Now her luck is improving.
Unlike many low-ranking soldiers, Gamboa received army training with civilian applications -- logistics -- and started a job with a fancy Fifth Avenue clothing store this week. And despite an Army snafu that nearly denied her U.S. citizenship, the Guatemalan-born Gamboa, who moved to Brooklyn as a child, took her oath before the U.S. flag on Friday. Military recruiters target poor neighborhoods like Gamboa's Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn. Young adults with few job skills join the Army. When they get out, many have fallen behind their contemporaries, experts say.
The stresses of combat and military life contribute to post traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse and mental illness, which are especially taboo subjects to soldiers trained not to admit failure easily.
About half of all homeless veterans suffer from mental illness, and more than two-thirds suffer from alcohol or drug abuse problems, the VA says. Gamboa has avoided those pitfalls, but female veterans are three times more likely to become homeless than women in the general population, the American Journal of Public Health reported.
Repeated deployments -- a hallmark of the Iraq war -- and separation from family can also portend future problems.
"Then the downward spiral begins with substance abuse and problems with the law," said Amy Fairweather of Iraq Veteran, which helps war veterans in San Francisco. "If you wanted to put together all the repercussions that put people at risk for homelessness, you couldn't do better than the Iraq war."

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Testimony from a former U.S. Army Ranger
Jessie Macbeth, a Former Army Ranger and Iraq War Veteran Tells All


This 20 minute interview will change how you view the U.S. occupation of Iraq forever. I cannot possibly recommend this more highly. An Iraq war veteran tells of atrocities he and other fellow-soldiers committed reguarly while in Iraq. I have never seen this level of honesty from a U.S. soldier who directly participated in the slaughtering of Iraqis.

Excerpts:

"When we were doing the night raids in the houses, we would pull people out and have them all on their knees and zip-tied. We would ask the man of the house questions. If he didn't answer the way we liked, we would shoot his youngest kid in the head. We would keep going, this was our interrogation. He could be innocent. He could be just an average Joe trying to support his family. If he didn't give us a satisfactory answer, we'd start killing off his family until he told us something. If he didn't know anything, I guess he was SOL."

and

"For not speaking out, I feel like I'm betraying my battle-buddies that died."

Watch the video here (http://www.peacefilms.org ).

Produced by Pepperspray Productions

http://dahrjamailiraq.com/weblog/archives/informational...

7:18 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

this is so difficult to believe that our soldiers would commit

these atrocities. They are only human and are in an inhumane situation so it is hard to say what anyone might do. This will ruin the lives of the people committing the terrible things. We put our young men and women into a place that is foreign to them and their lives are in danger and they do not know what to do. They are not like the actors on TV shows and the career military people. Some people who sign up for the military cannot be taught how to fight or how to kill another person. PERIOD.

I do believe what has been said, even though it is hard. It took me a long time to believe our US administration would do the things that they have done during their time in Washington. In fact, there are new surprises everyday. I do believe them all. What would I do if I were one of those soldiers in Iraq? I really do not know.

7:20 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"When we were doing the night raids in the houses, we would pull people out and have them all on their knees and zip-tied. We would ask the man of the house questions. If he didn't answer the way we liked, we would shoot his youngest kid in the head. We would keep going, this was our interrogation. He could be innocent. He could be just an average Joe trying to support his family. If he didn't give us a satisfactory answer, we'd start killing off his family until he told us something. If he didn't know anything, I guess he was SOL."

The victims of the Haditha massacre were also tied and shot in the head.

I knew this was happening, but still, to read it. . . .

7:21 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

this and many other things just make me sick!

I don't believe I can stand it too much longer, with more illegal and immoral things these idiots are doing. Right now, It seems there should be a way to stop it and I do meen now----not have to wait for the November elections. It seems as though our hands are tied. What can one person do?

7:22 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Our troops are turning into monsters. There are too many reports

coming out to deny it. Many reports coming out about the random and frequent murders, rapes, tortures of innocent Iraqi men, women and children by US troops. In the heat and chaos of any war, some of this is going to happen. We know that. But to the extent that it is happening now? No.

Some of these Americans were monsters to begin with; war gives them a perfect opportunity to act out their rage and/or sadism. Others were normal human beings before they went over. Some of these guys have been there three years now. They have lost their humanity. Shooting young children? As a way to obtain information from men who most likely know nothing anyway?

What we could be looking at is serious and wide spread PTSD. US troops decompensating in violent indiscriminate behavior. Shooting first, asking questions later. Shooting any thing that moves as a way to deal with their own trauma, rage, terror. After a while everything is like watching a movie, nothing seems real. A numbness sets in.

I wonder where is the chain of command? Where is the supervision? The mid and upper level officers are either burned out as well, or are helpless to stop it.

Please keep in mind that these US troops will be coming home some day. And they will live in your town, maybe next door to you, your children and loved ones. And somebody is going to have to help them become normal again.

That is going to be a very tough job for mental health experts. But not as tough as repairing the damage we have done to the country of Iraq, which may take many generations to recover from the damage we have done to the people and the land.

And please feel free to flame away at me. Not the first time since I am outspoken about military PTSD. And trying to face this reality head on. Denying it exists will not make it go away.

7:35 PM  

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