War Remembered
By John Cory
t r u t h o u t correspondent in Saudi Arabia
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Tuesday 28 January 2003
As I write this, the world awaits the UN inspection report and the State of the Union speech from George Bush. All of
the waiting is not keyed to evidence or evil or that "Aha!" moment. The world is waiting for a start date. When will the
war begin? Soon. How long will it take? Not long. How quickly will it be over? Not soon. War is never over - it just
lingers.
A few years ago I passed a slow afternoon with my business landlord. He was approaching his 76th birthday and on this
particular day he brought a bottle of bourbon, two glasses, and a desire to talk, as he entered my office.
Jack is one of Brokaw's "greatest generation" though Jack himself would deny such a moniker. He was a bomber pilot in
WWII and one of his proudest mementos is a squadron photograph that includes Clark Gable, standing right beside Jack's
big grinning mug.
As he poured us each a drink, Jack explained that he had just done what all old soldiers do at some time or other; he
had fingered a faded face in a faded photograph of an old comrade-in-arms and felt a flush of sad nostalgia. Fifty plus
years on, the war had come back to him. It wasn't a pity attack or guilt; it was simply the memory of a lively young pal
in a long ago place when war ruled the world. So we passed the afternoon exchanging tales of men and combat, and pubs
and high jinks so familiar to all who have ever been soldiers. A toast to the dead and the living, and the hope for
never again.
I have been to war. I served as a combat medic and I know what it is to peer into a man's heart through the shrapnel
holes of his flesh. I know what it is to see the dead; both friend and foe, strewn about the battlefield like so much
broken furniture. But there is more to war than the battles, victories, and the eventual truces.
I have lived and worked around this world for many years. While living in Japan I watched the annual commemoration of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki and had opportunities to speak with survivors and former soldiers. Decades after the Great War,
the destruction, illnesses, and the memories, all were as strong as ever. My times in Korea revealed the scars and
sadness of a war that ended with a divided nation and still divided families. Here in the Middle East I have talked with
Israeli and Egyptian men who fought in both the 1967 and 1973 wars. Their memories are equally strong and vibrant even
today.
After my combat tour, I saw the fall of Saigon in 1975, and then returned in 1999 and 2000 to find the ghosts of war
still ever present. In my travels around Southeast Asia I was astounded to find areas that were still mined and marked
with warnings about explosives buried in the rice paddies. I revisited a small village where I had served, only to be
asked to help the local mayor and his council complete their map of minefields and hidden ammo dumps. Could I remember
where the claymore mines had been placed? Where was the cache of mortar shells hidden down by the river? Did I know what
happened to the defoliating chemical agents that were once stored in this small hamlet?
A small village in the Central Highlands where many children and young adults are missing limbs, where birth deformities
and cancer rates are the norm and not the exception, where farmers struggle to grow enough rice and other staples by
avoiding some of the best land because of its hidden danger; this is the home of war's remains.
Let's make no mistake, war is never about just the soldiers. The face of war is not a recruiting poster. The face of war
is on children, long after the tanks and artillery have gone. Barren poisoned ground produces generations of poisoned
food and water. Uranium based bullets leave cancer producing agents to ricochet around the environments of playgrounds
and schools. Defensive chemical armaments become passive pollution that is associated with increased birth defects,
respiratory ailments, and a variety of blood disorders.
My friend Jack and I passed that afternoon over bourbon and cigars, talking as most men do, of forgotten chums, the luck
of survival, and our hope to never see the world at war again. Perhaps it was the moment or maybe my affection for Jack,
but I still remember his last toast for the day.
"Here's to war remembered, may we never forget."
***********
John Cory is t r u t h o u t.org’s correspondent in Saudi Arabia