NEW YORK: Boarding a flight? Active service members go
first. Watching a sports event? Then you’ll stand and applaud a group of
veterans at some point during the game.
America puts its service members on a unique pedestal: they are revered and yet poorly understood.
When
Donald Trump insulted the bereaved parents of a soldier killed in Iraq,
he broke a US taboo: that troops, veterans and above all their grieving
relatives are beyond reproach.
You can disagree with their politics, but you must honour their sacrifice.
Alexander
McCoy, 28, a former Marine sergeant studying political science at New
York’s Columbia University, says he has been upgraded to first and
business class, had strangers buy him a beer or pay for his meals, and
is offered discounts on movie or theme park tickets simply for being a
veteran.
“I do think that America as a culture prizes
military service,” McCoy told AFP. “Americans kind of mythologize
warfare because they have so little experience with it in America.”
Unlike
many other countries, including Germany where McCoy was stationed, a
vast majority in the United States has not experienced war at home since
the 1861-65 Civil War.
Other than the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbour in 1941 — more than 4,000 kilometres from the mainland —
the September 11, 2001 hijackings were the first major foreign attack on
US soil in centuries.
The influence of 9/11, which
killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania,
shattered feelings of safety and bolstered support for the military —
cast as the defenders of America.
Then president George W. Bush quickly sent troops to Afghanistan, and then invaded Iraq.
Americans
tied yellow ribbons to their vehicles, waved flags and rallied behind
the soldiers, holding them above any criticism of the foreign policy
behind the wars.
‘Family business’
“The Bush administration, and the federal government more
broadly, cultivated a kind of popular nationalism after 9/11 for all
kinds of reasons,” said Michael Allen, a history professor at
Northwestern University.
“Bush relied on his gut. How to
publicly sell the war on terror — that was where he really excelled,
because it was instinctive for him,” Allen said. “It was very natural
for him to rally around the flag.”
But the military has
not always been so venerated. Opposition to the Vietnam War was so
vehement that veterans were treated abominably despite 25 per cent of
the troops having been drafted and the deaths of more than 58,200.
Yet
if veneration has increased towards today’s all-volunteer force, in
which less than one per cent of the population currently serve, so too
has a profound disconnect with the civilian world.
US
military bases — once scattered all over the country — have been
consolidated. Many who serve come from a military background, which
McCoy believes is creating a “family business” — almost “a warrior
caste”.
“People respect vets,” says Deborah Gahm, an
accountant from Phoenix, Arizona, whose husband has served for more than
20 years, including in Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan.
“But
I don’t think it’s a deep level of respect, I think it’s very much on
the surface. In many respects, it’s just lip service,” she said.
There
has been also chronic under-investment in programmes that help soldiers
transition back into civilian life. Congress is considering major cuts
to the educational and housing allowances offered to vets.
“When
we make promises to people that sign a contract that could get them
killed, we ought to keep those promises. So there are people who like to
say that they support our troops but then they don’t,” Gahm said.
Damaging stereotypes
Gahm says she is troubled by the Hollywood portrayal of
returning warriors as violent or struggling with post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), and believes the public too often treats veterans as
victims.
“I think there are really damaging stereotypes out there,” she told AFP.
“Even vets who have PTSD rarely do violent acts,” she added.
While
her husband was in Iraq, she once went out to eat with their daughter,
and women at the next table were accusing soldiers of signing up to
murder, she said. She asked to be moved to shield her daughter from the
comments.
Allen sees the roots of today’s rituals
honouring vets in Richard Nixon’s attempts to sideline the anti-Vietnam
war movement by identifying with conventional, conservative America and
using sport to do so.
He would “obsessively” call
attention to his watching of football and bring returning prisoners of
war to sporting events, Allen said.
POWs were given lifetime free passes to Major League baseball games.
Reassessment
of the damage done to veterans by the anti-Vietnam backlash has seen
Democrats join Republicans in adopting trenchant support for the
military.
“The lesson learned by the political left was
you must never criticise soldiers and veterans, it’s absolutely
forbidden — to some degree, always the attitude on the political right,”
said Allen.
“You can’t go around criticising a Gold Star
family. That’s really very taboo to do,” said Gahm of Trump’s
laceration of Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the parents of a Muslim soldier
who was killed in a suicide bombing in Iraq.—AFP
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