Letter from an American
soldier...
Read full CNSNews.com article w/ video:
Soldier’s Outrage at Anti-War Protests at Army Hospital
“… I am a reservist out
of Dallas, Texas, who is currently deployed to Afghanistan in
support of Operation Enduring Freedom. I also was deployed to Iraq
for one year in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. I was part of
the initial invasion into Iraq. During my first deployment to Iraq,
my MP unit was called up. I volunteered for this deployment because
I felt I had more to give my country and felt it was the right thing
to do. I would like to comment on the article you wrote in reference
to the Code Pink group at Walter Reed Medical Center. I first saw
your article on the Sean Hannity website and then listened to Marc
Morano’s interview with Mr. Hannity via-pod cast from here in
Afghanistan. (‘Anti-War Protests Target Wounded at Army Hospital,’
August 25)
When I read the article I was assuming that the group was just close
to the Medical Center. But when I listened to your interview with
Mr. Hannity and your confrontation of the Code Pink lady, it became
a lot clearer. I was taken aback by her and her group’s arrogance to
what they are really doing there and who they are actually hurting.
To carry the signs, heckle the troops and to have mock caskets with
an American flag over them is beyond protest. It is downright
harassment of my brothers and sisters of the United States military
who have been injured.
By the end of the interview I was shaking and was even in tears for
my fellow brave soldiers who not only have to endure the loss of a
limb(s), loss of sight, or even worse – the loss of a battle buddy
(fellow soldier serving with your team). I know the guilt that
soldiers feel when they are not taken or injured but someone else
is. I feel guilt now that I made it through Iraq and now half way
through my tour in Afghanistan and yet I am fine. Over 2,000 of my
fellow soldiers have not made it. I can only imagine what my fellow
injured soldiers are feeling as they look out that window and see
the Code Pink group. I then went from thinking of my fellow soldiers
to thinking about my family and what they would have to go through
if I were injured and the emotional stress and guilt they would feel
that they were unable to protect their 34-year-old son, even though
I made a decision to protect my family and country. …
Even though I disagree with what all of these groups such as Code
Pink, Moveon.org and anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan stand for, my
fellow soldiers and I have fought, died, been injured and are still
fighting for their right to protest and speak their mind. But what
angers and hurts me as a soldier is that they parade their anti-war
views in the face of my brothers and sisters who are recovering from
the same battlefield that I fought on and am still fighting on as I
type this e-mail. Is there no honor or dignity left in the anti-war
movement? Do they have no shame? Do they have no integrity? Do they
have no heart? Do they have no soul? I can answer that with a simple
no! How can they say they support the troops but protest where they
try to recover from war? You interviewed one gentleman, and I use
that term loosely, who stated ‘If I was injured I would want someone
to speak for me like this.’ Well let me tell him something, we do
not want you to speak for us and we do not need you to speak for us!
…
In closing, I would like to thank you for bringing their conduct to
the public eye, not only in your article, but on ‘The Sean Hannity
Show.’ I actually began to have some faith in the media again when I
heard Morano stand up for us soldiers like he did. I wish there was
something that I could do to personally thank him for your actions.
But I am going to ask that you please do not stop speaking of these
actions at Walter Reed. Please find a way to help stop the
protesting at Walter Reed. Please write more articles, ask why they
were granted permission, get public officials to speak out on the
record and petition people to withdraw their right to protest within
a certain distance from a military hospital. It scares me that next
will be a fellow soldier's funeral. That is the next step! Please, I
ask that you continue to investigate this protest and their rights
to be there! Not to stop people’s freedom of speech, but protect and
respect my fellow soldiers.”
Sgt. Mark Leach, U.S. Army
Afghanistan
Read full CNSNews.com article w/ video:
Soldier’s Outrage at Anti-War Protests at Army Hospital
Pictures From Iraq That Are Too Shocking & Graphic for The
Mainstream Media
Click here to see more!
Take Action and Make a Donation!
|
|